abingdon lock on the river thames
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Abingdon Lock

Telephone: +44 (0)1235 523044
Postcode: OX14 3NW

abingdon lock

Click the link below for a map and a list of facilities at the lock.

Location and facilities for Abingdon Lock

Abingdon Lock's history is as fascinating as it gets. There are remains of an lock constructed around 1624. It is the oldest surviving lock chamber in the UK, and possibly Europe.

This ancient lock - now acting as a weir - is near the top of the Swift Ditch, a meandering stream that by-passes the town of Abingdon to the south. You can still see the old brick chamber at the head of the Swift Ditch.

Today you can see big cruisers with flying bridges, Dutch barges and passenger steamers along with the popular narrow boats and small powered craft using the river. But in the 17th and 18th centuries, when the Thames formed a main trade route to and from London, you would be more likely to see horse-drawn and sailing barges carrying grain, timber and coal.

Lock Keeper

The Lock Keeper here is Roger Steere, who has lived in the Lock House since 1984. Roger and his wife, Gillian, agree that running this lock has been 'extremely rewarding.' A former programmer, Roger says, 'When I was in computers, I thought ,"there must be more to life than this" so I became a lock keeper'.

A life-long steam engine enthusiast, Roger spends much of his spare time in his workshop constructing working scale models of locomotives and traction engines.

Did you know?

In 1819, Bushey Eyot (a small island near Bushey) was bought by the Thames Commissioners, as they wanted to build a lock house on it. The present lock house is the second to occupy this site - it was built in 1928 by the Thames Conservancy.

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