The River Nar & Narborough Regional Focus.
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Boating on Norfolk Broads

It
was another idea overtaken by technology.
In the days when roads were still hardly worth the name and horses
dragging coal waggons - and coal was the most important cargo - through
winter quagmires were the cutting edge of land-bound goods haulage,
almost any waterway with enough water offered an alternative.
Thus, in the mid and late 18th century, as the Industrial Revolution
gathered pace and the great canal builders - James Brindley,
William Jessop, John Rennie, Thomas Telford - were creating
new infrastructure across the country, the harnessing of west
Norfolk's little River Nar was in on the game early.
The idea was simple. The Nar, a tributary of the Great Ouse
which was already a major navigation, could be canalised to
connect the village of Narborough to King's Lynn and beyond.
Narborough was no metropolis - even a hundred years later,
White's Gazetteer noted just 390 residents - but it was 12
miles on the way east to the market town of Swaffham and thence
to East Dereham.

More
importantly, Narborough was the seat of the Spelman family,
Narborough Hall having been built by one Judge Spelman in
the time of Henry VIII. There was thus the money and influence
to get legislation for the creation of a navigable waterway
from what was essentially a trout stream. John Spelman, the
then squire, opined that 'it must greatly increase the Commerce'
of the surrounding towns and in 1750, he helped raise the
petition from those towns. The bill met with no opposition
and was passed in 1751.
The appointed commissioners employed surveyors John Aram
and Langley Edwards, who recommended a scheme involving seven
staunches, one open pen sluice and a basin at West Acre above
Narborough. It wasn't big league - the river would take horse-towed
lighters carrying up to 10 tons or eight chaldrons of coal
- but it would still beat the roads of the day.
Tolls would be levied though not on pleasure boats nor on
goods carried no further than a furlong above Setchey bridge
(five miles upstream from Lynn and now on the A10). There
would, furthermore, no 'haling by horses between King's Lynn
and Sandringham Eau where the tide ebbs and flows' and watermen
were forbidden to carry guns or nets 'to fowl or fish therewith'.

Work,
under Edwards' supervision, didn't actually start until September
1757 and then soon overran budget with £1,900 of the
£2,500 estimate spent after 12 months and the river
still nowhere near navigable. The commissioners gave Edwards
another four months to complete the job on the pain of a £20
weekly penalty and then, when it became clear that two more
staunches would be needed, they told him to pay for them himself
though whether he did is unclear. Either way, the navigation
opened in August 1759.
From the outset however, it struggled financially. In 1760,
the commissioners considered a new cut to the Great Ouse near
Wiggenhall St. Peter where the Nar turns north and parallel
with the bigger river before joining it. It would have cut
out 10 miles for cargoes heading to and from Ely and Cambridge
which many of them were. But the idea was dropped, for the
commissioners were already losing interest. By June 1763,
there was no quorum for the monthly meeting and no further
meetings were minuted.
Enter next, in 1765, another Spelman, the Reverend Henry,
who managed to obtain a second Act which, among other things,
blamed the original commissioners for damage to the system
through allowing in boats of too great a burden. It required
the prevention of damage 'by rude and disorderly persons managing
or employed on boats' and provided for £800 to be spent
on repairs with Spelman lending a further £1,345.
Whether navigation ever actually went above Narborough is
debatable but there were two short branches lower down, one
to Wormegay - now empty - and another to Blackborough Priory.
But the complete Nar system included only one pound-lock,
still visible beneath the A47 at Narborough. Ten staunches
were built in the five miles below Narborough, all but one
of them apparently of the water-profligate guillotine type.

The exception was Upper Bonemill which was fitted with mitre gates
at some time, probably to avoid the emptying of nearly a mile
of river below Narborough every time a boat used it which
would have left the bonemill waterwheel high and dry until
water built up again.
Narborough was the main destination, coal, timber, corn and
malt being the principal cargoes which probably explains why,
by the mid-nineteenth century, the navigation was owned by
the Marriott brothers, maltsters and corn and coal merchants
of Narborough. And it was they who were holding the parcel
when the music stopped. For in the 1840s, there came a proposal
for a railway and that could only mean one thing for laborious
water transport.
The Marriotts resisted, saying the Lynn and Dereham railway
was 'unnecessary and without any promise of return'. But when
it reached Narborough in 1846 and Dereham in 1848, the Nar
navigation was more or less history.

Navigation to Narborough ended in 1884, though steam tugs and barges
still used the lowest reaches of the river until well into
the 20th century, notably those of the fragrantly named West
Norfolk Farmers Manure Company bringing ammonia-rich gas water
to their factory from Cambridge gasworks.
But when they packed up in 1932, the Nar river mouth became
a mere mooring place, and with the building of a tidal sluice
in the early 1980s, even that ceased.
Today, the only traffic following the river is pedestrian on the
Nar Valley Way. But on the lowest reaches of the river, walkers
can still see industrial relics of the busier times. And all the
way up to Narborough, they can walk the embankments between which
the straightened river was made to run and they can reflect that
it was a good enough idea at the time but only until a better
idea reduced it once again to a quiet backwater. For that, at
least the walkers can be grateful.