Who owns the River Dart?

This is a guest post by Lewis Winks; Guy Shrubsole inputted to the research.

The government has promised ‘9 new river walks’ in England to extend public access to the countryside, but hasn’t released details of where these will be, nor how they propose to achieve this. Without a rights-based approach, achieving meaningful river access will face significant challenges, and is illustrative of wider issues resulting from a reliance on a permissive approach to countryside access.

To understand this better, we mapped ownership of our local river, the River Dart in Devon, making use of local knowledge, site visits, angling maps, Section 31 Deposits, Companies House records, and a handful of gaps backfilled with Land Registry data. We believe this is the first river in England and Wales to have riparian ownership fully mapped (do correct us if we’re wrong!). The Guardian has covered the research in a story out today.

We can now reveal:

  • There are 108 separate riparian landowners from source to sea.
  • A quarter of the riverbank is owned by aristocratic estates and new money elites.
  • 10% is owned by 34 corporations.
  • 7% is owned by farms, and 13% by individuals.
  • 38% of riverbank is registered to addresses outside of the catchment.
  • 18.7km is owned via offshore companies.

Here’s our map of who owns the River Dart (also click here to open the map in a separate tab):

Largest Dart landowners by riverside / bank ownership

LocationOwnerCategoryHectares owned in catchmentFrontage (km)
Dartmoor EstateDuchy of CornwallCrown            27,22145.3
Spitchwick EstateCastle Management Trust (Gibraltar Registered)Aristocracy / Gentry            1,62019.0
Multiple SitesNational TrustNGO / Charity            1,04711.2
Multiple SitesForestry CommissionGovernment            1,4279.3
South Devon RailwaySouth Devon Railway TrustCorporate                  347.0
Raleigh EstateSir John Edward Victor RoseNew Money                4305.5
SharphamThe Sharpham TrustNGO / Charity                2265.4
Dartington Hall EstateThe Dartinton Hall TrustNGO / Charity                4954.5
Multiple SitesDartmoor National Park AuthorityGovernment                6793.6
TotnesSouth Hams District CouncilGovernment                  203.4
BuckfastBuckfast AbbeyChurch                1573.2
Buckfast to TotnesDart Valley Railway PLCCorporate                  253.1
Staverton EstateChurch Commissioners for EnglandChurch                5862.9
Multiple SitesSouth West WaterCorporate                  352.7
Higher Weston FarmIan James WiddecombeFarm                1012.4
Hood-Barton EstateDavid L C White & Hilary WhiteNew Money                  972.2
Berry Pomeroy Estate19th Duke of SomersetAristocracy / Gentry            1,1502.0
DartmouthDartmouth Town CouncilGovernment                    81.9
Old Vicarage FarmOld Vicarage FarmFarm                  491.8

Ownership of land adjacent to River Dart, South Devon by Category

Category (all)countha (within 500m)ha %frontage (km)frontage (%)
Crown1                      1,84929%                  42.9728%
Gov’t8                              68511%                   15.8010%
New Money10                              65310%                  16.0610%
Individual20                              2764%                  10.267%
NGO / Charity12                          91914%                  19.6513%
Farm18                              5428%                  11.087%
Church3                              2734%                    4.683%
Corporate34                              3285%                  15.5010%
Aristocracy / Gentry2                              95715%                  19.5113%
TOTALS108                      6,483                 155.52
Absentee owners only (outside of catchment)countha (within 500m)% of all ha ownership (within 500m)frontage (km)% of all frontage ownership
Domestic36                      1,56524%                  36.3223%
Offshore
2
                          880
14%
                  18.76
12%
TOTALS
38
                      2,445
38%
                  55.08
35%

When ownership is this fragmented, securing permissive public access is likely to be a logistical nightmare. Each stretch would require time-consuming negotiations with dozens – if not hundreds – of individual landowners and corporate bodies, many of whom are difficult to identify or are based outside of the river catchment. The River Dart is just one example – but the situation along other, longer rivers is likely to be even more complex.

That’s why we’re calling for a rights-based approach to river access – similar to the system in Scotland, where the public has the right to responsibly walk, swim, paddle and canoe along most rivers and lochs, with sensible exceptions.

In England, our rivers are under pressure from pollution and are too often cut off from public connection. Community groups like Friends of the River Dart are working hard to protect and restore rivers, despite limited access and unclear ownership. We hope this mapping will support their efforts, inspire others to investigate who owns their local rivers, and present the case that meaningful access must be based on rights – not on tenuous and piecemeal negotiation.

Notes:

  • The Spitchwick Estate, which own 19km of riverbank, and is owned offshore in Gibraltar, have previously tried to prevent access for swimming at popular swimming spots on Dartmoor (see the Times and Totnes Today).The signs remain up, although the estate also owns River Dart Country Park, which charges visitors for – amongst other things – swimming in the Dart!
  • South West Water own nearly 3km of waterfront, which has no public access.
  • ‘Frontage’ is classed as landownership by distance along the river in km.

3 thoughts on “Who owns the River Dart?

  1. I was intrigued to visit Lover’s Leap on foot earlier this year and was pleased to find I could walk to that stretch from near Buckland in the Moor without passing any ‘Private’ or ‘No Access’ signs. However there were such signs on the backs of gates as we headed out, around the Southern side of Ausewell woods. But there are many lovely but inaccessible stretches in that area on either bank and it’d be great if the situation regarding access could be changed.

    Like

Leave a Reply