River Hooke

River Hooke
River Hooke at Kingcombe Meadows
River Hooke is located in Dorset
River Hooke
Location within Dorset
Location
CountryEngland
CountyDorset
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationDorset
Mouth 
 • location
Maiden Newton, Dorset
 • coordinates
50°46′38″N 2°34′26″W / 50.7772°N 2.5740°W / 50.7772; -2.5740

The River Hooke is a small river in the county of Dorset in southern England. It runs from its source at Toller Whelme through the villages and hamlets of Hooke, Kingcombe, Toller Porcorum and Toller Fratrum to join the River Frome at Maiden Newton, a course of some 6 miles. The river was formerly called the River Toller, probably a Celtic river name meaning hollow stream or stream running in a deep valley.[1] From the whence the name of the three Toller villages, as well as of the hundred of Tollerford. At some point, however, this former name was replaced in use by reference to a particular feature in the river's course: "Hooke" is a derivation of hoc, Old English for "sharp bend in a stream".[2] It is possible that this description gave the village of Hooke its name, which then transferred to the river by back-formation.

Although the River Hooke is flanked on both sides by chalk slopes of the Dorset Downs, in its course it has cut down to greensand. According to the Dorset-born author and broadcaster Ralph Wightman, this has resulted in "many springy and boggy patches which are not typical of chalk valleys."[3] Writing in 1965, Wightman commented that at Hooke village itself "the largest spring I have ever seen used to gush out of the steep hillside, and was immediately used for watercress."[4]

There is a river level monitoring stations on the River Frome at Hooke.[5]

  1. ^ Mills, A.D. (1986). Dorset Place-Names Their Origins and Meanings. Wimborne, Dorset: Roy Gasson Associates. p. 145.
  2. ^ Gant, R., Dorset Villages, Hale, 1980, p134
  3. ^ Wightman, R., Portrait of Dorset, Hale, 1983, p93
  4. ^ Wightman, R., Portrait of Dorset, Hale, 1983, p94
  5. ^ "River Hooke level at Hooke - GOV.UK". check-for-flooding.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 5 January 2024.