Warley Moor Reservoir, also known as Fly Flatts Reservoir, is a drinking water reservoir in West Yorkshire, England, owned and operated by Yorkshire Water.[1]
Warley Moor Reservoir | |
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Fly Flatts Reservoir | |
Location | West Yorkshire |
Coordinates | 53.7824°N 1.9560°W / 53.7824; -1.9560 |
Type | Reservoir |
Basin countries | England |
Managing agency | Yorkshire Water |
Built | 1872 (1872) |
Surface area | 68 acres (28 ha) |
Average depth | 45 feet (14 m) |
Water volume | 193 million imperial gallons (880 ML; 710 acre⋅ft) |
Completed in 1872, the reservoir was built by the engineer John Frederick La Trobe Bateman.[2] The first sod was cut on 20 May 1864, by the then Mayor of Halifax, William Holdsworth, who used a silver spade with the inscription:[2]
Halifax Corporation – The first sod of the Warley Moor Reservoir was turned with this spade, on Friday, the 20th May, 1864, by William Irving Holdsworth, Esq., Mayor of Halifax; J. F. Bateman, Engineer; John Parkinson and Joseph Mann, contractors; J. E. Norris, Town Clerk
The reservoir covers 68 acres (28 ha), is 45 feet (14 m) deep when full and holds up to 193,000,000 imperial gallons (880,000,000 L).[2] It was notably described in Whiteley Turner's 1913 book A Spring-Time Saunter: Round and About Bronte Land.[3]
The reservoir is used by Halifax Sailing Club.
Reservoirs in Yorkshire | ||
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North Yorkshire | ||
South Yorkshire | ||
West Yorkshire |