The National Lottery Heritage Fund is the largest funder for the UK’s heritage. Using money raised by National Lottery players we support projects that connect people and communities to heritage. Our vision is for heritage to be valued, cared for and sustained for everyone, now and in the future. From historic buildings, our industrial legacy and the natural environment, to collections, traditions, stories and more. Heritage can be anything from the past that people value and want to pass on to future generations. We believe in the power of heritage to ignite the imagination, offer joy and inspiration, and to build pride in place and connection to the past.
Using money raised by National Lottery players, The National Lottery Heritage Fund supports projects that connect people and communities with the UK’s heritage. Our project The River Fromus, Our Future, Our Past is made possible with The National Lottery Heritage Fund. Thanks to National Lottery players, our community has been able to enjoy, explore and understand our local River Fromus so that we can all value and protect this important natural heritage.
For more information about The National Lottery Heritage Fund go to their website: www.heritagefund.org.uk/
Over the last few years The Art Station has been focusing on The River Fromus which runs quietly and unnoticed through our town Saxmundham. Now we have spent time exploring it we understand it as a key feature in the history and landscape of the town not merely a minor watercourse. Watch the video we made about tracing the journey of the river.
Ekwall in The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names gives the origin of the town’s name as Seismund’s-ham, being the settlement of an otherwise unrecorded Saxon thegn or war lord. Saxmundham is recorded in the Little Domesday Book of 1086 and the reason the town exists is because originally the river would have been used to transport goods including building materials to build the early dwellings and create enclosures for animals. Perhaps Saxmundham was the furthest navigable point along the river and people settled here? There’s evidence of these building materials in the older period buildings all of which must have been transported up the river – presumably in flat bottomed barges when the river was navigable. Artefacts from Neolithic period (around 6,000BC), Anglo Saxon, Roman and Medieval periods have all been found in and around Saxmundham. In 2017 when construction took place to build houses on Church Hill an archeological dig found items from the Iron Age period, with struck flint, pottery, fired clay and a complete loomweight being recovered from pits and ditches. The trenching confirmed the presence of preserved archaeological remains from the Iron Age and Anglo-Saxon periods, believed to relate to settlement activity uncovered during archaeological works on the adjacent site. A settlement along the River Fromus was evidenced by two additional pit clusters of the period previously excavated nearby. For more information about archeological finds in Saxmundham go to Oxford Archeology and put Saxmundham in the search.
Our project funded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund was to find out more about our river and to offer access to this knowledge about our local natural heritage. This project is described here so that everyone can learn about the river, its beauty and its value. This focus comes at a key time when all rivers in the UK are under threat through pollution caused by the lack of cohesive policy and infrastructure in place to protect these significant and valuable natural assets and habitats. Our small river which runs into The River Alde is like many other rivers in Suffolk and across the UK and while some details will be specific to the River Fromus many of the challenges and also the potential for our river will also relate to and be significant for all rivers and river habitats.
To find out more about work done by The Rivers Trust to protect our rivers go to The Big River Watch

Saxmundham
The Fromus River is hardly visible in the town – just seen from two small bridges that lead from the main shopping high street to Fromus Green – a large green space, it looks like a polluted, littered stream, especially during the summer when water levels are low or the river is almost dry. The river has been canalised and is hemmed in by high banks and brick walls. Along the river bank trees and shrubs have grown up to create a green corridor that protects birds and small mammals and provides a habitat by the river. Blue Spaces Saxmundham have carried out river fly testing along the river at various points and have enabled our community to learn about the importance of riverflies. Riverflies are invertebrates that spend most of their life cycle in a river, stream, pond or lake. Along with other freshwater invertebrates, they are at the heart of the freshwater ecosystem and are a vital link in the aquatic food chain. Their common characteristics of limited mobility, relatively long life cycle, presence throughout the year and specific tolerances to changes in environmental conditions make them useful indicators of water quality, pollution, siltation and low flows. For further info and to find out how to get involved with riverfly testing go to the Riverfly Partnership.
Because the river runs straight and is canalised, when the water is high following heavy rainfall, the water speeds up and this is when flooding is most likely to occur. The river needs to be allowed to flow outwards onto a water meadow as part of a natural flood plain outside of the town rather than racing along a straight channel and flooding onto the high street and into buildings. This approach would create valuable seasonal water meadow habitats and reduce flooding in the town and is being piloted across the country. Learn more about Natural Flood Management.
At Benhall the river crosses the road as a shallow ford where its easy to slip if you’re on foot or a bicycle! The river now looks like a small stream or mini river again here. A few minutes walk away is Benhall Wadd a managed wetland meadow landscape. When we visited it was just being cut for the first time in three years. Cutting and removing the tops reduces the nutrients in the soil which encourages wetland plants and flowers to continue to grow there. Artist Anna Islely is the Warden of the Wadd – a role she takes seriously in making sure The Wadd remains a distinct and beautiful habitat. The Wadd is surrounded by the Alder Carr – a wetland of Alder trees. A fine network of rivulets and streams which eventually join the river keep this wetland area wet! Peter Hobson’s focus was on the gallery forest next to the Wadd – a very much untouched area of woodland which grows either side of a river courseway. This woodland is very special as it hasn’t been coppiced or pollarded and grows straight up to the light with a high crown and sits on the alluvial peat beds. The gallery forest is essential for cooling the surrounding landscape and the water quality of the river depends on there being a substantial gallery forest. We’ve learnt that so many of the local habitats including the river depend on each other and need to co-exist in a balanced way. You have to start thinking differently and view the whole environment as vitally interrelated and how together they create the richest and most beneficial biodiversity.
At Gromford Ford the river was running slowly again and at the small footbridge it was almost static where the river had become blocked. The presence of specific plants and weeds indicated high levels of phosphates and nitrates – decreasing the opportunity of invertebrates and amphibians to thrive there.
At Snape Reserve the RSPB working with the Environment agency have created a wetland and reed beds and freshwater marshes from low lying pasture land. This extensive wetland now supports bitterns, marsh harriers and will benefit wildlife such as otters, water voles, kingfishers, and dragonflies. Access to this area is restricted in order to protect all the newly created habitats and wildlife so The Art Station was delighted to be allowed a special tour with Aaron Howe, RSPB site manager. The river looks like a ‘proper river’ here, incredibly beautiful and the landscape is made up of an abundance of trees, reeds, wildflowers and birds. What if all rivers could be like this? What can we do as individuals and a community to support the river to return to a rich biodiverse habitat with clean water that supports our local species to thrive and provides an opportunity for us to improve our quality of life through enjoying nature and our river landscape.
The River Fromus flows into the River Alde within the Snape Reserve looked after by RSPB Snape. The Environment Agency maintain a tide flap at the mouth of the river so they can control the flow of water. Normally the River Fromus gently trickles into the River Alde through the tide flap. When the River Alde is too full then the tide flap seals itself off to prevent more water flowing through from the River Fromus. It’s then necessary to wait for the water in the River Alde to subside before the gate can open again to allow free flowing from the River Fromus. If both rivers become full then there’s a risk of flooding as the water is limited in where it can go so will travel sideways onto roads and riversides along the flood plain. From this point the Alde flows past Snape Maltings, an important cultural landmark for our community, and then out into The Estuary and towards the sea.
A new project called the Four Rivers Recovery Project is bringing people together to make positive changes for our four main rivers in East Suffolk: The Alde and The Ore, The Deben, The Waveney, and The Blyth. The Art Station hope to be part of that project as The Fromus feeds into The Alde – and all tributaries will have a role to play in creating a better landscape and improving the quality of water. Go to Four Rivers Recovery Project to get involved.