Lechlade is the highest town to which the
River Thames is navigable by relatively large craft including
narrowboats. It is possible to travel by river or walk the
Thames Path from here to London. In the early eighteenth century goods unloaded in
Bristol were transported to
Gloucester, carried overland to Lechlade and sent down the Thames to London. The
Halfpenny Bridge is therefore the usual start for a water based
Thames meander – the term for a long-distance journey down the Thames. The
Thames Path also continues upstream to the traditional source of the Thames at
Thames Head. The river is actually navigable for a short distance further upstream, near the village of
Inglesham, where the
Thames and Severn Canal joins the River Thames. Rowing boats can reach even further upstream, to
Cricklade. Lechlade is a popular resort for Thames boating. Boats of different types can be hired from here, from rowing boats to river cruisers. The highest lock on the Thames is
St John's Lock, at Lechlade, overlooked by a statue of
Old Father Thames. There is a view from
St John's Bridge across the lock and the meadows to the spire of St Lawrence's parish church. The River Leach flows into the Thames at St John's Bridge. The poet
Percy Bysshe Shelley composed
A Summer Evening Churchyard here which includes the lines Clothing in hues of heaven thy dim and distant spire Around whose lessening and invisible height Gather among the stars the clouds of night ==Economy==