Ralph Creyke was a proponent of
warping, a process where silt-laden water was allowed to flow over barren land, and to deposit the silt on its surface. He lived at Rawcliffe House in
Goole, and was probably the first person in Yorkshire to carry out warping as a contract. His first contract was in 1812 for Francis Blackburne, where he agreed to warp in Goole for a price of £1,165. His next known project was the warping of in Sandhill for his client Josias Cockshutt Twisleton, while in April 1816 he obtained permission to warp in Rawcliffe from the Court of Sewers. All three of these schemes used silt-laden water from the final section of the
River Don, known as the Dutch River. His next major project was for "warping and otherwise improving certain moors, commons and wastes and other low grounds in the parishes of Whitgift and Snaith" and for this he obtained the '''''' (). In order to achieve this, he constructed the Swinefleet Warping Drain southwards from the
River Ouse to improve land on the edge of
Thorne Moors for agriculture. The first section was completed in 1821, and allowed him to warp of the moors. In recognition of his achievements, he was awarded a gold medal by the
Society for Encouragement of the Arts in 1825. Creyke, using his previous experience, constructed a sluice at Swinefleet Clough which was wide at the bottom and wide at the surface level of the land. It included two openings in the stonework, each wide, and four large pointing doors, which normally prevented the tide from entering, but could be held open by iron rods, to allow the tidal water to enter. Banks were constructed on either side of the main channel, and the drain initially ran for around , with the project including land purchase and the building of the sluice costing £18,000. By 1825, were being warped, on behalf of 30 landowners, who paid £15 per acre for Creyke's services. In a letter to the Society of Arts, Creyke explained that he worked on a bigger scale and at less cost than others who had preceded him. Hence the drain was wide, compared to the he had previously used, the sluice was over three times wider, and he was thus able to warp at a time, rather than . He also warped the land throughout the year, rather than just in the summer months. Creyke died in 1828, but his son, also known as Ralph Creyke, inherited the drain and continued the family warping business. By 1845, some of land towards Fockerby Common were being warped, facilitated by an extension of the Swinefleet Warping Drain by to the east, a section now known as Red House Drain. The younger Creyke was subsequently involved in a large scheme to warp of Thorne Moors, working with
T H S Sotheron, for which they obtained the '''''' , but the project was beset by legal delays, and work never commenced. Creyke continued to work with Sotheron's descendants until 1878, when he sold the warping business to Makin Durham, who was another great exponent of warping. He had built Durham's Warping Drain eastwards from the River Don in 1856, extended it further eastwards prior to 1881, and then built a southern extension to the site that later became
Thorne Colliery. Around 1875, Durham formed the Yorkshire Land and Warping Company, which had its registered office at Thorne from then until 1947, when the company was wound up. Swinefleet Warping Drain was part of the assets of that company, either from 1878, or maybe from 1904. Makin died at the beginning of 1882 at the age of 77 yrs. Gradually, the value of the moors as a source of peat for commercial exploitation became more important than their potential for agriculture, and attempts to create agricultural land dwindled. Around 1900, Swinefleet Warping Drain was extended southwards, giving it a total length of around The drain was used for warping land near Medge Hall,
Crowle just before the start of the
First World War, and was last used for this purpose in 1934.
Drainage Swinefleet has long been prone to flooding, due to the low-lying nature of the land, and in 1793, the '
was obtained to allow land within the parishes of Swinefleet and Reedness to be enclosed, and some drainage work to be carried out. Another act, the ' , created the Reedness and Swinefleet Drainage Commissioners, who managed land drainage in the area until the board was reconstituted in 1990, under the provisions of the
Land Drainage Act 1976 . The Reedness and Swinefleet
Internal Drainage Board manage of drainage ditches and have one pumping station. Most of the watercourses within their jurisdiction are man-made, and this includes that part of Swinefleet Warping Drain which is north of the county border at Blackwater Dyke. In 2019, they were considering building one or two ramps, to allow a weed-cutting boat to be used on the drain; modifications to their pumping station so that it would comply with regulations on the passage of eels along waterways; and the possibility of constructing a pumping station at the outlet of the drain, at an estimated cost of £2.5 million. A ramp was built in March 2019, and trails with a weed-cutting boat were successful. Immediately to the west of Swinefleet Warping Drain, Goole Fields District Drainage Board (DDB) manage the drainage of of land, where they maintain of drains and have one pumping station. Some of the excess water from their area enters the River Ouse through a sluice at the end of Shipcote Drain, just to the west of the Warping Drain outlet, but water is also pumped from Goole Fields Cross Drain into the Warping Drain by a pumping station. The pumping station outputs between 13 Ml per day and an agreed maximum of 22 Ml per day. Since the cessation of peat extraction on the moors, large areas form the Thorne, Crowle and Goole Moors
Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). In order to aid the recovery of the peat moors, water levels are held significantly higher than they had been when peat extraction was taking place, and
English Nature also use pumping in an attempt to maintain constant water levels. Construction of their current pumping station on Blackwater Dike commenced in late 2016, and included the installation and commissioning of a permanent
Archimedes' screw pump to ensure that water levels in the peat bog are kept at an optimum level for peat regeneration. The work was commissioned by the Doncaster East
Internal Drainage Board, and the principal contractor for the works was North Midland Construction PLC. The installation includes a tilting weir, which controls water levels for much of the time, but when the pump is required, it is powered by an off-grid generator, controlled by a telemetry system which uses wind and solar power. The installation was the first in the United Kingdom to use a new design of screw pump, enclosed in a vinyl ester pipe, which greatly improves its efficiency, and allows fish to travel through it without harm. The new pump is powered by electricity, derived from a battery pack which is charged by a wind generator and solar cells, with an auxiliary diesel generator which can be used if necessary. The amount of water that English Nature can pump into the Warping Drain is restricted by the need to maintain the gravity outfall from Black Dyke and Reedness village, while in 2019 the new pump was out of action for several months, resulting in the old one having to be used. Goole Fields DDB consider that water flowing out of the SSSI as a result of the new regime threatens properties in the parish of
Goole Fields. ==Route==