
The River Forth meanders over fertile farmlands near Stirling
The 'River Forth' (''Uisge For'' and ''Abhainn Dhubh'' (meaning "black river") in Gaelic), 47 km (29 miles) long, is the major
river draining the eastern part of the central belt of
Scotland.
The Forth rises in
Loch Ard in
The Trossachs, a
mountain range some 30 km (19 miles) west of
Stirling. It flows roughly eastward, through
Aberfoyle, joining with the
Duchray Water and
Kelty Water, and out over the flat expanse of the
Flanders Moss. It is then joined by the
River Teith (which itself drains
Loch Venachar,
Loch Lubnaig,
Loch Katrine, and
Loch Voil) and the
River Allan, before meandering through the ancient city of Stirling. At Stirling the river widens and becomes
tidal, and it is here that the last (seasonal)
ford of the river exists. From Stirling, the Forth flows east over the
Carse of Stirling and past the towns of
Alloa and
Airth. Upon reaching
Kincardine the river begins to widen into an
estuary, the
Firth of Forth.
Settlements on the Forth
There are a number of towns which line the shores, as well as the petrochemical complexes at Grangemouth, the commercial docks at Leith, oilrig construction yards at Methil, the ship-breaking facility at Inverkeithing and the naval dockyard at Rosyth, with numerous other industrial areas including the Forth Bridgehead area, Burntisland, Kirkcaldy, Bo'ness and Leven.
Navigation on the Forth
In
medieval times the Forth was navigable at least as far as Stirling, but
silting and the increase in
ship sizes now mean that traffic upstream of
Kincardine is rare.
Bridges over the Forth
Upstream of Stirling, the river is rather small and is crossed in numerous places (although prior to modern drainage works, the ground was often treacherously marshy near the riverbank). After its
confluence with the Teith and Allan, the river is sufficiently wide that a significant bridge is required. A
bridge has existed at Stirling since at least the
13th Century, and until the opening of the road crossing at Kincardine in
1936, Stirling remained the easternmost road crossing. Much further downstream (at Queensferry) the famous
rail bridge opened in
1890 and a modern
road bridge in
1964. A swinging railway bridge between
Alloa on the north shore and
Throsk on the south opened in
1885 and was closed (and largely demolished) in
1970.
See also
★
Rivers of the United Kingdom