The River Peck, too, has an attractive first view in Peckham, having started on One Tree Hill. It then vanishes underground, travelling beneath the streets of south London before linking up with the Earls Sluice. This begins its life in Ruskin Park, overshadowed by King's College Hospital.
There are few traces of the Earl's Sluice, except for the occasional dip in the road, or stench pipe, and when it, now united with the Peck, needs to cross the railway, it does it in a pipe!
Possibly the least known and hardest to trace of the rivers is the Neckinger, which wandered through the marshy areas of Lambeth, starting near the Thames before wandering south and then north again.
There are fine views to be had of St Paul's Cathedral at the start of the walk, though much of its course in the days when it really was a river would have been fairly nasty, with tanneries, slaughterhouses and mills all making use of its water.The Neckinger finally enters the Thames at St Saviour's Dock.
These pictures were all taken by Andrew. You will find many more if you look at Paul Talling's attractive book London's Lost Rivers



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