Arram Beck is a small stream in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, running through high embankments and flowing eastwards from the village of Arram to join the River Hull.
It provides habitat for a variety of fish species (including perch, dace, roach) and chub have also been stocked here too.
The civil engineer for the project was William Chapman, who had submitted the original plans in 1796.
[3] According to Frederick Reynard, a resident of Sunderlandwick who gave evidence to a Royal Commission on Inland Waterways in 1906, the Beck, which is only about 660 yards (600 m) long, was occasionally used for navigation in the 19th century, but had ceased to be so by 1894.
[4] As part of the Environment Agency flood reduction works, Aike Beck was diverted into it in the 1990s.