CANALS OF GREAT BRITAIN

(Redirected from Canals of the United Kingdom)
:''For canals of Northern Ireland see the Canals of Ireland article''

Contents
History of commercial carrying
Growth of leisure use
Present status
Canals in England
Canals in Scotland
Canals in Wales
Canals that have been abandoned or are currently not navigable
Proposed canal routes
Canal features
Canal boats
Canal museums
See also
References
External links

History of commercial carrying


''See History of the British canal system for a more detailed history.''
Traditional working canal boats

Canals first saw use during the Roman occupation of Great Britain, and were used mainly for irrigation. However, the Romans did create several navigable canals, such as Foss Dyke, to link rivers, enabling increased transportation inland by water.
Great Britain's navigable waterway network was steadily increased (by making existing rivers navigable, rather than cutting canals), but grew massively in the 18th century as the demand for industrial transport increased. The canals were key to the pace of the Industrial Revolution: roads at the time were unsuitable for large volumes of traffic. A system of very large pack horse trains had developed, but few roads were suitable for large wheeled vehicles able to transport large amounts of materials (especially fragile manufactured goods such as pottery) quickly. Canal boats were very much quicker, could carry large volumes, and were much safer for fragile items. Following the success of the Bridgewater Canal (the first modern artificial canal in Britain), other canals were quickly constructed between industrial centres, cities and ports, and were soon transporting vast amounts of raw materials (esp coal and lumber) and manufactured goods. There were immediate benefits to households, as well as to commerce: in Manchester, the cost of coal fell by 75% when the Bridgewater Canal arrived.
As the Industrial Revolution took hold in the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century, the canals enjoyed great success and underwent various technological changes. Early canals "contoured" round hills and valleys, later ones went straighter, as locks took them up and down hills, and the more modern canals strode across valleys on taller and longer aqueducts and through hills in longer and deeper tunnels.
However, from the mid 19th century, railways began to replace canals, especially those built with the standard narrow (7ft) bridges and locks. As trains, and later road vehicles, became more advanced, they became more economically viable than canal boats, being faster, cheaper to run, and able to carry much larger cargoes. The canal network declined, and many canals were bought by railway companies. Narrow canals became unusable, filled with weeds, silt and rubbish, or converted to railways.
There was a late burst of wide-waterway building (eg the Caledonian Canal, and the Manchester Ship Canal), and of invention and innovation by people such as Bartholomew of the Aire and Calder company, who conceived the trains of 19 coal-filled "Tom Pudding" compartment boats that were pulled along the Aire and Calder Navigation from the Yorkshire coalfields, and lifted bodily to upturn their contents directly into seagoing colliers at Goole Docks (their descendants, Hargreaves' tugs pushing three coal-pans trains to be upended into hoppers at the Aire power stations lasted as late as 2004). However, the last new canal before the end of the 20th century was the New Junction Canal in Yorkshire (now South Yorkshire) in 1905. As competition intensified, horse-drawn single narrowboats were replaced by diesel powered boats towing an unpowered butty, and the boatman's family abandoned their shore homes for a life afloat, to help with boat handling and to reduce accommodation costs - the birth of the legendary "boatman's cabin" with bright white lace, gleaming brass and gaily-painted metalware.
Constant lowering of tolls meant that the carriage of some bulky, non-perishable, and non-vital goods by water was still feasible on some inland waterways - but the death knell for the canal system as a viable commercial network was sounded in the winter of 1947, when a long hard frost kept goods icebound on the canals for many weeks, and most of the remaining customers turned to the road and rail haulage industry to ensure reliability of supply. Some individual waterways (especially the Manchester Ship Canal) remained viable, and there were still hopes for development, but "Containerisation" of ports and lorries mostly passed the waterways by. The last major investment development of the inland waterways was the enlargement of the South Yorkshire Navigation in the early 1980s to cope with barges of standard European dimensions that (in the depression of the 80s) never came. The scale of the futile hopes of those days can be appreciated by the occupants of a holiday narrowboat nearly lost in a lock built for the barges that were going to sail down the Rhine, across the North Sea, and up to Doncaster.

Growth of leisure use



In the latter half of the 20th century, while the use of canals for transporting 'goods' was dying out, there was a rise in interest in their history and potential use for leisure. A large amount of credit for this is usually given to L. T. C. Rolt, whose book "Narrowboat" about a journey made in ''nb Cressy'' was published in 1944. A key development was the foundation of the Inland Waterways Association, and the establishment by some boatyards of a fledgling weekly-boat-hire companies, following the example of such companies on the Norfolk Broads, which had long been used for leisure boating.
Holidaymakers began renting 'narrowboats' and roaming the canals, visiting towns and villages they passed. Other people bought boats to use for weekend breaks and the occasional longer trip. The concept of a canal holiday became even more familiar when the large agencies that dealt with Broads holidays began to include canal boatyards in their brochures. Canal-based holidays became popular due to their relaxing nature, self-catering levels of cost, and huge variety of scenery available; from inner London to the Scottish Highlands. This growth in interest came just in time to give local canal societies the ammunition they needed to combat government proposals in the 1960s to close commercially-unviable canals, and to resist pressure from local authorities and newspapers to "Fill In this eyesore" or even to "Close the Killer Canal" (when someone fell in one). It was not long before enthusiastic volunteers were repairing unnavigable but officially-open canals and moving on to restore officially-closed ones and demonstrating their renewed viability to the authorities. It is said that the real breakthrough came when the British Waterways Board came to realise that income from the licence of a leisure boat is just as real as income from a "real" working boat.
Local authorities began to see how a cleaned-up and well-used waterway was bringing visitors to other towns and waterside pubs(not just boaters, but people who just like being near water and watching boats (see gongoozler). They began to clean up their own watersides, and to campaign for "their" canal to be restored. As a result of this growing revival of interest, there are now even some new routes under construction for the first time in a century, linking navigable rivers and existing canals. Large projects such as the restoration of the spectacular Anderton Boat Lift, or the building of the startling Falkirk Wheel attracted development funding from the European Union and from the Millennium Fund. A project called the Jubilee River, which diverts flood waters from the River Thames in Berkshire, is already open but it was designed to look and act like a natural river, and it is not generally counted as a new canal.

Present status


There are now thousands of miles of navigable canals and rivers throughout Great Britain. Most of them are linked into a single English and Welsh network from Bath to London, Liverpool to Goole, and Lancaster to Ripon, and connecting the Irish Sea, the North Sea, the estuaries of the Humber, Thames, Mersey, River Severn, and River Ribble. This network is navigable in its entirety by a narrowboat (a boat 7ft wide) no longer than about 56 feet. There are also several significant through-routes not connected to the main network (eg Glasgow to Edinburgh via the Falkirk Wheel, and Inverness to Fort William via Loch Ness.
The aim of campaigning bodies such as the Inland Waterways Association is to persuade British Waterways (which owns about half of Britain's inland waterway network) to fully reopen all disused canals. In May 2005 The Times reported that British Waterways was hoping to quadruple the amount of cargo carried on Britain's canal network to 6 million tonnes by 2010 by transporting large amounts of waste to disposal facilities.
=List of Canals=
The following list includes some systems that are navigable rivers with sections of canal (eg Aire and Calder Navigation) as well as "completely" artificial canals (eg Rochdale Canal).

Canals in England



Aire and Calder Navigation

Andover Canal

Ashby-de-la-Zouch Canal

Ashton Canal

Barnsley Canal

Basingstoke Canal

Baybridge Canal

Beaumont Cut

Birmingham Canal Navigations (a company owning many canals around Birmingham and the Black Country, including the Birmingham Old Main Line and the Birmingham New Main Line) (''see BCN Main Line)

Birmingham and Fazeley Canal (part of Birmingham Canal Navigations)

Blyth Navigation, Suffolk

Bridgewater Canal

Bridgwater and Taunton Canal

Bude Canal

Bumble Hole Branch Canal

Calder and Hebble Navigation

Caldon Canal

Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation

Chester Canal (now part of the Shropshire Union Canal)

Chesterfield Canal

Chichester Canal

Coalport Canal

Coventry Canal

Cromford Canal

Dartford and Cray Navigation, Kent

Dearne and Dove Canal, South Yorkshire

Derby Canal

Digbeth Branch Canal (part of Birmingham Canal Navigations)

Dorset and Somerset Canal

Driffield Navigation, East Yorkshire

Droitwich Canal

Dudley Canal - Dudley Canal Line No 1 and Dudley Canal Line No 2 (part of Birmingham Canal Navigations)

Ellesmere Canal (much of which is now known as the Llangollen Canal)

Erewash Canal, Derbyshire

Exeter Canal

Fairbottom Branch Canal

Fletcher's Canal

Foss Dyke

Gloucester and Sharpness Canal, Gloucestershire

Grand Junction Canal (now part of Grand Union Canal)

Grand Union Canal

Grand Western Canal

Grantham Canal

Hatherton Canal

Herefordshire and Gloucestershire Canal

Hertford Union Canal, London

Hollinwood Branch Canal

Horncastle Canal

Huddersfield Broad Canal

Huddersfield Narrow Canal

Ipswich and Stowmarket Navigation, Suffolk

Islington Branch Canal

Kennet and Avon Canal

Lancaster Canal

Lea Navigation, London

Leeds and Liverpool Canal

Leven Canal

Lichfield Canal

Limehouse Cut, London

Liskeard and Looe Union Canal

Llangollen Canal

Louth Navigation

Macclesfield Canal

Manchester, Bolton and Bury Canal

Manchester Ship Canal

Market Weighton Canal

Melton Mowbray Navigation

Middle Level Navigations

Montgomery Canal

Newcastle-under-Lyme Canal

North Walsham & Dilham Canal, Norfolk

North Wilts Canal

Nottingham Canal

Oakham Canal

Oxford Canal, Oxfordshire

Peak Forest Canal

Pocklington Canal

Regent's Canal, London

Ribble Link

Ripon Canal

Rochdale Canal

Rother Link

Royal Military Canal

Salisbury and Southampton Canal

Sankey Canal

Selby Canal

Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation

Shrewsbury Canal

Shropshire Canal

Shropshire Union Canal

Sir Nigel Gresley's Canal

Somerset Coal Canal

Southwick Ship Canal

St. Columb Canal

Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal

Stainforth and Keadby Canal

Stockport Branch Canal

Stort Navigation

Stourbridge Canal

Stratford-upon-Avon Canal

Stroudwater Navigation

Tame Valley Canal (part of Birmingham Canal Navigations)

Tavistock Canal

Thames and Medway Canal, Kent (also known as the Gravesend and Rochester Canal)

Thames and Severn Canal

Titchfield Canal

Trent and Mersey Canal

Ulverston Canal

Uttoxeter Canal

Weaver Navigation, Cheshire

Wardle Canal, Cheshire

Wednesbury Old Canal (part of Birmingham Canal Navigations)

Wey and Arun Junction Canal

Wey and Godalming Navigations

Wilts and Berks Canal

Worcester and Birmingham Canal

Worsley Navigable Levels

Wyrley and Essington Canal (part of Birmingham Canal Navigations)

Canals in Scotland



Aberdeenshire Canal

Caledonian Canal

Crinan Canal

Dingwall Canal

Forth and Clyde Canal

Glasgow, Paisley and Johnstone Canal

Monkland Canal

Union Canal (originally known as ''Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal'')

Canals in Wales



Aberdare Canal

Glamorganshire Canal

Kidwelly and Llanelli Canal

Llangollen Canal

Monmouthshire, Brecon and Abergavenny Canal

Montgomery Canal

Neath and Tennant Canal

Swansea Canal

Canals that have been abandoned or are currently not navigable



Andover Canal

Bentley Canal, Wolverhampton/Walsall

Bradford Canal, West Yorkshire

★ 'Brown's Canal' – A 1 mile long canal built around 1801 that connected to the River BrueThe Canals of Southwest England ''Charles Hadfield'' Page 190-191 ISBN 0-7153-8645-X

Caistor Canal, Lincolnshire

Cann Quarry Canal

Car Dyke

Chard Canal

Cinderford Canal

City Canal, London

Coombe Hill Canal

Charnwood Forest Canal

Croydon Canal, London

Donnington Wood Canal, East Shropshire

Fletcher's Canal, Clifton, Salford

Galton's Canal, Somerset

Glastonbury Canal

Grand Surrey Canal, London

Grosvenor Canal, London

Hackney Canal, Devon

Horncastle Canal, Lincolnshire

Itchen Navigation, Hampshire

Kensington Canal, London

Ketley Canal, East Shropshire

Leominster Canal

Nutbrook Canal

Ouse Navigation, Sussex

Par Canal, Cornwall

★ 'Parnall's Canal' – A half mile long canal that was built in Cornwall in about 1720 near St Austell. It was closed due to a rock slide in about 1732.The Canals of Southwest England ''Charles Hadfield'' Page 165 ISBN 0-7153-8645-X

Portsmouth and Arundel Canal

Rolle Canal (Also known as the 'Torrington Canal')

Shrewsbury Canal

Somersetshire Coal Canal

Stamford Canal

Stover Canal, Devon

Ulverston Canal

Westport Canal, Somerset

Wombridge Canal, East Shropshire

Proposed canal routes



★ 'Grand Union Canal (Slough Branch)'
Extending Slough arm of the Grand Union Canal south to join the River Thames.

★ 'York stream (Maidenhead)'
Making the York stream fully navigable for boats and linking to other nearby canals and navigable rivers.

★ 'Bedford and Milton Keynes Waterway'
Connection from Grand Union Canal at Milton Keynes to the River Great Ouse at Bedford.

★ 'Warwick'
Connection from River Avon to Grand Union Canal via Warwick.

★ 'London to Portsmouth'
At various times in history, proposals were made for a secure inland route from the capital London to the headquarters of the Royal Navy at Portsmouth to be constructed, which would allow craft to move between the two without having to venture out into the English Channel and possibly encounter enemy ships. There is no naturally navigable route between the two cities, resulting in several proposals. ''See London to Portsmouth canal''.

★ 'Fens Waterways Link'
The Fens Waterways Link is a new circular route centred on the rivers Nene and Welland in the east of England. Planned in conjunction with the Milton Keynes and Bedford link, it will eventually be connected to the rest of the country's waterways via the Great Ouse.

Canal features


===Aqueducts===

Avon Aqueduct

Almond Aqueduct

Avoncliff Aqueduct

Barton Swing Aqueduct

Bullbridge Aqueduct

Chirk Aqueduct

Clifton Aqueduct

Cosgrove aqueduct

Dundas Aqueduct

Lichfield Aqueduct

Marple Aqueduct

Midford Aqueduct at Midford on the Somerset Coal Canal

Pontcysyllte Aqueduct

Prestolee Aqueduct

Slateford Aqueduct

Store Street Aqueduct
===Boat lifts===

Anderton Boat Lift

Falkirk Wheel

Combe Hay Caisson Lock
===Inclined planes===

Hay Inclined Plane

Foxton Inclined Plane

The Underground Incline
===Locks===

Bath Locks

Bingley Five Rise Locks

Bingley Three Rise Locks

Bow Locks

Caen Hill Locks, Devizes

Crofton Locks

Eastham Lock - the largest in the UK, at Eastham, Merseyside

Foxton Locks

Fourteen Locks, Newport

Grindley Brook

Tardebigge Locks - the longest flight in the UK with 30 locks rising 67 metres.

Watford Locks

Whilton Locks
===Tunnels===

Blisworth Tunnel

Braunston Tunnel

Bruce Tunnel

Butterley Tunnel

Crick Tunnel

Dudley Tunnel

Harecastle Tunnel

Husbands Bosworth Tunnel

Lapal Tunnel

Netherton Tunnel

Norwood Tunnel

Saddington Tunnel

Sapperton Tunnel

Standedge Tunnel

Wast Hills Tunnel

Canal boats



★ Bastard boats or Statters (12' / 3.65 m beam; wide boats on Manchester, Bolton & Bury)

★ Broad-beam boats (called "wide boats" on the Grand Union canal, 2.2 m to 4.3 m beam)

★ Cabin Cruisers

★ Fly boats (long and short; on Aire & Calder)

★ Keels (on Aire & Calder)

★ Long boats (narrow boats used on Severn)

Narrowboats or Narrow Boats (approx. 7' / 2.13 m beam; originally working boats on Midlands canals; now mostly pleasure boats)

★ Severners (used on the River Severn)

★ Short boats (on Northern canals such as Leeds & Liverpool, Calder & Hebble, Aire & Calder)

★ Sloops (on Aire & Calder)

★ Starvationers used in the Worsley Navigable Levels and the Bridgewater Canal.

★ Trench boats (for 6' / 1.83 m locks on the Trench Arm of the Shrewsbury Canal)

★ Tub boats (used on various canals including Bude canal and the Grand Western canal)

★ White boats (on Aire & Calder canal; with white side decks for working at night)

★ Wide-beam narrowboats (more than 4.3 m beam)

Canal museums



National Waterways Museum, Gloucester

London Canal Museum

Stoke Bruerne Canal Museum, Northamptonshire

See also



Geography of the United Kingdom

History of the British canal system

Waterways in the United Kingdom

Waterway restoration

Canal ring


References


External links



London Canal Museum

Waterscape

British Waterways

UK Canals Network

Search for information about the inland waterways

UK Government Inland Waterways Policy

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