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Ashton Canal
{{{alt}}}
The Ashton Canal at Droylsden
Principal Engineer Benjamin Outram
Date of Act 1792
Date of first use 1796
Date Completed 1797
Date Closed 1961
Date Restored 1974
Maximum Boat Length 70 ft 0 in (21.34 m)
Maximum Boat Beam 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)
Start Point Ashton-under-Lyne
End Point Ducie St Jn, Manchester
Branch(es) Hollingwood Branch Canal, Stockport Branch, Islington Branch Canal
Connects to Huddersfield Narrow Canal, Peak Forest Canal, Rochdale Canal
Locks 18
Status Navigable
Navigation Authority British Waterways
Ashton Canal
legend
Urban straight track
-- Huddersfield Narrow Canal
Unknown route-map component "uJUNCld" Urban track turning from right
Dukinfield Jn
Unknown route-map component "uGRENZE" Urban straight track
Urban straight track Waterway turning to left
-- Peak Forest Canal
Waterway under major road
A6140 road
Waterway under motorway
M60 road
Unknown route-map component "uddHSTRg" Waterway T-junction to right
Hollinwood Branch Canal
Waterway under major road
A635 road
Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSu"
17-18 Fairfield locks
Unknown route-map component "uSWING"
Clockhouse swing bridge
Unknown route-map component "uSWING"
Grimshaws swing bridge
Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSu"
13-16 Clayton locks
Unknown route-map component "uSWING"
Crabtree swing bridge
Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSu"
11-12 Clayton locks
Unknown route-map component "uJUNCld" Unwatered canal turning from right
Clayton Jn
Urban straight track Unwatered canal turning left
Stockport Branch (5 miles)
Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSu"
8-10 Clayton locks
Waterway under major road
A635 road
Unknown route-map component "uFGATEu"
7 Beswick lock
Waterway under major road
A6010 road
Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSu"
4-6 Beswick locks
Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSu"
2-3 Ancoats locks
Unknown route-map component "ugSTRq" Waterway T-junction to right
Islington Branch Canal
Unknown route-map component "uFGATEu"
1 Ancoats locks
Waterway under major road
A665 road
Waterway with marina/wharf on left
Thomas Telford basin
Unknown route-map component "uBROADo"
Store Street Aqueduct
Urban track turning from right + Unknown route-map component "POINTERl"
Urban straight track
-- Rochdale Canal
Unknown route-map component "uJUNCld" Waterway T-junction to right
Ducie St Jn
Urban straight track + Unknown route-map component "POINTERl"
-- Bridgewater Canal

The Ashton Canal is a canal built in Greater Manchester in North West England.

Contents

Route

The Ashton leaves the Rochdale Canal at Ducie St. Junction in central Manchester, and climbs for six miles (10 km) and 18 locks, passing through Ancoats, Holt Town, Bradford-with-Beswick, Clayton, Openshaw, Droylsden, Fairfield and Audenshaw to make a head-on junction with the Huddersfield Narrow Canal (formerly the Huddersfield Canal) at Whitelands Basin in the centre of Ashton-under-Lyne. At Bradford, the canal passes by the venue of the 2002 Commonwealth Games.

Apart from the Rochdale and Huddersfield Narrow canals, the Ashton Canal only currently connects with one other canal. Just short of Whitelands, at Dukinfield Junction/Portland Basin a short arm crosses the river Tame on the Tame Aqueduct, and makes a head-on junction with the Peak Forest Canal.

There used to be four other important connections to branch canals: the Islington Branch Canal in Ancoats; the Stockport Branch Canal from Clayton to Stockport (Heaton Norris); the Hollinwood Branch Canal from Fairfield to Hollinwood; and the Fairbottom Branch Canal (itself a branch of the Hollinwood Branch Canal) from Waterhouses to Fairbottom. There was to have been a fifth branch, namely the Beat Bank Branch Canal (itself a branch of Stockport Branch Canal) from Reddish to Beat Bank in Denton, but this was abandoned before completion.

Many of the canal locks are now listed buildings.[1]

History

The first section between Ancoats Lane to Ashton-under-Lyne and Hollinwood was completed in 1796, followed by the lines to Heaton Norris and Fairbottom in 1797. Although there were plans to link it to the Rochdale Canal, it opened as an isolated waterway. The canal received its Act of Parliament in 1792.

Benjamin Outram was retained to complete the final section between Ancoats Lane and the Rochdale Canal including the Piccadilly Basin. It included the unique Store Street Aqueduct, built on a 45 degree skew and believed to be the first major such structure in Britain and the oldest still in use today.

The section was completed by 1798, but the necessary extension by the Rochdale proprietors to the Bridgewater Canal was not built until 1800. Although the Huddersfield Narrow Canal was open as far as Woolroad by 1798, neither it, nor the Peak Forest Canal were complete. In fact it was another ten years before the former connected to Yorkshire and the east coast.

With little but local trade in its early years, the canal struggled financially and a dividend was not paid until 1806.

It then prospered until competition from railways, and later road transport, greatly diminished traffic, and through traffic had ended by 1945. Traffic on the branches ended in the 1930s. Following nationalisation in 1947-8, traffic did not revive, and all traffic had ceased by 1958, after which maintenance was run down. By 1961, combined with vandalism, the canal had become unnavigable, and its retention for pleasure use seemed unlikely.

The Ashton Canal was one of seven stretches of canal, formerly designated as remainder waterways, which were re-classified by the British Waterways Act of 8 February 1983. Under the act, a total of 82 miles (132 km) of canal were upgraded to Cruising Waterway Standard.[2]

Leisure use

Pressure from the Inland Waterways Association, combined with the formation of the Peak Forest Canal Society, led to a campaign to reopen the Ashton, with the major organised volunteer clearance of the section though Droylsden in September 1968, known as Operation Ashton. Further campaigning, and the growth of local authority support, led to its restoration, along with the adjacent lower Peak Forest Canal, and reopening on 1 April 1974.[3]

The restoration of these two canals opened up the Cheshire Ring, an immediately- (and still-) popular one-week leisure cruise circling much of east Cheshire. With the opening of the Southern Pennine canals, the Ashton is now also part of the South Pennine Ring (Rochdale and Huddersfield Narrow) and the longest Pennine Ring of all (Outer Pennine Ring - Leeds & Liverpool and Huddersfield Narrow).

It used to be common to hear reports of unfortunate incidents along the Ashton, such as thefts from boats and intimidating, or at least unnerving, behaviour on the part of some local youths and children. This, for a time, caused boats to go through in convoys.[4][5][6] Today the Ashton Canal is increasingly valued by the communities through which it passes, and although many boaters still advise others to cover the Ashton during early hours, and not in school holidays, reports of problems often turn out to be the repeated telling of old stories. Portland Basin is a good overnight mooring after ascending the Ashton locks, if one does not wish to proceed beyond Romiley.

There are current campaigns to restore the Hollinwood Branch and Stockport Branches.

See also

References

  • Schofield, R.B., (2000) Benjamin Outram, Cardiff: Merton Priory Press
  1. ^ http://www.manchester.gov.uk/planning/heritage/listed/streets1.htm
  2. ^ Inland Waterways of Great Britain, (1985), 6th Ed, Lewis A. Edwards, Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson, ISBN 0-85288-081-2
  3. ^ Inland Waterways of Great Britain, 8th Ed., (2009), Jane Cumberlidge, Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson, ISBN 978-1-84623-010-3
  4. ^ "COPS AHOY IN NEW CANAL CRUISER". Manchester Evening News. 13 July 1996.  
  5. ^ "Bicentenary of Ashton Canal may help to return it to its former glory". Manchester Evening News. 17 March 1997.  
  6. ^ "Pirates ahoy on urban waterway". Manchester Evening News. 2 November 2004.  

External links

Coordinates: 53°28′58″N 2°06′00″W / 53.4828°N 2.0999°W / 53.4828; -2.0999








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