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Birmingham Canal Navigations
(BCN) is a network of navigable canals connecting Birmingham, Wolverhampton, and the eastern part of
the Black
Country. The BCN is connected to the rest of the English canal
system at several junctions.
At its working peak, the BCN contained about 160 miles (257 km)
of canals; today just over 100 miles (160 km) are navigable, and
the majority of traffic is from tourist and residential narrowboats.
History
BCN Network (within shaded area) from historical map, 1864
The first canal to be built in the area was the Birmingham
Canal, built from 1768 to 1772 under the supervision of James Brindley
from the, then, edge of Birmingham, with termini at Newhall Wharf
(since built over) and Paradise Wharf (also known as Old Wharf)
near to Gas
Street Basin to meet the Staffordshire and
Worcestershire Canal at Aldersley (north of Wolverhampton).
The Birmingham and Fazeley
Canal, from Birmingham to Tamworth, followed in 1784 with the
Birmingham Canal Company merging with the Birmingham and Fazeley
Canal Company immediately, to form what was originally called the
Birmingham and Birmingham and Fazeley Canal Company. This
cumbersome name was short-lived, and the combined company became
known as the Birmingham Canal Navigations from 1794, as
the network was expanded.
Levels
The BCN is built on three main levels, each with its own reservoirs.
- 453 ft, the Birmingham Level;
- 473 ft, the Wolverhampton Level;
- 408 ft, the Walsall Level
These levels are linked by locks at various places
on the network.
There are also stretches on their own levels.
- The Titford
Canal and its branches were built at 511 ft, linked to the Titford Reservoir (Titford Pool). A feeder
supplies water to the Edgbaston Reservoir.
- A short section of the BCN Old Main Line, at Smethwick Summit, was built
at 491 ft. Pumps at either end were built to pump water used by the
locks back to the summit - one at Spon Lane locks, and one at
Smethwick locks: the Smethwick Engine. When the summit
became too busy John
Smeaton designed a scheme where it was lowered by 18 feet to
the Wolverhampton level, eliminating six locks and providing a
parallel set of locks at Smethwick which improved traffic
throughput. It also linked to the general Wolverhampton Level
supply of water.
The canals
of the BCN
Fingerpost at Old Turn
Junction, where the BCN Main Line meets the Birmingham and Fazeley
Canal
- BCN Main
Line (originally known as the Birmingham Canal) from Aldersley
Junction (north of Wolverhampton) to Gas Street
Basin (at the Worcester Bar in central Birmingham), using some
of the Old Main Line canal.
- Old Main Line, originally terminating in Birmingham at two
wharfs now built upon: Old Wharf (adjacent to Gas Street Basin) and
Newhall Wharf.
- New Main Line, a revised route for the Birmingham Canal, double
towpathed, largely
progressing in straight lines using cuttings and tunnels.
- Bentley
Canal
- Birmingham and Fazeley
Canal (from Old Turn Junction (by the National Indoor Arena), eastwards
to the Coventry
Canal at Fazeley Junction)
- Bradley Locks Branch
- Dudley Canal
- The Engine
Arm
- Gower
Branch Canal - linking the Birmingham and Wolverhampton levels,
via three locks, at Tividale.
- Netherton Tunnel Branch
Canal
- Rushall
Canal
- Soho Branch Loop Line (an old circuitous route cut off by
Telford's improvements, originally with a branch, the Soho Branch
to Soho Wharf, serving the Soho Manufactory)
- Spon Lane Locks Branch (between Bromford Junction and Spon Lane
Junction on the Old Main Line - 3 locks, part of the original
Wednesbury Canal, not to be confused with Spon Lane
Branch, another name for Tat Bank Branch on the Titford
Canal)
- Titford
Canal
- Tame
Valley Canal (a later canal cutting off some northern
meanders)
- Walsall
Canal (a more modern canal connecting the main line with
Walsall and forming a big northern loop with the Wyrley and
Essington Canal)
- Wednesbury Oak Loop (part of the
original Old Main Line, now incomplete)
- Wednesbury Old Canal - part of the
original Wednesbury Canal
- Wyrley and Essington Canal
(bought by the Birmingham Canal Navigations in 1840)
- Anglesey Branch
- Birchills Branch
- Cannock Extension Canal
- Daw End Branch Canal
- Lord Hay's Branch (Lords Hayes Branch) (abandoned)
Linking
canals
Associated
features
Engineers
Society
The BCN Society is a registered
charity (number 1091760) formed in 1968, which exists to
conserve, improve and encourage a wide range of interests in the
BCN. It publishes a quarterly journal. Boundary Post. From
1983, it erected signposts at most of the canal junctions on the
BCN.
References
- Broadbridge, S. R.. The
Birmingham Canal Navigations, Vol. 1 1768 - 1846. David &
Charles. ISBN
0-7509-2077-7.
(There was no
second volume)
- Foster, Richard. Birmingham New
Street. The Story of a Great Station Including Curzon Street. 1
Background and Beginnings. The Years up to 1860. Wild Swan
Publications. ISBN
0-906867-78-9.
- Hadfield, Charles (1969). The
Canals of the West Midlands (Second ed.). David & Charles.
ISBN
0-7153-4660-1.
- Pearson, Michael. Canal
Companion - Birmingham Canal Navigations. J. M. Pearson &
Associates. ISBN
0-907864-49-X.
- canal maps and
text
- Perrott,David; Mosse,Jonathan
(2006). Nicholson Waterways Guide 3 - Birmingham & the
Heart of England. Collins. ISBN
978-0-00-721111-1.
- Birmingham Canal
Navigations. GEOprojects. ISBN
0-86351-172-4.
- Highly detailed
printed 1:30,000 sheet map
See also
External
links
Coordinates: 52°28′39″N 1°54′32″W / 52.4776°N
1.9088°W / 52.4776;
-1.9088