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Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation
legend
Unknown route-map component "uJUNCa"
Aire and Calder Navigation
Urban bridge over water
River Went
Waterway with floodgate down
Sykehouse Lock
Unknown route-map component "uGRENZE"
New Junction Canal
Unused waterway turning from left Unknown route-map component "ueKRZo" Unused transverse waterway
River Don
Unused straight waterway Unknown route-map component "uABZrg" Transverse waterway with floodgate left
Bramwith Lock
Unused straight waterway Urban straight track
(Stainforth and Keadby Canal)
Unused straight waterway Waterway with floodgate down
Long Sandall Lock
Unused waterway under major road Waterway under major road
A638
Unused straight waterway Waterway with floodgate down
Doncaster Town Lock
Unused waterway with junction to left Unknown route-map component "uWEIRl"
Weir
Unused waterway weir with flow ahead Urban straight track
Weir
Unused waterway turning left Unknown route-map component "ueABZlg"
Waterway under motorway
A1(M)
Waterway with unused branch to left Unused waterway turning from right
Waterway with floodgate down Unused waterway weir with flow ahead
Sprotbrough Lock and weir
Unknown route-map component "ueABZrg" Unused waterway turning right
Unknown route-map component "uSTRfr"
Site of Conisbrough Lock
Unused transverse waterway Waterway with unused branch to right
River Dearne
Waterway with unused branch to left Unused waterway turning from right
Waterway with floodgate down Unused straight waterway
Mexborough Low Lock
Waterway under major road Unused waterway under major road
A6023
Waterway with floodgate down Unused straight waterway
Mexborough Top Lock
Waterway with floodgate down Unused straight waterway
Waddington Lock
Urban straight track Unused straight waterway
Kilnhurst Cut
Transverse waterway with floodgate left Waterway T-junction to right Unused straight waterway
Swinton Junction
Urban straight track Unused straight waterway
(Dearne and Dove Canal)
Waterway with floodgate down Unused waterway weir with flow ahead
Kilnhurst Flood Lock and weir
Unknown route-map component "ueABZrg" Unused waterway turning right
Unused waterway turning from left Waterway with unused branch to right
Unused straight waterway Waterway with floodgate down
Aldwarke Lock
Unused waterway under major road Waterway under major road
A6123
Unused waterway weir with flow ahead Urban straight track
Aldwarke weir
Unused waterway turning left Unknown route-map component "ueABZlg"
Waterway with unused branch to left Unused waterway turning from right
Waterway with floodgate down Unused straight waterway
Eastwood Lock
Waterway under major road Unused waterway under major road
A633
Urban straight track Unused straight waterway
Rotherham cut
Waterway with floodgate down Unused waterway weir with flow ahead
Rotherham Lock and weir
Unknown route-map component "ueABZrg" Unused waterway turning right
Waterway with unused branch to left Unused waterway turning from right
Urban straight track Unused waterway with junction to left
River Rother
Waterway with floodgate down Unused waterway weir with flow ahead
Ickles Lock and weir
Urban straight track Unused straight waterway
Holmes Cut
Waterway with floodgate down Unused straight waterway
Holmes Lock
Waterway with floodgate down Unused waterway weir with flow ahead
Jordans Lock and weir
Unknown route-map component "ueABZrg" Unused waterway turning right
Unused waterway turning from left Waterway with unused branch to right
Unknown route-map component "uexWHARF" Urban straight track
Site of Tinsley wharf
Unused straight waterway Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSd"
Tinsley Locks (3)
Unknown route-map component "uxAKRZu2" Waterway under motorway
M1 motorway
Unused straight waterway Unknown route-map component "uLOCKSd"
Tinsley Locks (8)
Unused waterway under major road Waterway under major road
A6102 Ring Road
Unused waterway weir with flow ahead Urban straight track
Weirs (5)
Unused waterway under minor road Unknown route-map component "uBROADo"
B6083 B6085
Unused straight waterway Unknown route-map component "uKBFe"
Sheffield Basin

The Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation (S&SY) is a system of navigable inland waterways (canals and canalised rivers) in South Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, England.

Chiefly based on the River Don, it runs for a length of 43 miles (69 km) and has 27 locks.[1] It connects Sheffield, Rotherham, and Doncaster with the River Trent at Keadby and (via the New Junction Canal) the Aire and Calder Navigation.

The system consisted of five parts, four of which are still open to navigation today:-

Contents

Formation and Early History

The River Don Navigation Company had bought out the Dearne and Dove Canal in 1846, the Sheffield Canal in 1848, and leased the Stainforth and Keadby Canal in 1849. They then amalgamated with the South Yorkshire, Doncaster and Goole Railway in 1850, to become the South Yorkshire Railway and River Dun Company. This in turn was leased to the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway in 1864. By the 1880s, there was dissatisfaction among the users that the rates for traffic were higher than on the railways, and the canals were failing to modernise, as steam boats were banned, despite them having been in use for 50 years on the neighbouring Aire and Calder Navigation.[2]

A plan to upgrade the waterways to allow the use of 300 to 500 tonne boats led to the formation of the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Canal Company Limited in November 1888. The cost of the scheme was estimated to be around £1 million, in addition to the cost of acquiring the canals from the railway company. The new company obtained an Act of Parliament on 26 August 1889, creating the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation Company, which was authorised to raise £1.5 million and to purchase the four canals either by negotiation, or by compulsory purchase if negotiations failed. The railway company was unwilling to sell, and it was not until 1895, after protracted negotiation and legal battles that the transfer was agreed. The Navigation Company had only succeeded in raising £625,000, which was less than the purchase price of the canals, and therefore the railway company nominated half of the ten directors, while the Aire and Calder Company declined to buy any shares because of railway influence.[2] Many of the ambitious plans for the modernisation of the system were hindered by a lack of capital, although some further developments took place.

Recent History

After being plagued with subsidence problems, poor water supply and railway competition, the company effectively abandoned the majority of the Dearne and Dove Canal in the 1930s, although formal closure did not take place until 1961.

In 1948 the company was nationalised and became a part of British Waterways. By the 1960s traffic was dwindling and the official head of the main line of the navigation became the new steelworks at Aldwarke, below Rotherham. Repeated proposals were made in the 1960s and 1970s to upgrade the system to allow larger vessels as far as Rotherham. Go-ahead was finally given in the early 1980s: the channel was deepened to 8 feet and the locks were rebuilt to take 700 ton vessels. A new wharf and freight terminal were built in Rotherham utilising the disused riverside bus depot as warehousing; various other facilities on the navigation below Rotherham were upgraded. The improvements were opened in 1983. Although these have received traffic sporadically since (and are still used in a limited fashion today), the upgrade was not the success that was hoped.

By the 1970s, boats rarely ventured above Rotherham. The effort made in the 1980s to attract traffic to the waterway below Rotherham did not extend to the stretch above the town: the locks remained suitable only for much smaller barges. Over time parts of the Sheffield Canal gradually slid towards dereliction through lack of use. In 1990 there was a concerted effort by Sheffield City Council and British Waterways to revitalise the waterway, which brought traffic back to a redeveloped Sheffield Basin (now focussed on leisure and commercial activities and renamed Victoria Quays).

Today the system is open to navigation throughout the main line, the Stainforth and Keadby and New Junction canals, and is mostly used for leisure boating. Some commercial carrying does take place from the quarry at Cadeby and the wharves at Rotherham and Doncaster; plus there is an active commercial barge-yard at Swinton and leisure boatyard and boat-builder at Sheffield. In 2008–09 the system carried 290,000 tonnes of freight, of which 266,100 tonnes were limestone from Cadeby.[3]

The Rother Link is a scheme that would see the River Rother upgraded to navigable status from Rotherham as far as Killamarsh, where a short canal would link to the Chesterfield Canal to complete a leisure cruising circuit. A canal restoration group is also seeking the re-opening of the Dearne and Dove Canal, has performed some restoration work at Elsecar and commissioned an engineer's report into reopening.

See also

References

  1. ^ Nicholson Waterways Guide, Volume 6, (2006), Harper Collins Publishers Ltd, ISBN 0-00-721114-7
  2. ^ a b Charles Hadfield, (1973), The Canals of Yorkshire and North East England, Vol 2, David and Charles, ISBN 0-7153-5975-4
  3. ^ Mckenzie, Stuart (March 2010). "Waterlines (letters) - Yorkshire freight". Waterways World: 107-108. 

External links

Canals on the Yorkshire Ring - anticlockwise from the north
Aire and Calder Navigation | Barnsley Canal | Dearne and Dove Canal | Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation | New Junction Canal


Coordinates: 53°23′N 1°28′W / 53.383°N 1.467°W / 53.383; -1.467








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