Thursday, 9 August 2018

Sussing out Soulbury

Soulbury Locks
August 2018

These last couple of year I have found myself chugging up and down the Grand Union between Tring and Braunston and taking a closer look at the layout of the canal. In particular I have been having a look at the abandoned narrow gauge locks which accompany so many of the broad ones which are still in use. 

Soulbury Locks

Given my north Grand Union base my initial take was that the Grand Junction Canal was built narrow and then widened to cater for increased trade, as evidenced by the 1930's widening from Wigrams Turn at Napton through to Camp Hill in Birmingham. But a closer look at the dates on the lock furniture castings made me realise that the sequence of events was rather different.

Duplicated locks at Slapton

The Grand Junction was indeed built to wide dimensions, capable of carrying barges of 14ft x 71ft (thereabouts) but the wide beam traffic tended to be between London and Berkhampstead. Thereafter most trade comprised narrow boats, often single when horse drawn and later as motor and butty pairs when the use of diesel engines became common in the early 20th century.

Soulbury Pumping Station

This  dry summer has highlighted the Achilles heel of the direct route to London - the twin summits at Tring and Braunston. Both summits need copious water supplies and these are hard to find, particularly at the southern one. Almost as soon as the canal was built a series of pumping stations were built to recirculate water back up the locks, which in most cases still stand a silent reminders of busier times. They may no longer contain steam engines but if you pass on a summers day you will probably hear a steady hum as electric pumps continue the endless cycle of water movement.


Side pound paddles

Pumps are all very well but they were only part of the solution as a body of reserve water was always needed to cover leakage and evaporation and the result were the ranked reservoirs of Marsworth and feeder channels such as the Wendover Arm, gathering water from miles around.

The one problem these schemes didn't address was the volume of  single narow boats using the canal. Each boat used a lock full of water, which was over 50,000 gallons so each boat moving along the canal would take 100,000 gallons from both summit pounds, the same as a pair. With water in short supply the option was either to make narrow boats wait for another one and travel together (which could create long delays) or to develop systems which limit water use.

At Soulbury, as elsewhere on this canal, the problem was addressed in a couple of ways. 

Firstly side pounds were created beside the main lock chamber to that a descending boat would open a side paddle and drain water into it, saving it for later used by later boat coming up. In the case of the CGC there were two side pounds and two paddles so my assumption is that effectively 2/3 of the water was stored at intervening levels and the passage of a boat released only 1/3 of a lock of water (leakage ignored). Can someone with greater knowledge correct me if I am wrong here please?

Cottage in side pound

These side pounds must have remained in use till after 1860's this being the date embossed on the paddle gear castings. That said, many of the top side pound chambers were later built over for lock keepers cottages, with the chamber used as a (damp) basement. At Soulbury the  cottage is dated 1906. So somewhere in the intervening 40 years the side pounds were abandoned, probably as trade volumes transferred to the railways.

Date of cottage construction - shape matching the pound.

In the 1830's the new railways were making inroads into the canal carrying trade and to compete the tolls were reduced. This resulted in a considerable increase in tonnages carries (but a downturn in revenues). This put added pressure on the canal infrastructure and in turn on the limited water supplies. The solution was to build duplicated narrow gauge locks alongside the older wide ones which both increased capacity and used less water when a single boat was passing through. The remains of these single locks can still be found in many locations, including the double arched bridges which stand at the foot of many locks. I have yet to identify when the narrow locks were filled in.

Double bridges to cross wide and narrow locks.

So, all is not as ot seems at Soulbury or elsewhere in the area, where the line of the single locks can still be traced and the remnants of the side pounds can spotted either as basements of lock side cottages, ornamental ponds or covered in decking and used as a pub beer garden.

2 comments:

Si Kling said...

My impression is that working boatmen were generally rough, hard bitten characters concerned above all with getting the job done as quickly and easily as possible.

I suspect side-pounds were abandoned because the working boaters did not bother with the faff of using them unless the lock-keeper was standing over them.

Perhaps in better funded days the canal company could enforce it, but with tolls much reduced and staff cutbacks inevitable, the boatmen probably stopped using them because they could get away with it.

Only a theory, but I do not imagine the boatmen would use side-pounds for the greater good by choice.

I enjoy the blog. I cycle often around the BCN past-and-present. Very interested to read about those narrow locks being subsequent.

Ian Bingham said...

A sad man writes:

How much water can be saved/stored by a side pond, even without leakage, is more complex than it seems. 1/2 seems right for one side pond - and 2/3 for two side ponds. The main issue is that level of the ponds themselves rise and fall; to avoid this altogether requires an infinite surface area, which has been found to be rather impractical.

Taking a lock with a single side pond (because its easier) with the same surface area as the lock (because its easier) with its existing level at 1/3 full. Discharging a full lock into the pond, will cause the pond to rise so the the equilibrium will be at 2/3 rise. And therefore you will store only 1/3 of the lock's capacity. When the lock is turned, the next equilibrium will again be 1/3 rise - thus requiring only 2/3 to fill the lock form the upper poundetc etc. So if the side pond has the same surface area as the lock, the maximum saving is 1/3.

With side ponds the same surface area as the lock - it is to do with N/N+1 where N is the number of ponds (including the lock as one pond). So for a lock and two side pond example, the maximum saving is a quarter of a lock full.

It is possible to work to do the maths with side ponds differing in area to the lock; but its harder. Bigger is better though.