Friday, 30 March 2012

Shropshire Canal - Hay Inclined Plane

Shropshire Canal
Hay Inclined Plane
March 2012
 
The Hay Inclined plane at Coalport offers the best insight into how these structures worked. 

Hay Inclined Plane from Coalport

This plane was initially self acting, which is to say that it worked under gravity with heavy loads going down pulling empty tub boats back up. When the balance was reversed a horse drawn winch was used from 1791 to 1793, but a steam engine was installed in 1793 and this delivered a good service during the plane's working life which ended in 1894.

 Looking up and down the Hay Incline Plane - BR's steepest gradient!


The plane replaced the equivalent of 27 locks with four men able to raise a five ton load 207 feet in three and a half minutes.

In keeping with the other inclines on the Shropshire Canal system, the tub boats were initially settled onto wheeled bogies which were hauled over a low "hump" at the top of the incline before being let down its twin tracks, passing an ascending tub half way.

Top of Hay Inclined Plane, Blist Hill Museum

There are accounts of cables snapping and five ton loads hurtling down the incline and careering right over moored boats and ending up in the middle of the River Severn. 

The incline you see today is a reconstruction of the 1970's, created as part of the Blist Hill Living Museum, with ex British Rail tracks laid to provide a visual idea if how things looked during its operation. In actual fact an L shaped plateway track was used but hey, its good enough.


Archive images of the Hay Incline:

 1957

 1879

Source - Ironbridge Museum Archive


 1958

 1971

Operational Incline with  Jacksville Ferry


Severn Trow at Ironbridge


A rebuilt Spry in 1986 - Source - Ironbridge Gorge Museum Archive

The above photos have been assembled from various sources, including those freely found on the internet. My thanks go to the many photographers alive and dead who have contributed to this collection and in so doing, are keeping the memory of these  canals alive. These images are reproduced for ease of research are are not necessarily the property of this blog and some may still be subject to copyright, and as such they should not be used for commercial gain without the explicit permission of the owner (whoever that may be). 

1 comment:

Halfie said...

There's another hump, this one not intentional. It's most clearly seen in your photo looking down the incline, and is about half way down where it passes over a bridge (over the Silkin Way?) The bridge was built with good foundations and hasn't subsided as the rest of the incline has. Or so I was told when I was there last year.