Sunday, 1 April 2012

Shropshire Canal - Coalport

Shropshire Canal
Coalport
April 2012

April 1st, and my last post in the Shropshire Tub Boat Canal series! Hurray I hear you all cry - enough pictures of overgrown ditches - lets have some more of your "nice" canal photos...

Restored canal at foot on Hay Incline

Well, by the time you read this we will be on our way to Llangollen so its back to the summer boating routine. However, this series has been six months on the making, three planning and assembling the maps and three doing the field work / write ups. At least its kept me off the streets for the winter.

Past the China Museum

The Coalport section of the Shropshire Canal offers a final hurragh for the canal hunter. The section at the bottom of the Incline was put back into water in the 1970's and this section runs into the China Museum site, all very pretty.


The canal line buried beneath the access road

Beyond that the line of the canal has been lost in a housing development built on the site of NuWay, but the line of the canal is followed by the access road. From there the canal runs behind the Brewers Arms Inn and reemerges as a dry ditch which runs parallel to the River Severn to Coalport Bridge.

The dry ditch approaching Coalport Bridge

This low level canal avoided the fast flowing section of river and craft initially accessed the river at Coalport Bridge via a short lived lock. This was later replaced by a self acting lift where goods were transhipped into larger river worthy trows.


 Journeys end - Coalport Bridge

Phew..............

5 comments:

No Direction said...

This has been a very interesting series of posts, such a lot of work, it needs to be published, maybe in one of the Canal mags or included in a Shropshire guide book.

Sue said...

Capt,

Your series this winter has been absolutely facinating, I have loved every one of them.

Gosh, it makes you wonder just how many canals there were crossing the country, and all the little arms branching off, it must have been a very busy period in those years.

But it is thanks to them that we are all cruising what is left and of course what we can rescue from what isn't.

What a legacy for future generations.. For sure "Save our Waterways"

Halfie said...

It's been an absolute treat, Andy. Thanks for all the effort you've put into it. I look forward to the next series, wherever that might be.

Frank Clarijs said...

Great series you wrote, very enjoyable to read. Thanks a lot of the enjoyable minutes every second morning .

Nick Holt said...

Well done Captain - a fascinating series that's certainly kept me engrossed all Winter - and spurred me on to look more carefully at the environs of our remaining canal system... as you've shown, there's canals in them there woods!

best wishes

Nick