Grand Western Canal

The Grand Western Plan

Legend
Bristol Channel
River Parrett
Bridgwater
Bridgwater Docks
Bridgwater and Taunton Canal
River Parrett
River Tone
Taunton
(built as tub-boat canal)
Reservoir on River Tone
Reservoirs on River Culm

Tiverton Branch (open)
(authorised but not built)
Cullompton Branch
Exeter
Topsham (Jn with River Exe)
Exeter Ship Canal
River Exe
English Channel

The Grand Western Canal ran between Taunton in Somerset and Tiverton in Devon in the United Kingdom. The canal had its origins in various plans, going back to 1796, to link the Bristol Channel and the English Channel by a canal, bypassing Lands End. An additional purpose of the canal was the supply of limestone and coal to lime kilns along with the removal of the resulting quicklime, which was used as a fertiliser and for building houses. This intended canal-link was never completed as planned, as the coming of the railways removed the need for its existence.[1]

Construction was in two phases. A level section from Tiverton to Lowdwells on the Devon/Somerset border, opened in 1814, and was capable of carrying broad-beam barges, carrying up to 40 tons. The Somerset section, suitable for tub-boats, which were about 20 feet (6.1 m) long and capable of carrying eight tons, opened in 1839. It included an inclined plane and seven boat lifts, the earliest lifts to see commercial service in the UK. The lifts predated the Anderton Boat Lift by nearly 40 years.

The 11 miles of Devon section remains open, despite various threats to its future, and is now a designated country park and local nature reserve, and allows navigation. The Somerset section was closed in 1867, and is gradually disappearing from the landscape, although sections are now used as a footpath. It maintains a historical interest and has been subject to some archaeological excavations.

History

Stagnant water between banks covered in vegetation. Part of a house can be seen to the right.
The current end of navigation on the Grand Western Canal at Lowdwells Lock

The Grand Western Canal was conceived as one of several competing schemes to alleviate the hazards and delays of coastal sailing ships making a passage around Land's End to get between the Bristol Channel and the English Channel.[1] A canal from the mouth of the River Exe to Exeter had been opened in 1566; and eight miles of the River Tone had been made navigable in 1638. Navigation of the River Tone had been extended to Taunton in 1717, by the construction of locks on the upper section.[2]

Against this background, in 1768 a committee of men commissioned James Brindley to survey a route, in the form of a canal, between Taunton and Exeter; and the survey was duly carried out by Robert Whitworth in 1769.[1] This was to have been called the Exeter to Uphill Canal; as it involved a route from Topsham or Exeter to Taunton, then the use of the River Tone and a second canal from Burrow Bridge, via Bridgwater, Glastonbury, Wells and Axbridge, to Uphill.[1] Nothing further came of the plan until the 1790s, when various canal engineers were consulted, and in 1794 John Rennie was asked by a different committee, the Grand Western Canal Committee, to make another survey, which was adopted, and formed the basis for a planned Act of Parliament. Opposition from the City of Exeter, who feared it would compete with the Exeter Canal for transportation of coal, was eventually softened; and the Act was passed on 24 March 1796.[1][2]

The Act authorised a canal from Taunton to Topsham with branches to Tiverton and Cullompton. Water supply would be derived from proposed reservoirs, one on the River Tone and two on the River Culm, and from any other available sources within 2000 yd (1.8 km) of the line of the canal. The canal company was also authorised to improve the River Tone near Taunton, and to raise £220,000, plus an additional £110,000 if required. Navigation onwards from Taunton was via the River Tone and the River Parrett. Construction did not start immediately.[2]

Construction

Grand Western Canal

Legend
Bridgwater and Taunton Canal
Taunton Stop Lock
Taunton Lift
Norton Fitzwarren Lift
River Tone
wharf
Allerford Lift
Trefusis Lift
River Tone aqueduct
Nynehead Lift
Nynehead Court Drive
Winsbeer Lift
Wellisford Incline
Greenham lift
Lowdwells aqueduct
Lowdwells Lock
Lowdwells
Waytown Tunnel (40yd)
Lime kilns
Fenacre Bridge
Great Fossend Bridge
abandoned tramway

Proposed route to Topsham
Ebear Bridge
Holbroke Bridge
A361 North Devon Link Road
Sampford Peverell Bridge
Rock Bridge (formerly A373)
Tiverton Road (formerly A373)
Crowshill Bridge
aqueduct over Tiverton Railway
Manley Bridge
Tidcombe Bridge
Tiverton Basin
Water with trees on the left and a tow path to the right
Grand Western Canal at Halberton, Seen from Manley Bridge, looking towards Tiverton.

Finally in 1810, work started under the direction of John Thomas. Surprisingly, the decision was taken to start in the middle, with a 2.5 miles (4 km) section of the main line and the 9 miles (14 km) branch to Tiverton. The logic for this was that there was a large potential trade in limestone between quarries at Canonsleigh and Tiverton, and this would generate income. The summit level was cut 16 feet (5 m) lower than the original plans, so that no locks would be required, but this greatly increased the amount of earthworks required. A further Act was obtained in 1811 to sanction this, and to re-route the canal near Halberton,[2] where Rock Bridge was constructed to carry the road over the canal.[3] The same engineers that built the canal also built a substantial country house,[4] turnpike house[5] and cottages[6] at the site. Several other bridges, including Batten's Bridge,[7] Crownhills Bridge,[8] Greenway Bridge[9] and Sellick Bridge[10] were also constructed at Halberton to carry minor roads over the canal.

Water in front of trees, a house and a church.
The canal at Sampford Peverell where it cuts right through the village. The house in front of the church is the old vicarage which the company had to replace

With costs much higher than anticipated, work ceased in June 1811. After much deliberation, it was decided to continue construction, and to obtain a third Act of Parliament to authorise increased charges for carriage of goods. By 1812, progress was being made, but was hampered by the need for rock cuttings at Holcombe Rogus. Leakage also meant that some sections needed to be lined with puddle clay. Lime kilns were constructed to provide the materials, which can still be seen beside the canal,[11] close to the Waytown Tunnel.[12] Fenacre Bridge[13] and Fossend Bridge[14] were constructed at Burlescombe, where culverts were also needed to manage the streams.[15] At a total cost of £244,505, the canal was opened on 25 August 1814, when the first boat travelled from Lowdwells to Tiverton, laden with coal.[2]

At Sampford Peverell two rectories were built in 1836, at the expense of the Grand Western Canal Company, in compensation for cutting through the grounds and demolishing the south wing of the Old Rectory.[16][17] Two road bridges were also needed in the village.[18][19]

Second Phase

A footpath to the left, water in the centre of the picture and on the right a stone wall with arch shaped openings.
A bank of limekilns at Waytown, Holcombe Rogus.
This fine ashlar arch carried the canal over the drive to Nynehead Court.

Traffic on the opened section was much lower than anticipated, and the prospects of building the rest of the canal dwindled, as profits were minimal. However, in 1829 James Green turned his attention to the link to Taunton. He had been the architect of the Bude Canal, which was built for tub-boats and used inclined planes to change levels, and proposed a similar solution here. The Bridgwater and Taunton Canal had opened in 1827, making navigation from Taunton to Bridgwater easier than on the River Tone. In a report of 1830, Green proposed using vertical lifts instead of inclined planes, and estimated the cost of the canal at £65,000.[2]

Work started in 1831, and progressed quickly, including the construction of a bridge at Bradford on Tone[20] and Harpford Bridge at Langford Budville,[21] where a new warehouse was also built.[22] In addition to the boat lift in Nynehead[23][24] two aqueducts were required within the village.[25][26]

The route in Taunton was altered to connect to the Bridgwater and Taunton Canal directly, rather than using a short stretch of the River Tone. Seven lifts and one inclined plane were to be built, and it was these features that caused the subsequent delay in the completion of the canal. Teething problems with the design of the lifts gradually came to light, and although the cost of rectifying these was borne by Green, the canal could not be opened. There were also problems with the inclined plane. The canal was partially opened to Wellington, in 1835; but in January 1836, Green was dismissed.[2]

Completion

The engineer W A Provis was asked to survey the works, and to report on the lifts and the causes of the failure of the plane. His clear report is an important source of information on the canal at the time of its construction. Some remedial work was instigated, following the report, including the provision of a steam engine to power the Wellisford incline. The 14 miles (22.5 km) extension was fully opened on 28 June 1838, at a cost of about £80,000.[2]

Boat lifts

Main article: Boat lift
Diagrammatic representation of chambers with caisons being raised and lower on chains below a wheel.
Diagram showing the arrangement of the boat lifts

Green's use of boat lifts was innovative. The idea was not new, as he acknowledged in an article describing the lifts which he published in Transactions[27] in 1838, having been suggested in principle by a Dr James Anderson of Edinburgh in 1796. Robert Weldon had tried to build one on the Somersetshire Coal Canal in 1798, which was replaced by an inclined plane after persistent failures. One was built at Ruabon on the Ellesmere Canal in 1796, but was replaced as it was not robust enough for regular use. James Fussell built one on the abortive Dorset and Somerset Canal, but the works were abandoned before it was ever used regularly. The lift at Tardebigge on the Worcester and Birmingham Canal was replaced by locks in 1815 as it was "too complex and delicate", according to Rennie. Finally, another lift at Camden Town on the Regent's Canal was replaced by locks in 1815 because it could not be made to work.[2]

Principles

With no working prototypes, Green set about building seven lifts. The principle was simple. Two caissons were suspended from three carrying wheels of 16 feet (5 m) diameter, by wrought iron chains. The caisson at the bottom was jacked against the front wall of the lift to seal it, and a door or gate was opened to allow the boat to float in. The caisson at the top was jacked against the back wall in a similar manner. When both boats were in, the doors on the caissons and lift were closed, and the jacks released. Because a boat displaces its own weight in water, the system should be balanced, and a small amount of energy is required to start the boats moving. When the top caisson reaches the bottom, the jacks are applied, the doors are opened, and the boats can continue.[2]

In order to maintain the balance, a second chain was fixed to the bottom of the caisson, so that the total length of chain on each side of the lift remained the same. As a caisson descended, the chain coiled up at the bottom of the lift. The small amount of energy was created by ensuring that the ascending caisson was a little too low by the time the descending one reached the bottom. Thus it would hold a greater depth of water by the time it was ready to descend again. In practice, about 2 inches (5 cm) of water, weighing about a ton, was found to be sufficient.[2]

Problems

The difficulty was that Anderson had suggested that the water in the caisson chambers should be at a lower level than that in the canal. This had not been implemented, and so the lower caisson would not sink deep enough for either boat to be floated out. Attempts to fit gates and to let the water in the chamber drain to waste had proved ineffective. Ultimately, lock chambers were built at the foot of the each lift. These were filled with water from the upper level, so that the boat could float out, and it then descended the final 3 feet (0.9 m) as it would in a conventional lock. Only the lift at Greenham used Anderson's principle, and included a proper drain to lower the level in the chambers.[2]

Diagrammatic representation of the working of an inclined plane with water lower on the left than on the right with a chain running up the slope between them.
Diagram showing the arrangement of the Wellisford inclined plane

With the inclined plane, the problems stemmed from a mis-calculation. Power was provided by a large tank, filled with water, which descended in a shaft, raising one boat on a trolley and allowing another to descend as it did so. When the tank reached the bottom of the shaft, the water discharged, and the second tank was used to reverse the process. Green had been the engineer on the Bude Canal, where this design had been used successfully, but the size of the tanks at Wellisford were much too small. On the Bude Canal, a tank holding 15 tons of water was required to raise a boat weighing six tons. The Grand Western Canal used boats holding eight tons, but the tanks only held ten tons of water, whereas tests indicated that about 25 tons was needed. It was for this reason that the steam engine was obtained to supply the power.[2]

Locations of the boat lifts

Remains of Nynehead Boat Lift.
Point Coordinates
(Links to map resources)
OS Grid Ref Notes
Greenham Lift 50°58′19″N 3°18′36″W / 50.972°N 3.310°W / 50.972; -3.310 (Greenham Lift) ST080200 42 ft (12.8 m)
Wellisford Plane 50°59′13″N 3°16′55″W / 50.987°N 3.282°W / 50.987; -3.282 (Wellisford Plane) ST100216 81 ft rise 440 ft long (24.7 m x 134 m)
Winsbeer Lift 50°59′28″N 3°15′14″W / 50.991°N 3.254°W / 50.991; -3.254 (Winsbeer Lift) ST120220 18 ft (5.5 m)
Nynehead Lift 50°59′28″N 3°13′34″W / 50.991°N 3.226°W / 50.991; -3.226 (Nynehead Lift) ST140220 24 ft (7.3 m)
Trefusis Lift 51°00′04″N 3°11′49″W / 51.001°N 3.197°W / 51.001; -3.197 (Trefusis Lift) ST160230 38.5 ft (11.7 m)
Allerford Lift 51°01′05″N 3°10′08″W / 51.018°N 3.169°W / 51.018; -3.169 (Allerford Lift) ST180250 19 ft (5.8 m)
Norton Fitzwarren Lift 51°01′08″N 3°09′18″W / 51.019°N 3.155°W / 51.019; -3.155 (Norton Fitzwarren Lift) ST190250 12.5 ft (3.8 m)
Taunton Lift 51°01′19″N 3°06′07″W / 51.022°N 3.102°W / 51.022; -3.102 (Taunton Lift) ST228253 23.5 ft (7.2 m)

Operation

A narrow boat moored alongside grassy area. Houses can be seen in the background.
The terminus at Tiverton. A series of old limekilns built into the superstructure survive underneath the elevated canal terminus

The Somerset section of the canal was suitable for tub-boats, which were about 20 feet (6.1 m) long and capable of carrying eight tons. The Devon section was suitable for larger broad-beam barges, carrying up to 40 tons. Income from tolls increased steadily from £971 in 1835, rising to £2754 in 1838 and £4926 in 1844. At this point, competition from the railways started. The Bristol and Exeter Railway reached Taunton in 1842 and Exeter in 1844. A branch to Tiverton was opened in 1848, and although the canal company received £1200 for loss of trade while an aqueduct was constructed over the line of the railway, deficits started to mount up almost immediately.[2]

In 1853, with income no longer meeting operational costs, the canal was leased to the Bristol and Exeter Railway. From 1854, the company started to pay a dividend to its shareholders of 0.2%. Just ten years later, an Act of Parliament was obtained to sell the canal to the railway company and to abandon the Somerset section of the canal. The transfer took place on 13 April 1865, and the tub-boat canal was closed in 1867. The lifts were dismantled, and most of the route sold back to the original landowners.[2]

Decline

Limestone traffic continued on the Tiverton section. Only two boats were working the canal by 1904, and the last commercial traffic was roadstone from Whipcott quarry to Tiverton, where there was a crushing plant. Around 7,000 tons per year were transported up to 1925. After this the only income was from the washing of sheep, for which a charge was made for every 20 sheep, and the sale of water lilies which grew in the canal. In the 1930s, dams were built at both ends of a section near Halberton, where persistent leakage could not be cured.[2]

Having passed into the ownership of the Great Western Railway in 1888, the canal became the responsibility of the British Transport Commission when the railways were nationalised in 1948, and was formally closed in 1962. The responsibility for it passed to the British Waterways Board in 1964.[2]

Restoration

Stream running through channel overgrown with vegetation.
The remains of the old canal by Trefusis Farm, Bradford on Tone. One of the canal’s seven lifts was located near here.

With various plans for using the route of the canal for landfill and for a bypass, some local interest was aroused regarding its future. The Tiverton Canal Preservation Committee was formed in 1962. This committee was stirred to action by plans in 1966 to infill parts of the canal so that housing could be built over it. Tiverton Borough Council gave the committee the power to negotiate with the British Waterways Board in March 1967, but the Board were unwilling to offer financial assistance.[2]

Changes in legislation aided the cause. From 1968, county councils could set up country parks, under the Countryside Act 1968, and the Transport Act 1968 enabled the British Waterways Board to allow local authorities to maintain or purchase inland waterways. By 1969, BWB had stated that they were prepared to hand over the canal to Devon County Council, together with some money for maintenance. With some representatives within the council wavering, the preservation committee organised a walk along the entire canal on 18 October 1969. Around 400 walkers set off, with the local member of Parliament firing a starting gun, and by the time Tiverton was reached, the party totalled about 1200 people.[2]

Handover

Cyclist on tow path to the left of canal under trees.
Cycling beside the canal at the "Swan's Neck" north west of Halberton
Remains of the aqueduct over the River Tone. The cast iron trough on the right carried the canal and the tow path was to the left

By April 1970, the British Waterways Board had agreed to give the canal to Devon County Council, with £30,000 for maintenance. The actual contract was signed on 5 May 1971 at Tiverton Town Hall, when General Sir Hugh Stockwell of the BWB also handed over a cheque for £38,750 to Colonel Eric Palmer, chairman of Devon County Council. The transfer of the canal was effective from 24 June 1971.[2]

The new owners set to work immediately. The dry section was excavated and lined with a butyl liner to prevent leakage. The canal was reopened in 1971.[28] Navigation was restricted to unpowered boats, with the exception of a maintenance boat that was used for cutting weed, while the final section from Fossend to Lowdwells, which would have been part of the original main line to Exeter, is designated as a nature reserve, and so all navigation and angling is discouraged.[2] The canal is now a designated country park, and a horse-drawn tourist narrowboat runs from Tiverton. Since 2003 powered boats have been allowed on the Canal, subject to Licence from Devon County Council. The Canal is also a very popular Coarse Fishing spot and angling rights on the Canal are leased to the Tiverton and District Angling Club. In addition to holding a valid Environment Agency Rod Licence, a permit must be purchased in advance.

The Somerset section is largely dry and is gradually disappearing into the landscape, as a result of roads improvements and ploughing, but a footpath has been established along much of its route, and archaeological excavations of the lift at Nynehead, the only one where there are still substantial remains,[23][24] were carried out between 1998 and 2003 by the Somerset Industrial Archaeological Society.[29]

2012 breach and repair

Exceptionally heavy rainfall in November 2012 caused a major break in the Grand Western Canal's banks, near Halberton, necessitating nearby homes to be evacuated.[30][31] Two temporary dams were installed which allowed the rest of the canal to remain open[32] and meant the horse drawn barge at Tiverton was able to run throughout the summer of 2013.[33] Around 400 fish were returned to the canal from a flooded field but many fish including pike, eels, perch, bream, tench and roach were lost. About 25 people from the Environment Agency and Tiverton Angling Club assisted with saving the fish.[34] The Environment Agency restocked the canal with 3,000 fish in January 2013 and by May the Environment Agency said they were flourishing.[35]

Devon County Council agreed to pay for repairs to the canal, in time for its 200th anniversary and on 7 July 2013, a 3 million pound project to repair the breach, began with an official turf cutting. The repairs included rebuilding the failed embankment and raising the level to reduce the risk of overtopping in the future, and further improvements to water management.The canal was lined with an impermeable material along the length of the embankment.[36] In addition a water level monitoring and alarm system has been installed. This system has sensors in Tiverton and Burlescombe and alerts the canal rangers and Devon County Council if the levels become exceptionally high.[37] Refilling of the breached section began on 4 March 2014 using a sluice gate at Rock Bridge which gradually filled the empty section[38] and the canal was officially re-opened on 19 March 2014 by chairman of Devon County Council Councillor Bernard Hughes. Six narrow boats, led by Chairmen of Halberton Parish Council, Councillor Ken Browse, were the first to travel on the new section.[39]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Hadfield, Charles (1955). "Chapter IX: The Schemes to Join the English and Bristol Channels". In: The Canals of Southern England. London: Phoenix House Ltd.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Helen Harris (1996) The Grand Western Canal, Devon Books, ISBN 0-86114-901-7
  3. "Rock Bridge at Halberton". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  4. "Rock House and adjacent range of outbuildings". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  5. "Turnpike Cottage". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  6. "Cottage 100 metres east of Rock - House". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  7. "Batten's Bridge". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  8. "Crownhills Bridge". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  9. "Greenway Bridge". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  10. "Sellick Bridge". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  11. "Waytown Limekilns". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  12. "Waytown Tunnel". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  13. "Fenacre Bridge at Burlescombe". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  14. "Fossend Canal Bridge at Burlescombe". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  15. "Twin Culverts at Burlescombe". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  16. "Sampford Peverell The Old Rectory". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  17. "Sampford Peverell The Rectory". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  18. "Sampford Peverell Bridge". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  19. "Buckland Bridge". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  20. "Bridge over Grand Western Canal at Trefusis Farm, Bradford on Tone". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  21. "Harpford Bridge over remains of Grand Western Canal, Langford Budville". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  22. "Warehouse about 25 a west of Harpford Bridge, Langford Budville". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  23. 1 2 "Remains of vertical lift on former Grand Western Canal.". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  24. 1 2 "The Boat Lift on The Grand Western at Nynehead". Nynehead Village Web Site. Retrieved 2009-12-03.
  25. "Aqueduct, formerly carrying Grand Western Canal over driveway to Nynehead Court". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  26. "Aqueduct formerly carrying the Grand Western Canal over the River Tone, now disused". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  27. Transactions of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Volume 2, 1838
  28. Russell, Ronald (1971). Lost Canals of England and Wales. Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5417-5.
  29. "The Boat Lifts of the Grand Western Canal, Denis Dodd, Railway and Canal Historical Society" (PDF).
  30. "Great Western Canal runs DRY after one side collapses in torrential rain". Daily Mail (London). 20 November 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  31. "Grand Western Canal breach captured at Halberton, Devon". BBC News. 22 November 2012. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  32. "Grand Western Canal repairs costing £3m begin". BBC News. 8 July 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  33. "Tourists think Tiverton's Grand Western Canal has no water in it, says businessman". 2 July 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  34. "Breached Grand Western Canal to be restocked with fish". BBC News. 16 December 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  35. "Fish stock in breached Grand Western Canal now 'flourishing'". BBC News. 11 May 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  36. "Turf cutting marks start of Grand Western Canal repairs". 9 July 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  37. Wevill; Richard (7 January 2014). "Water levels managed 'better than ever before'". Culm Valley Gazette. p. 14.
  38. "Water pours back into repaired section of Tiverton canal". Mid Devon Gazette. 4 March 2014. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  39. "Narrow boats return for first journey on fixed canal". Mid Devon Gazette. 19 March 2014. Retrieved 19 March 2014.

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