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Regent's Canal

Regent's Canal is a canal across an area just north of central London, England. It provides a link from the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal, 550 yards (500 m) north-west of Paddington Basin in the west, to the Limehouse Basin and the River Thames in east London. The canal is 8.6 miles (13.8 km) long.[1]

Regent's Canal
West portal of the Islington tunnel
Specifications
Length8.6 miles (13.8 km)
Maximum boat length78 ft 0 in (23.77 m)
Maximum boat beam14 ft 6 in (4.42 m)
Locks13
StatusOpen
Navigation authorityCanal and River Trust
History
Principal engineerJames Morgan
Date of act13 July 1812
Construction began14 October 1812
Date of first use1816; 208 years ago (1816)
Date completed1 August 1820
Geography
Start pointPaddington Arm
(Grand Union Canal)
End pointRiver Thames
(Limehouse)
Branch(es)Hertford Union Canal
Limehouse Cut
Route map
Regent's Canal
Grand Union Canal
Little Venice, Maida Vale
 A404  Harrow Road
 A40  Westway
 A4206  Bishop's Bridge
Paddington Basin
 A5 
Maida Hill Tunnel
272 yards (249 m)
Eyre's Tunnel
53 yards (48 m)
Chiltern Main Line bridge
 A41  Chapel Bridge
Macclesfield Bridge
Cumberland Basin
 A5205  Water Meeting Bridge
West Coast Main Line bridge
1
Hampstead Road Locks
 A502  Hampstead Road Bridge
2
Hawley Lock
3
Kentish Town Lock
 A400  Kentish Town Bridge
northbound
 A400  Camden Bridge
southbound
 A503  Camden Road
 A5202  College Street Bridge
northbound
 A5202  Gray's Inn Bridge
southbound
Midland Main Line bridge
St Pancras Basin
4
St Pancras Lock
East Coast Main Line tunnel
 A5200  Maiden Lane Bridge
Battlebridge Basin
 A5203  Thornhill Bridge
Islington Tunnel
960 yards (880 m)
5
City Road Lock
City Road Basin
Wenlock Basin
6
Sturt's Lock
 A1200  New North Road Bridge
Kingsland Basin
 A10  Kingsland Bridge
East London line bridge
Laburnum Basin
7
Acton's Lock
West Anglia Main Line bridge
 A107  Cambridge Heath Bridge
8
Old Ford Lock
Hertford Union Canal
Great Eastern Main Line bridge
9
Mile End Lock
 A11  Mile End Bridge
10
Johnson's Lock
London, Tilbury & Southend line bridge
11
Salmon Lane Lock
 A13  Commercial Road Bridge
12
Commercial Road Lock
DLR bridge
Limehouse Basin Marina
Limehouse Cut
13
Limehouse Basin Lock
River Thames

History edit

 
Regent's Canal: Transfer certificate of 10 shares, issued 1 December 1818
Regent's Canal Act 1812
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for making and maintaining a navigable Canal from the Grand Junction Canal in the Parish of Paddington, to the River Thames in the Parish of Limehouse, with a Collateral Cut in the Parish of Saint Leonard, Shoreditch, in the County of Middlesex.
Citation52 Geo. 3. c. cxcv
Dates
Royal assent13 July 1812
Text of statute as originally enacted

First proposed by Thomas Homer in 1802 as a link from the Paddington arm of the then Grand Junction Canal (opened in 1801) with the River Thames at Limehouse, the Regent's Canal was built during the early 19th century after the Regent's Canal Act 1812 (52 Geo. 3. c. cxcv) was passed. Noted architect and town planner John Nash was a director of the company; in 1811 he had produced a masterplan for George IV, then Prince Regent, to redevelop a large area of central north London – as a result, the Regent's Canal was included in the scheme, running for part of its distance along the northern edge of Regent's Park.

 
The entrance to the Regent's Canal at Limehouse, 1823.

As with many Nash projects, the detailed design was passed to one of his assistants, in this case James Morgan, who was appointed chief engineer of the canal company. Work began on 14 October 1812. The first section from Paddington to Camden Town opened in 1816 and included a 251-metre (274 yd) long tunnel under Maida Hill east of an area now known as 'Little Venice', and a much shorter tunnel, just 48 metres (52 yd) long, under Lisson Grove. The Camden to Limehouse section, including the 886-metre (969 yd) long Islington Tunnel and the Regent's Canal Dock (used to transfer cargo from seafaring vessels to canal barges – today known as Limehouse Basin), opened four years later on 1 August 1820. Various intermediate basins were also constructed (e.g.: Cumberland Basin to the east of Regent's Park, Battlebridge Basin (close to King's Cross, London) and City Road Basin). Many other basins such as Wenlock Basin, Kingsland Basin, St. Pancras Stone and Coal Basin, and one in front of the Great Northern Railway's Granary were also built, and some of these survive.

All the locks were built with duplicate chambers to facilitate the heavy barge traffic. With the demise of commercial traffic in the early 1970s, at the end of 1973, the British Waterways Board embarked on a three-year programme to convert one chamber at each lock into an overflow weir to facilitate unmanned use by pleasure craft without the risk of serious flooding due to incorrect use of the paddles.[2]

The City Road Basin, the nearest to the City of London, soon eclipsed the Paddington Basin in the amount of goods carried, principally coal and building materials. These were goods that were being shipped locally, in contrast to the canal's original purpose of transshipping imports to the Midlands. The opening of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1838 actually increased the tonnage of coal carried by the canal. By the early twentieth century, with the Midland trade lost to the railways, and more deliveries made by road, the canal had fallen into a long decline.[3]

Explosion of the barge Tilbury under the Macclesfield Bridge edit

 
Macclesfield Bridge before the explosion. After the explosion it was also known as Blow Up Bridge.

Just before 5am on 2 October 1874 the narrowboat barge Tilbury which was loaded with sugar, nuts, three barrels of petroleum and around five tons of gunpowder exploded right under the Macclesfield Bridge, just outside London Zoo. Until the explosion, the Tilbury was part of a convoy consisting of a tugboat and three narrowboats travelling westwards heading for a quarry in the West Midlands.[4] [5]

Damage and aftermath edit

All the people on board died; captain Charles Baxton, a labourer named William Taylor, a third man and a young boy. The Macclesfield bridge was destroyed and rebuilt in 1876 reusing the cast iron pillars (made in Coalbrookdale according to an inscription at their top), but turning them by 180° (canal side towards tow path side) so tow rope grooves that were created before the incident can be seen on the outer side of the columns.

The explosion was heard 20 miles away. Debris flew in all directions, the roofs of surrounding houses blew off, windows smashed, trees uprooted and dead fish rained down on the West End. The tugboat's keel was found embedded in a house 300 yards away.[4] The bridge was nick-named the 'Blow-Up Bridge'.[5]

The damage would have been far worse had the barge exploded in the highly populated areas of Camden and Islington, which the convoy had passed through earlier that morning.

The canal company that owned Tilbury was condemned for gross negligence in permitting the “highly imprudent and improper” practice of carrying petroleum and gunpowder aboard the same barge.

The incident accelerated the passing of the Explosives Act 1875,[6] which regulates the manufacture and carriage of dangerous substances.[4]

Railway projects edit

There were a number of abortive projects to convert the route of the canal into a railway. In September 1845 a special general assembly of the proprietors approved the sale of the canal at the price of one million pounds to a group of businessmen[7] who had formed the Regent's Canal Railway Company for the purpose.[8] The advertisement for the company explained:

The vast importance of this undertaking, whereby a junction will be effected between all existing and projected railways north of the Thames, combined with the advantage of a General City Terminus, is too obvious to require comment. By the proposed railway, passengers and goods will be brought into the heart of the City at a great saving of time and expense, and facilities will be afforded for the more expeditious transmission of the mails to most parts of the kingdom.[8]

The railway company subsequently failed, but in 1846 the directors of the canal went about trying to obtain an Act of Parliament to allow them to build a railway along its banks. The scheme was abandoned in the face of vigorous opposition, especially from the government who objected to the idea of a railway passing through Regent's Park. In 1859, two further schemes to convert the canal into a railway were proposed. One, from a company called the Central London Railway and Dock Company, was accepted by the directors, but once again the railway company failed. In 1860 the Regent's Canal Company proposed a railway track alongside the canal from Kings Cross to Limehouse, but funds could not be raised. Further schemes over the next twenty years also came to nothing,[citation needed] with the Metropolitan Railway that opened to the south in 1863 serving much the same purpose of linking the lines radiating north of London.

In 1883, after some years of negotiation, the canal was sold to a company called the Regent's Canal and City Docks Railway Company at a cost of £1,170,585. The company altered its name to the North Metropolitan Railway and Canal Company in 1892, but no railway was ever built; instead it raised money for dock and canal improvement and eventually, in 1904, became the Regent's Canal and Dock Company.[7]

The Regent's Canal and Dock Company became part of the merged Grand Union Canal Company on 1 January 1929.

 
Wenlock Basin, Islington (2004)

New uses edit

 
Hand-operated drawbridge from Regents Canal into Limehouse Basin next to the DLR

A new purpose was found for the canal route in 1979, when the Central Electricity Generating Board (CEGB) installed underground cables in a trough below the towpath between St John's Wood and City Road. These 400 kV cables now form part of the National Grid, supplying electrical power to London. Pumped canal water is circulated as a coolant for the high-voltage cables. The canal is frequently used today for pleasure cruising; a regular waterbus service operates between Maida Vale and Camden, running hourly during the summer months.[9]

Due to the increase in cycle commuting since the 2005 London Bombings[10] and increasing environmental awareness, the canal's towpath has become a busy cycle route for commuters. National Cycle Route 1 includes the stretch along the canal towpath from Limehouse Basin to Mile End. British Waterways has carried out several studies into the effects of sharing the towpath between cyclists and pedestrians, all of which have concluded that despite the limited width there were relatively few problems at the time of the audits.[11] More recently, in 2019, The Guardian reported on instances of conflict between pedestrians and cyclists.[12]

Geography edit

 
Commercial Road Lock on Regent's Canal where it meets the Limehouse Basin

The Regent's Canal forms a junction with the old Grand Junction Canal at Little Venice, a short distance north of Paddington Basin. After passing through the Maida Hill and Lisson Grove tunnels, the canal curves round the northern edge of Regent's Park, passing London Zoo and skirting round the base of Primrose Hill. It continues through Camden Town and King's Cross Central. It performs a sharp bend at Camley Street Natural Park, following Goods Way where it flows behind both St Pancras railway station and King's Cross railway station. The canal opens out into Battlebridge Basin, originally known as Horsfall Basin, home of the London Canal Museum. Continuing eastwards beyond the Islington tunnel it forms the southern end of Broadway Market and meets the Hertford Union Canal at Victoria Park, East London. It turns south towards the Limehouse Basin, where it meets the Limehouse Cut, and ends as it joins the River Thames. [citation needed]

Maximum craft dimensions edit

 
The Regent's Canal near St Mark's Regents' Park.

On the Regent's Canal the maximum length is 21.95 metres (72.0 ft), with a beam of 4.27 metres (14.0 ft) and a headroom of 2.79 metres (9 ft 2 in). The navigational depth is, on average 1.15 m (3 ft 6 in).[13]

Culture edit

In 2012, playwright Rob Inglis was awarded a £16,000 Arts Council grant to write Regent's Canal, a Folk Opera, a musical that celebrates the 200th anniversary of the digging of the canal.[14] It played in a number of locations around London in 2012.[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Regent's Canal".
  2. ^ McKnight, Hugh (1978). The Shell Book of Inland Waterways. Newton Abbot: David and Charles.
  3. ^ Islington: Communications, A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 8: Islington and Stoke Newington parishes (1985), pp. 3–8 accessed: 22 July 2008
  4. ^ a b c "The Great Barge Explosion". Waterfront. 25 November 2015.
  5. ^ a b "The Explosive History Of Blow-Up Bridge". Londonist. 26 January 2017.
  6. ^ Explosives Act 1875
  7. ^ a b Denney, Martin (1977). London's Waterways. London: B.T. Batsford. pp. 79–80. ISBN 0-7134-0558-9.
  8. ^ a b "Regent's Canal Railway". The British and Foreign Railway Review. 1 (1): 306. 1845. Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  9. ^ "Regents Canal Waterbus". London Waterbus Company. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  10. ^ 'Cycling on London's Waterways', British Waterways London
  11. ^ See a presentation June 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine by British Waterways following a Safety Audit July 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine study by Transport Initiatives in 2006. January 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Townsend, Mark (27 July 2019). "On roads, cyclists are vulnerable – but on towpaths they're the menace". Guardian. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  13. ^ Boating in London(British Waterways). Retrieved October 29, 2011 Archived May 5, 2011, at the UK Government Web Archive
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 December 2013. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  15. ^ Peter Gruner (23 August 2012). . CamdenNewJournal. Archived from the original on 9 January 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Alan Faulkner – The Regent's Canal: London's Hidden Waterway (2005) ISBN 1-870002-59-8
  • Alan Faulkner – The George and the Mary: A Brief History of the Grand Union Canal carrying Company Ltd (1973)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Regent's Canal at Wikimedia Commons
  • Plan of Grand Union Canal (Regent's Canal) with links to places of interest near each lock, basin, and bridge.
  • Photographs of Regent's Canal
  • Regent's Canal interactive map
  • More background information and history of the Regent's Arm
  • Regent's Canal, Camden markets, history and pictures
  • Regent's Canal Walk: Little Venice to Limehouse Basin (Walking Guide)
Next confluence upstream River Thames Next confluence downstream
River Neckinger (south) Regent's Canal River Ravensbourne (south)
(Deptford Creek)

regent, canal, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Regent s Canal news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Regent s Canal is a canal across an area just north of central London England It provides a link from the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal 550 yards 500 m north west of Paddington Basin in the west to the Limehouse Basin and the River Thames in east London The canal is 8 6 miles 13 8 km long 1 Regent s CanalWest portal of the Islington tunnelSpecificationsLength8 6 miles 13 8 km Maximum boat length78 ft 0 in 23 77 m Maximum boat beam14 ft 6 in 4 42 m Locks13StatusOpenNavigation authorityCanal and River TrustHistoryPrincipal engineerJames MorganDate of act13 July 1812Construction began14 October 1812Date of first use1816 208 years ago 1816 Date completed1 August 1820GeographyStart pointPaddington Arm Grand Union Canal End pointRiver Thames Limehouse Branch es Hertford Union CanalLimehouse CutRoute map vteRegent s Canal Legend Grand Union Canal Little Venice Maida Vale A404 Harrow Road A40 Westway A4206 Bishop s Bridge Paddington Basin A5 Maida Hill Tunnel 272 yards 249 m Eyre s Tunnel 53 yards 48 m Chiltern Main Line bridge A41 Chapel Bridge Macclesfield Bridge Cumberland Basin A5205 Water Meeting Bridge West Coast Main Line bridge 1 Hampstead Road Locks A502 Hampstead Road Bridge 2 Hawley Lock 3 Kentish Town Lock A400 Kentish Town Bridge northbound A400 Camden Bridge southbound A503 Camden Road A5202 College Street Bridge northbound A5202 Gray s Inn Bridge southbound Midland Main Line bridge St Pancras Basin 4 St Pancras Lock East Coast Main Line tunnel A5200 Maiden Lane Bridge Battlebridge Basin A5203 Thornhill Bridge Islington Tunnel 960 yards 880 m 5 City Road Lock City Road Basin Wenlock Basin 6 Sturt s Lock A1200 New North Road Bridge Kingsland Basin A10 Kingsland Bridge East London line bridge Laburnum Basin 7 Acton s Lock West Anglia Main Line bridge A107 Cambridge Heath Bridge 8 Old Ford Lock Hertford Union Canal Great Eastern Main Line bridge 9 Mile End Lock A11 Mile End Bridge 10 Johnson s Lock London Tilbury amp Southend line bridge 11 Salmon Lane Lock A13 Commercial Road Bridge 12 Commercial Road Lock DLR bridge Limehouse Basin Marina Limehouse Cut 13 Limehouse Basin Lock River Thames Contents 1 History 1 1 Explosion of the barge Tilbury under the Macclesfield Bridge 1 1 1 Damage and aftermath 1 2 Railway projects 1 3 New uses 2 Geography 3 Maximum craft dimensions 4 Culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Regent s Canal Transfer certificate of 10 shares issued 1 December 1818 Regent s Canal Act 1812Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act for making and maintaining a navigable Canal from the Grand Junction Canal in the Parish of Paddington to the River Thames in the Parish of Limehouse with a Collateral Cut in the Parish of Saint Leonard Shoreditch in the County of Middlesex Citation52 Geo 3 c cxcvDatesRoyal assent13 July 1812Text of statute as originally enactedFirst proposed by Thomas Homer in 1802 as a link from the Paddington arm of the then Grand Junction Canal opened in 1801 with the River Thames at Limehouse the Regent s Canal was built during the early 19th century after the Regent s Canal Act 1812 52 Geo 3 c cxcv was passed Noted architect and town planner John Nash was a director of the company in 1811 he had produced a masterplan for George IV then Prince Regent to redevelop a large area of central north London as a result the Regent s Canal was included in the scheme running for part of its distance along the northern edge of Regent s Park nbsp The entrance to the Regent s Canal at Limehouse 1823 As with many Nash projects the detailed design was passed to one of his assistants in this case James Morgan who was appointed chief engineer of the canal company Work began on 14 October 1812 The first section from Paddington to Camden Town opened in 1816 and included a 251 metre 274 yd long tunnel under Maida Hill east of an area now known as Little Venice and a much shorter tunnel just 48 metres 52 yd long under Lisson Grove The Camden to Limehouse section including the 886 metre 969 yd long Islington Tunnel and the Regent s Canal Dock used to transfer cargo from seafaring vessels to canal barges today known as Limehouse Basin opened four years later on 1 August 1820 Various intermediate basins were also constructed e g Cumberland Basin to the east of Regent s Park Battlebridge Basin close to King s Cross London and City Road Basin Many other basins such as Wenlock Basin Kingsland Basin St Pancras Stone and Coal Basin and one in front of the Great Northern Railway s Granary were also built and some of these survive All the locks were built with duplicate chambers to facilitate the heavy barge traffic With the demise of commercial traffic in the early 1970s at the end of 1973 the British Waterways Board embarked on a three year programme to convert one chamber at each lock into an overflow weir to facilitate unmanned use by pleasure craft without the risk of serious flooding due to incorrect use of the paddles 2 The City Road Basin the nearest to the City of London soon eclipsed the Paddington Basin in the amount of goods carried principally coal and building materials These were goods that were being shipped locally in contrast to the canal s original purpose of transshipping imports to the Midlands The opening of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1838 actually increased the tonnage of coal carried by the canal By the early twentieth century with the Midland trade lost to the railways and more deliveries made by road the canal had fallen into a long decline 3 Explosion of the barge Tilbury under the Macclesfield Bridge edit nbsp Macclesfield Bridge before the explosion After the explosion it was also known as Blow Up Bridge Just before 5am on 2 October 1874 the narrowboat barge Tilbury which was loaded with sugar nuts three barrels of petroleum and around five tons of gunpowder exploded right under the Macclesfield Bridge just outside London Zoo Until the explosion the Tilbury was part of a convoy consisting of a tugboat and three narrowboats travelling westwards heading for a quarry in the West Midlands 4 5 Damage and aftermath edit All the people on board died captain Charles Baxton a labourer named William Taylor a third man and a young boy The Macclesfield bridge was destroyed and rebuilt in 1876 reusing the cast iron pillars made in Coalbrookdale according to an inscription at their top but turning them by 180 canal side towards tow path side so tow rope grooves that were created before the incident can be seen on the outer side of the columns The explosion was heard 20 miles away Debris flew in all directions the roofs of surrounding houses blew off windows smashed trees uprooted and dead fish rained down on the West End The tugboat s keel was found embedded in a house 300 yards away 4 The bridge was nick named the Blow Up Bridge 5 The damage would have been far worse had the barge exploded in the highly populated areas of Camden and Islington which the convoy had passed through earlier that morning The canal company that owned Tilbury was condemned for gross negligence in permitting the highly imprudent and improper practice of carrying petroleum and gunpowder aboard the same barge The incident accelerated the passing of the Explosives Act 1875 6 which regulates the manufacture and carriage of dangerous substances 4 Railway projects editThere were a number of abortive projects to convert the route of the canal into a railway In September 1845 a special general assembly of the proprietors approved the sale of the canal at the price of one million pounds to a group of businessmen 7 who had formed the Regent s Canal Railway Company for the purpose 8 The advertisement for the company explained The vast importance of this undertaking whereby a junction will be effected between all existing and projected railways north of the Thames combined with the advantage of a General City Terminus is too obvious to require comment By the proposed railway passengers and goods will be brought into the heart of the City at a great saving of time and expense and facilities will be afforded for the more expeditious transmission of the mails to most parts of the kingdom 8 The railway company subsequently failed but in 1846 the directors of the canal went about trying to obtain an Act of Parliament to allow them to build a railway along its banks The scheme was abandoned in the face of vigorous opposition especially from the government who objected to the idea of a railway passing through Regent s Park In 1859 two further schemes to convert the canal into a railway were proposed One from a company called the Central London Railway and Dock Company was accepted by the directors but once again the railway company failed In 1860 the Regent s Canal Company proposed a railway track alongside the canal from Kings Cross to Limehouse but funds could not be raised Further schemes over the next twenty years also came to nothing citation needed with the Metropolitan Railway that opened to the south in 1863 serving much the same purpose of linking the lines radiating north of London In 1883 after some years of negotiation the canal was sold to a company called the Regent s Canal and City Docks Railway Company at a cost of 1 170 585 The company altered its name to the North Metropolitan Railway and Canal Company in 1892 but no railway was ever built instead it raised money for dock and canal improvement and eventually in 1904 became the Regent s Canal and Dock Company 7 The Regent s Canal and Dock Company became part of the merged Grand Union Canal Company on 1 January 1929 nbsp Wenlock Basin Islington 2004 New uses edit nbsp Hand operated drawbridge from Regents Canal into Limehouse Basin next to the DLR A new purpose was found for the canal route in 1979 when the Central Electricity Generating Board CEGB installed underground cables in a trough below the towpath between St John s Wood and City Road These 400 kV cables now form part of the National Grid supplying electrical power to London Pumped canal water is circulated as a coolant for the high voltage cables The canal is frequently used today for pleasure cruising a regular waterbus service operates between Maida Vale and Camden running hourly during the summer months 9 Due to the increase in cycle commuting since the 2005 London Bombings 10 and increasing environmental awareness the canal s towpath has become a busy cycle route for commuters National Cycle Route 1 includes the stretch along the canal towpath from Limehouse Basin to Mile End British Waterways has carried out several studies into the effects of sharing the towpath between cyclists and pedestrians all of which have concluded that despite the limited width there were relatively few problems at the time of the audits 11 More recently in 2019 The Guardian reported on instances of conflict between pedestrians and cyclists 12 Geography edit nbsp Commercial Road Lock on Regent s Canal where it meets the Limehouse Basin The Regent s Canal forms a junction with the old Grand Junction Canal at Little Venice a short distance north of Paddington Basin After passing through the Maida Hill and Lisson Grove tunnels the canal curves round the northern edge of Regent s Park passing London Zoo and skirting round the base of Primrose Hill It continues through Camden Town and King s Cross Central It performs a sharp bend at Camley Street Natural Park following Goods Way where it flows behind both St Pancras railway station and King s Cross railway station The canal opens out into Battlebridge Basin originally known as Horsfall Basin home of the London Canal Museum Continuing eastwards beyond the Islington tunnel it forms the southern end of Broadway Market and meets the Hertford Union Canal at Victoria Park East London It turns south towards the Limehouse Basin where it meets the Limehouse Cut and ends as it joins the River Thames citation needed Maximum craft dimensions edit nbsp The Regent s Canal near St Mark s Regents Park On the Regent s Canal the maximum length is 21 95 metres 72 0 ft with a beam of 4 27 metres 14 0 ft and a headroom of 2 79 metres 9 ft 2 in The navigational depth is on average 1 15 m 3 ft 6 in 13 Culture editIn 2012 playwright Rob Inglis was awarded a 16 000 Arts Council grant to write Regent s Canal a Folk Opera a musical that celebrates the 200th anniversary of the digging of the canal 14 It played in a number of locations around London in 2012 15 See also editSt Pancras Cruising Club Camden Lock Kingsland Basin List of canal basins in Great Britain List of canal aqueducts in Great Britain List of canal locks in Great Britain List of canal tunnels in Great BritainReferences edit Regent s Canal McKnight Hugh 1978 The Shell Book of Inland Waterways Newton Abbot David and Charles Islington Communications A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 8 Islington and Stoke Newington parishes 1985 pp 3 8 accessed 22 July 2008 a b c The Great Barge Explosion Waterfront 25 November 2015 a b The Explosive History Of Blow Up Bridge Londonist 26 January 2017 Explosives Act 1875 a b Denney Martin 1977 London s Waterways London B T Batsford pp 79 80 ISBN 0 7134 0558 9 a b Regent s Canal Railway The British and Foreign Railway Review 1 1 306 1845 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Regents Canal Waterbus London Waterbus Company Retrieved 28 October 2017 Cycling on London s Waterways British Waterways London See a presentation Archived June 8 2011 at the Wayback Machine by British Waterways following a Safety Audit Archived July 8 2011 at the Wayback Machine study by Transport Initiatives in 2006 Archived January 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine Townsend Mark 27 July 2019 On roads cyclists are vulnerable but on towpaths they re the menace Guardian Retrieved 18 February 2021 Boating in London British Waterways Retrieved October 29 2011 Archived May 5 2011 at the UK Government Web Archive Regent s Canal a folk opera Archived from the original on 22 December 2013 Retrieved 9 January 2014 Peter Gruner 23 August 2012 Musical writer Rob Inglis finishes off folk opera script from hospital bed CamdenNewJournal Archived from the original on 9 January 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2014 Further reading editAlan Faulkner The Regent s Canal London s Hidden Waterway 2005 ISBN 1 870002 59 8 Alan Faulkner The George and the Mary A Brief History of the Grand Union Canal carrying Company Ltd 1973 External links edit nbsp Media related to Regent s Canal at Wikimedia Commons Canalplan AC Gazetteer Grand Union Canal Regent s Canal Plan of Grand Union Canal Regent s Canal with links to places of interest near each lock basin and bridge Photographs of Regent s Canal Regent s Canal interactive map More background information and history of the Regent s Arm Regent s Canal Camden markets history and pictures Regent s Canal Walk Little Venice to Limehouse Basin Walking Guide Next confluence upstream River Thames Next confluence downstreamRiver Neckinger south Regent s Canal River Ravensbourne south Deptford Creek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Regent 27s Canal amp oldid 1212610773 Regent s Canal Act 1826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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