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Gloucester and Sharpness Canal

The Gloucester and Sharpness Canal (also known as the Gloucester and Berkeley Canal) is a ship canal in the west of England, between Gloucester and Sharpness; for much of its length it runs close to the tidal River Severn, but cuts off a significant loop in the river, at a once-dangerous bend near Arlingham. It was once the broadest and deepest canal in the world. The canal is 26.5 km (16.5 miles)[1] long.

A map of the canal from 1933
Gloucester and Sharpness Canal
River Severn (Gloucester)
Gloucester Dock Lock (with lift bridge over)
Gloucester Docks
Victoria Dock
Dry Dock
Barge Arm
Llanthony Bridge
Llanthony Wharf, Bakers Quay
High Orchard Bridge,  A430  Inner Ring Road
Monk Meadow Dock
Hempstead Bridge
Old section of Two Mile Bend
Netheridge Bridge,  A430  South-Western Bypass
Old section of Two Mile Bend
Simms Bridge
Rea Bridge
Sellars Bridge
Parkend Bridge
River Frome
Whitminster Weir feeder and overflow
Wycliffe College Boat Club
Saul Junction Foot Bridge
Stroudwater Navigation (Saul Junction)
Saul Junction Marina
Dry Dock
Sandfield Bridge
Power lines to Lydney (clearance 105 feet (32 m))
Fretherne Bridge
Splatt Bridge
Former canal basin at Cambridge
Cambridge Arm, River Cam
Cambridge Arms Bridge
Slimbridge Wetland Reserve
Patch Bridge
Purton Water Treatment Works
Bristol Water pipeline to Pucklechurch
Purton Upper Bridge
Purton Lower Bridge
Purton Hulks
Severn Railway Bridge remains
Sharpness Barge Arm (from old entrance)
High Level Bridge
Low Level Bridge
Sharpness New Dock
Sharpness Lock
Tidal Basin
Tidal Basin Gates
Severn Estuary (Sharpness)

Canal planning and construction edit

 
Founder's share of the Glocester and Berkeley Canal Company, issued 29 September 1794, printed on vellum. The proprietors of this canal were authorised to raise the sum of £140,000 to be divided into shares of £100 each. If the former sum be insufficient, then they raise a further sum of £60,000.[2]

Conceived in the canal mania period of the late 18th century, the Gloucester and Berkeley Ship Canal scheme (as it was originally named) was started by architect and civil engineer Robert Mylne. In 1793 an Act of Parliament (33 Geo. 3. c. 97) was obtained authorising the raising of a total of £200,000.[3] The project rapidly encountered financial difficulties – to such an extent that Mylne left the project in 1798.

By mid-1799 costs had reached £112,000 but only 5+12 miles (9 km) of the canal had been completed.[4] Robert Mylne's role was taken over by James Dadford who had originally been engaged as resident engineer on the project in 1795.[5] Lack of funds resulted in the company ceasing to employ Dadford in 1800.[4]

Decade of capital raising edit

Between 1800 and 1810 various attempts were made to raise money to allow further building but they came to nothing.[4] Money from tolls and rents allowed for some improvements to be made to the basin at Gloucester in 1813.[6]

Eventual completion edit

Following the Poor Employment Act 1817, it was possible for the company to borrow money from the Exchequer Bill Loan Commission. This along with further share issues provided enough money to bring the scheme to completion.[7] After these significant delays, the canal opened in April 1827. In the course of its construction the canal had cost £440,000 (equivalent to £41,000,000 in 2021).[8] As opened the canal was 86+12 feet (26.4 m) wide, 18 feet (5.5 m) deep and could take craft of up to 600 long tons (610 tonnes; 670 short tons). The longer of the two locks onto the canal proper was 115 feet (35 m) long.[8]

Eventual dividends edit

By the middle of the 19th century it proved possible to pay a small dividend, the debt to the Exchequer Bill Loan Commission having been repaid with the help of a loan of £60,000 from the Pelican Life Assurance Company.[8] In 1871 the last of the debts incurred in the course of funding the canal including the Pelican loan were paid off.[9] Where the Severn Railway Bridge (completed in 1879) passed over the canal, a swing section was constructed[10] to avoid restricting headroom.

Purton hulks edit

In 1909, following a collapse in the bank of the river, the canal company's chief engineer A. J. Cullis called for old vessels to be run aground along the bank of the Severn, near Purton, to create a makeshift tidal erosion barrier to reinforce the narrow strip of land between the river and canal.[11] Barges, trows and schooners were "hulked" at high tide, and have since filled with silt. More boats have been added, including the schooner Katherine Ellen which was impounded in 1921 for running guns to the IRA, the Kennet barge Harriett, and ferrocement barges built in World War II.[12]

In 1999 Paul Barnett started a privately funded research project to record the 81 vessels at the site, recognised as the largest ships' graveyard in mainland Britain.[13] In 2010 British Waterways took control of the site in an attempt to protect it.[14]

Bridge-houses edit

Eight of the bridges have Neo-classical bridge-men's houses in the near vicinity. These were built in the early 19th century when the volume of traffic on the canal made it important that all the bridges could open at night so that vessels could meet the tides at Sharpness. At that time, the other bridge-men lived in existing houses that were close enough to their bridges.

The classical-style bridge-men's houses were originally symmetrical in plan with gables on each elevation. Each had a living room, one bedroom, a scullery at the back and a porch with Doric columns at the front. In later years, the houses have been extended to provide more accommodation and modern facilities. Today, the houses are in private ownership, mostly Grade II listed.

Modern times edit

In 1905 traffic exceeded one million tons for the first time.[15] Oil was added to the list of cargoes carried by the canal, with bulk oil carriers taking fuel to storage tanks sited to the south of Gloucester.[16] In 1937 the canal was navigated by the submarines HMS H33 and HMS H49.[17] The canal was nationalized in 1948.[18] At the same time the Sharpness Dock Police which had policed the dock since 1874 were absorbed into the British Transport Police.[19]

In 1955 the Board of Survey of Canals and Inland Waterways released a report that, among other things, described the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal as carrying substantial traffic and offering scope for commercial development.[20]

The River Cam, which is subject to accretion due to industrial and agricultural runoff, is an important feeder for the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal.[21] It was formerly navigable as the Cambridge Arm[22] with one entrance lock leading to a basin and wharf at Cambridge, the limit of navigation due to mill weirs and low bridges on the Bristol to Gloucester road. The lock was missing and the basin abandoned by 1901.[23] Most of the straightened channel has survived as flood defence improvements and is potentially still navigable, but the entrance is now blocked by a very low bridge at the site of the former lock.[24]

By the mid-1980s commercial traffic had largely come to a halt with the canal being given over to pleasure cruisers with the exception of a few passages by grain barges.[16] The oil trade ceased in 1985 with the closure of the petroleum depot at Quedgeley.[10] In order to allow the A430 Gloucester southwestern bypass to be built the canal had to be diverted. This new cut eliminated a major problem which had plagued commercial traffic since opening: the sharp double bend in the canal. The new section of channel was opened on 6 May 2006.[25] In January 2009 a project began to replace the Patch Bridge swing bridge with a motor powered design instead of the former hand-cranked system.[26]

Today, the canal can be used by boats up to 64 m (210 ft) in length, 9.6 m (31 ft) in beam and 32 m (105 ft) in height. The maximum draft is 3.5 m (11 ft).[1]

The canal links directly to the Stroudwater Navigation at Saul Junction, the only such flat crossing between two different canal companies anywhere in the world.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Inland Waterways Association: Gloucester and Sharpness Canal". Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  2. ^ "The History of Cheltenham and its Environs", Cheltenham, Printed and published by H. Ruff, 1803. p. 318
  3. ^ Hadfield (1969), p.342
  4. ^ a b c Hadfield (1969), p.344
  5. ^ Hadfield (1969), p.343
  6. ^ Hadfield (1969), p.345
  7. ^ Hadfield (1969), p.346
  8. ^ a b c Hadfield (1969), p.348
  9. ^ Hadfield (1969), p.351
  10. ^ a b Paget-Tomlinson (2006), pp.124–125
  11. ^ "The Purton Hulks". morturn.com – Legacy from the past. Retrieved 19 October 2008.
  12. ^ . telegraph.co.uk. London. 18 October 2008. Archived from the original on 20 October 2008. Retrieved 19 October 2008.
  13. ^ "The Friends of Purton".
  14. ^ "Purton Hulks taken over by British Waterways". BBC News. 22 September 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
  15. ^ Hadfield (1969), p.352
  16. ^ a b Green (1999), p.27
  17. ^ Tall and Kemp (1996), p.64
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 28 August 2007.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 June 2004. Retrieved 28 August 2007.
  20. ^ "Uneconomic Canals Use Of 771 Miles "Not Justified"". The Times. 21 April 1955. p. 7.
  21. ^ "https://nrfa.ceh.ac.uk/data/station/info/54098". National River Flow Archive. Retrieved 15 March 2023. {{cite web}}: External link in |title= (help)
  22. ^ "View map: Ordnance Survey, Gloucestershire XLVIII.NE (includes: Cam; Coaley; Eastington; Frampton on Severn... - Ordnance Survey Six-inch England and Wales, 1842-1952". maps.nls.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  23. ^ "View map: Ordnance Survey, Gloucestershire XLVIII.3 (Coaley; Eastington; Frampton on Severn; Frocester; Sli... - Ordnance Survey 25 inch England and Wales, 1841-1952". maps.nls.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  24. ^ "Song of the Paddle Forum-Gloucestershire River Cam". Song of the Paddle Forum. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  25. ^ "Canal's new channel section opens". BBC News. 6 May 2006. Retrieved 25 August 2007.
  26. ^ Clare, Rachel (6 January 2009). "Wardens at bird sanctuary travel by boat". stroud news and journal. Retrieved 7 January 2009.
  27. ^ "Saul Junction - Stroudwater History". stroudwaterhistory.org.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2023.

Bibliography edit

  • Colin Green (1999). Severn Traders. Black Dwarf Publications. ISBN 0-9533028-2-2.
  • Charles Hadfield (1969). The Canals of South and South East England. David and Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4693-8.
  • Edward Paget-Tomlinson (2006). The Illustrated History of Canal & River Navigations (3rd ed.). Landmark Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-84306-207-0.
  • J.J. Tall; Paul Kemp (1996). HM Submarines in Camera An Illustrated History of British Submarines. Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0-7509-0875-0.

External links edit

  • Gloucester Docks and the Sharpness Canal Past, Present and Future
  • some OS Bench Marks to be seen along the Gloucester & Sharpness Canal
  • images & map of mile pegs (milestones) seen along the Gloucester & Sharpness canal
  • Stroud Voices (of local canals) - oral history site

51°44′N 2°29′W / 51.733°N 2.483°W / 51.733; -2.483

gloucester, sharpness, canal, also, known, gloucester, berkeley, canal, ship, canal, west, england, between, gloucester, sharpness, much, length, runs, close, tidal, river, severn, cuts, significant, loop, river, once, dangerous, bend, near, arlingham, once, b. The Gloucester and Sharpness Canal also known as the Gloucester and Berkeley Canal is a ship canal in the west of England between Gloucester and Sharpness for much of its length it runs close to the tidal River Severn but cuts off a significant loop in the river at a once dangerous bend near Arlingham It was once the broadest and deepest canal in the world The canal is 26 5 km 16 5 miles 1 long A map of the canal from 1933vteGloucester and Sharpness CanalLegendRiver Severn Gloucester Gloucester Dock Lock with lift bridge over Gloucester DocksVictoria DockDry DockBarge ArmLlanthony BridgeLlanthony Wharf Bakers QuayHigh Orchard Bridge A430 Inner Ring RoadMonk Meadow DockHempstead BridgeOld section of Two Mile BendNetheridge Bridge A430 South Western BypassOld section of Two Mile BendSimms BridgeRea BridgeSellars BridgeParkend BridgeRiver FromeWhitminster Weir feeder and overflowWycliffe College Boat ClubSaul Junction Foot BridgeStroudwater Navigation Saul Junction Saul Junction MarinaDry DockSandfield BridgePower lines to Lydney clearance 105 feet 32 m Fretherne BridgeSplatt BridgeFormer canal basin at CambridgeCambridge Arm River CamCambridge Arms BridgeSlimbridge Wetland ReservePatch BridgePurton Water Treatment WorksBristol Water pipeline to PucklechurchPurton Upper BridgePurton Lower BridgePurton HulksSevern Railway Bridge remainsSharpness Barge Arm from old entrance High Level BridgeLow Level BridgeSharpness New DockSharpness LockTidal BasinTidal Basin GatesSevern Estuary Sharpness Contents 1 Canal planning and construction 1 1 Decade of capital raising 1 2 Eventual completion 1 3 Eventual dividends 1 4 Purton hulks 1 5 Bridge houses 2 Modern times 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Bibliography 5 External linksCanal planning and construction edit nbsp Founder s share of the Glocester and Berkeley Canal Company issued 29 September 1794 printed on vellum The proprietors of this canal were authorised to raise the sum of 140 000 to be divided into shares of 100 each If the former sum be insufficient then they raise a further sum of 60 000 2 Conceived in the canal mania period of the late 18th century the Gloucester and Berkeley Ship Canal scheme as it was originally named was started by architect and civil engineer Robert Mylne In 1793 an Act of Parliament 33 Geo 3 c 97 was obtained authorising the raising of a total of 200 000 3 The project rapidly encountered financial difficulties to such an extent that Mylne left the project in 1798 By mid 1799 costs had reached 112 000 but only 5 1 2 miles 9 km of the canal had been completed 4 Robert Mylne s role was taken over by James Dadford who had originally been engaged as resident engineer on the project in 1795 5 Lack of funds resulted in the company ceasing to employ Dadford in 1800 4 Decade of capital raising edit Between 1800 and 1810 various attempts were made to raise money to allow further building but they came to nothing 4 Money from tolls and rents allowed for some improvements to be made to the basin at Gloucester in 1813 6 Eventual completion edit Following the Poor Employment Act 1817 it was possible for the company to borrow money from the Exchequer Bill Loan Commission This along with further share issues provided enough money to bring the scheme to completion 7 After these significant delays the canal opened in April 1827 In the course of its construction the canal had cost 440 000 equivalent to 41 000 000 in 2021 8 As opened the canal was 86 1 2 feet 26 4 m wide 18 feet 5 5 m deep and could take craft of up to 600 long tons 610 tonnes 670 short tons The longer of the two locks onto the canal proper was 115 feet 35 m long 8 Eventual dividends edit By the middle of the 19th century it proved possible to pay a small dividend the debt to the Exchequer Bill Loan Commission having been repaid with the help of a loan of 60 000 from the Pelican Life Assurance Company 8 In 1871 the last of the debts incurred in the course of funding the canal including the Pelican loan were paid off 9 Where the Severn Railway Bridge completed in 1879 passed over the canal a swing section was constructed 10 to avoid restricting headroom Purton hulks edit Main article Purton Hulks In 1909 following a collapse in the bank of the river the canal company s chief engineer A J Cullis called for old vessels to be run aground along the bank of the Severn near Purton to create a makeshift tidal erosion barrier to reinforce the narrow strip of land between the river and canal 11 Barges trows and schooners were hulked at high tide and have since filled with silt More boats have been added including the schooner Katherine Ellen which was impounded in 1921 for running guns to the IRA the Kennet barge Harriett and ferrocement barges built in World War II 12 In 1999 Paul Barnett started a privately funded research project to record the 81 vessels at the site recognised as the largest ships graveyard in mainland Britain 13 In 2010 British Waterways took control of the site in an attempt to protect it 14 Bridge houses edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eight of the bridges have Neo classical bridge men s houses in the near vicinity These were built in the early 19th century when the volume of traffic on the canal made it important that all the bridges could open at night so that vessels could meet the tides at Sharpness At that time the other bridge men lived in existing houses that were close enough to their bridges The classical style bridge men s houses were originally symmetrical in plan with gables on each elevation Each had a living room one bedroom a scullery at the back and a porch with Doric columns at the front In later years the houses have been extended to provide more accommodation and modern facilities Today the houses are in private ownership mostly Grade II listed nbsp Rea Bridge Bridge house nbsp Sellars Bridge Bridge house nbsp Hardwicke Bridge now removed Bridge house nbsp Parkend Bridge Bridge house nbsp Fretherne Bridge Bridge house nbsp Splatt Bridge Bridge house nbsp Cambridge Arms Bridge Bridge house nbsp Purton Upper Bridge Bridge houseModern times editIn 1905 traffic exceeded one million tons for the first time 15 Oil was added to the list of cargoes carried by the canal with bulk oil carriers taking fuel to storage tanks sited to the south of Gloucester 16 In 1937 the canal was navigated by the submarines HMS H33 and HMS H49 17 The canal was nationalized in 1948 18 At the same time the Sharpness Dock Police which had policed the dock since 1874 were absorbed into the British Transport Police 19 In 1955 the Board of Survey of Canals and Inland Waterways released a report that among other things described the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal as carrying substantial traffic and offering scope for commercial development 20 The River Cam which is subject to accretion due to industrial and agricultural runoff is an important feeder for the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal 21 It was formerly navigable as the Cambridge Arm 22 with one entrance lock leading to a basin and wharf at Cambridge the limit of navigation due to mill weirs and low bridges on the Bristol to Gloucester road The lock was missing and the basin abandoned by 1901 23 Most of the straightened channel has survived as flood defence improvements and is potentially still navigable but the entrance is now blocked by a very low bridge at the site of the former lock 24 By the mid 1980s commercial traffic had largely come to a halt with the canal being given over to pleasure cruisers with the exception of a few passages by grain barges 16 The oil trade ceased in 1985 with the closure of the petroleum depot at Quedgeley 10 In order to allow the A430 Gloucester southwestern bypass to be built the canal had to be diverted This new cut eliminated a major problem which had plagued commercial traffic since opening the sharp double bend in the canal The new section of channel was opened on 6 May 2006 25 In January 2009 a project began to replace the Patch Bridge swing bridge with a motor powered design instead of the former hand cranked system 26 Today the canal can be used by boats up to 64 m 210 ft in length 9 6 m 31 ft in beam and 32 m 105 ft in height The maximum draft is 3 5 m 11 ft 1 The canal links directly to the Stroudwater Navigation at Saul Junction the only such flat crossing between two different canal companies anywhere in the world 27 nbsp Motorised Dutch Barge passing a swing bridge on the Gloucester amp Sharpness Canal nbsp The canal at Patch Bridge near the Wildfowl Reserve at Slimbridge nbsp The Sea Cadet training ship TS John Jerwood passes through Patch Bridge on the Gloucester amp Sharpness Canal on its way to the River Severn nbsp The Gloucester and Sharpness Canal at Saul Junction nbsp The Gloucester and Sharpness Canal at the entrance to Gloucester docksSee also edit nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Transport portalCanals of the United Kingdom History of the British canal systemReferences edit a b Inland Waterways Association Gloucester and Sharpness Canal Retrieved 24 April 2013 The History of Cheltenham and its Environs Cheltenham Printed and published by H Ruff 1803 p 318 Hadfield 1969 p 342 a b c Hadfield 1969 p 344 Hadfield 1969 p 343 Hadfield 1969 p 345 Hadfield 1969 p 346 a b c Hadfield 1969 p 348 Hadfield 1969 p 351 a b Paget Tomlinson 2006 pp 124 125 The Purton Hulks morturn com Legacy from the past Retrieved 19 October 2008 Purton Hulks maritime history sunk by neglect telegraph co uk London 18 October 2008 Archived from the original on 20 October 2008 Retrieved 19 October 2008 The Friends of Purton Purton Hulks taken over by British Waterways BBC News 22 September 2010 Retrieved 6 October 2010 Hadfield 1969 p 352 a b Green 1999 p 27 Tall and Kemp 1996 p 64 Waterways Virtual Archive Catalogue Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 28 August 2007 Sharpness Dock Police 1874 1948 Archived from the original on 14 June 2004 Retrieved 28 August 2007 Uneconomic Canals Use Of 771 Miles Not Justified The Times 21 April 1955 p 7 https nrfa ceh ac uk data station info 54098 National River Flow Archive Retrieved 15 March 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help View map Ordnance Survey Gloucestershire XLVIII NE includes Cam Coaley Eastington Frampton on Severn Ordnance Survey Six inch England and Wales 1842 1952 maps nls uk Retrieved 15 March 2023 View map Ordnance Survey Gloucestershire XLVIII 3 Coaley Eastington Frampton on Severn Frocester Sli Ordnance Survey 25 inch England and Wales 1841 1952 maps nls uk Retrieved 15 March 2023 Song of the Paddle Forum Gloucestershire River Cam Song of the Paddle Forum Retrieved 15 March 2023 Canal s new channel section opens BBC News 6 May 2006 Retrieved 25 August 2007 Clare Rachel 6 January 2009 Wardens at bird sanctuary travel by boat stroud news and journal Retrieved 7 January 2009 Saul Junction Stroudwater History stroudwaterhistory org uk Retrieved 15 March 2023 Bibliography edit Colin Green 1999 Severn Traders Black Dwarf Publications ISBN 0 9533028 2 2 Charles Hadfield 1969 The Canals of South and South East England David and Charles ISBN 0 7153 4693 8 Edward Paget Tomlinson 2006 The Illustrated History of Canal amp River Navigations 3rd ed Landmark Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 84306 207 0 J J Tall Paul Kemp 1996 HM Submarines in Camera An Illustrated History of British Submarines Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 0875 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gloucester and Sharpness Canal Gloucester Docks and the Sharpness Canal Past Present and Future some OS Bench Marks to be seen along the Gloucester amp Sharpness Canal images amp map of mile pegs milestones seen along the Gloucester amp Sharpness canal Stroud Voices of local canals oral history site51 44 N 2 29 W 51 733 N 2 483 W 51 733 2 483 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gloucester and Sharpness Canal amp oldid 1189368091, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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