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Somerset Coal Canal

The Somerset Coal Canal (originally known as the Somersetshire Coal Canal) was a narrow canal in England, built around 1800. Its route began in basins at Paulton and Timsbury, ran to nearby Camerton, over two aqueducts at Dunkerton, through a tunnel at Combe Hay, then via Midford and Monkton Combe to Limpley Stoke where it joined the Kennet and Avon Canal. This link gave the Somerset coalfield (which at its peak contained 80 collieries) access east toward London. The longest arm was 10.6 miles (17.1 km) long with 23 locks. From Midford an arm also ran via Writhlington to Radstock, with a tunnel at Wellow.

Somerset Coal Canal
Disused locks at the Combe Hay flight
Map of the Somerset Coal Canal
Specifications
Length10.6 miles (17.1 km)
(Length of Paulton branch)
Maximum boat beam7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)
Locks23
StatusUnder restoration
History
Former namesSomersetshire Coal Canal
Principal engineerWilliam Jessop
William Smith
Construction began1795
Date of first use1798
Date completed1805
Date closed1898
Date restored2012–present
Geography
Start pointPaulton / Timsbury
End pointDundas Aqueduct
Connects toKennet and Avon Canal

A feature of the canal was the variety of methods used at Combe Hay to overcome height differences between the upper and lower reaches: initially by the use of caisson locks; when this method failed an inclined plane trackway; and finally a flight of 22 conventional locks.

The Radstock arm was never commercially successful and was replaced first with a tramway in 1815[1] and later incorporated into the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway. The Paulton route flourished for nearly 100 years and was very profitable, carrying high tonnages of coal for many decades; this canal helped carry the fuel that powered the nearby city of Bath.

By the 1880s, coal production declined as the various pits either ran out of coal or were flooded and then closed. In 1896 the main pump at Dunkerton, which maintained the canal water level, failed. The resultant lowering in level meant that only small loads could be transported, which reduced revenue, thus the canal company could not afford a replacement pump.

The canal became disused after 1898 and officially closed in 1902, being sold off to the various railway companies who were expanding their networks.

In September 2014, restoration work began on the canal section from Paulton to Radford, with the aim of restoring the entire canal to navigation in the future. The largest canal drydock in England has been revealed at Paulton; culverts and bridges nearby are being reinstated or rebuilt; and about 23 mile (1 km) of canal from Paulton to Radford has been in water since mid-2015.[2]

History edit

Background edit

 
House at Tucking Mill, next to the canal, reputedly lived in by William Smith

In 1763 coal was discovered in Radstock and mining began in the area, but transport was a major problem because of the poor state of the roads. This cost and the potential for cheaper delivery of coal from south Wales via the Monmouthshire Canal[3] led to the proposal for a canal which could transport the coal to Bath and Wiltshire.[4] Initial surveys were conducted during 1793 by William Jessop and William Smith under the direction of John Rennie who presented the report on 14 October 1793 estimating the cost of construction of the canal at £80,000. Smith, who also worked at the Mearns Pit at High Littleton, made the original observations leading to his important stratification theory by observing the dips in the geological strata through which the canal was cut.[5][6] Smith became Surveyor to the company, but was dismissed in April 1799, apparently because he had used his position as surveyor to buy a local house at advantageous terms.[7] He then set himself up in a private practice in Bath but was re-engaged by the company in 1811, to provide advice when repairs became necessary to the canal bed.[8]

 
Derelict lock next to Caisson House, Combe Hay

The canal was authorised by an Act of Parliament entitled "An Act for making and maintaining a navigable Canal, with certain Railways and Stone Roads, from several Collieries in the county of Somerset, to communicate with the intended Kennet and Avon Canal, in the parish of Bradford, in the county of Wilts" of 1794,[3] and further detailed surveys were carried out by Robert Whitworth and John Sutcliffe, who was then appointed as chief engineer.

Construction edit

In May 1795, tenders were invited for the first section to be built from the meadows near Goosehard (or Gooseyard) near Paulton to Hopyard in the parish of Camerton. In June 1795 a contractor, Houghton & Son from Shropshire, started the terminus at Paulton meadows using local labour. This first section of the canal was completed on Monday 1 October 1798; the first load of coal carried on the canal was delivered to Bath via Dunkerton. Some 14 collieries at Timsbury and Paulton were connected to their respective basins in the meadow terminus by tramways; this required the construction of three tramway bridges over the Cam brook. A further bridge at Upper Radford was required over the canal; at this point tramways connected the Withy Mills and Radford workings. The course of the Cam brook was modified at various places to protect the canal from erosion. In 1799 William Whitmore and his partner, Norton, offered to build a balance (or geometrical) lift without payment, on condition that if successful they were to have £17,300 and a royalty of 4 pence per ton of goods passed.[9]

The design of the caisson lock at Combe Hay was not a success: on 15 February 1798 the first descent failed. Mr Weldon (the inventor) made one successful descent on 7 June and said "I will undertake to pass 1,500 tons of goods through the lock in 12 hrs". Tenders were invited on 28 June for further constructions. Two more attempts to use the lock took place on 11 April and 2 May, but only the latter was successful. By 22 August 1799 the second rebuilding of the caisson had been abandoned. It was replaced by three locks and an inclined plane trackway, but the trackway was not successful either, and the company proposed to raise more money to finance the building of a flight of 19 locks to replace it, the use of which would incur an additional toll of one shilling per ton on all traffic.[3] This was vigorously opposed by the owners of the Kennet and Avon Canal and the Wilts and Berks Canal, on the grounds that the price of coal to their customers would be too high. After negotiation, the company obtained a new Act of Parliament on 30 April 1802, which authorised the formation of a separate body called "The Lock Fund of the Somerset Coal Canal Company", with powers to raise the sum of £45,000. The money was raised by the Kennet and Avon, the Wilts and Berks and the Somerset Coal Canal each contributing £15,000, and the one shilling surcharge was to be levied until the capital had been repaid, after which it would cease.[10] The act set the tonnage rates to be charged:

 
Somerset Coal Canal at Dundas Aqueduct
Tonnage rates on the Somerset Coal Canal in 1805[11]
Cargo Rate
For all Coal, Coke, &c 2+12d per Ton, per Mile.
For all Iron, Lead, Ores, Cinders, &c 4d ditto. ditto.
For all Stones, Tiles, Bricks, Slate, Timber, &c 3d ditto. ditto.
For all Cattle, Sheep, Swine and other Beasts 4d ditto. ditto.
For all other Goods 4d ditto. ditto.
For every Horse or Ass Travelling on the Railway 1d each.
For every Cow or other Neat Cattle ditto 12d ditto. ditto.
For Sheep, Swine and Calves ditto 5d per Score.

Fractions of a Mile to pay for Half a Mile, and of a Ton as a Quarter of a Ton; Rates for Wharfage to be determined by the Company. In addition to the above Rates, One Shilling per Ton is paid on all Goods to the Lock Fund, which also receives Three Farthings per Ton from the Coal Canal company.[11]

The boats were weighed at Midford, where a weigh house was built in 1831. Boats were floated into a one-ended lock, the gate closed and the water drained. This left the boat resting on a cradle suspended by angled rods attached to a beam which took the weight of the boat. One-pound weights were then added to a pan, with one pound being equivalent to one hundredweight (112 pounds or 51 kilograms), until the system was in equilibrium, then the weight was recorded. The weigh house at Midford was one of only four known to have been built in England and Wales.[3]

Somerset Coal Canal
 
 
 
Kennet and Avon Canal
 
 
 
Dundas aqueduct
 
 
Stop lock
 
 
River Avon
 
Limpley Stoke moorings
 
End of navigable section
 
 A36  bridge
 
Tucking Mill Wharf
 
 
Toll point (weigh house)
 
 B3110  bridge
 
S&D Railway (from 1874)
 
 
 
 
Radstock Branch
 
 
Midford Aqueduct
 
 
Midford Basin
 
 
Tramway
 
 
Twinhoe Basin
 
 
Wellow Tunnel
 
 
Stoney Littleton Aqueduct
 
 
Radstock Basin
 
 
Combe Hay Locks 20–22
 
 
 
 
Adit to pumping engine
 
 
Temporary inclined plane (1801-1806)
 
 
Combe Hay Locks 1–19
 
 
 
Combe Hay pumping engine
 
 
 
Combe Hay Aqueduct
 
Combe Hay Tunnel
 
 A367  Dunkerton Tunnel
 
Dunkerton Big Aqueduct
 
Dunkerton Little Aqueduct
 
Dunkerton pumping engine
 
Dunkerton Colliery Wharf
 
Camerton Colliery Wharf
 
Radford Colliery Wharf
 
Withy Mills Colliery Wharf
 
 
Dry Dock
 
 
 
Paulton Basin
 
Timsbury Basin


Operation edit

The canal opened in 1805[3] and was used for passenger traffic as well as coal. In 1814 the Benedictine monks who came to Downside Abbey are said to have used the canal for the last stage of their journey.[12] Another cargo carried by the canal was limestone from Combe Down.[13] The peak level of cargo carried was in 1838 at 138,403 tons[14] resulting in over £17,000 of tolls being paid. Cargoes of over 100,000 tons were common until the 1870s when the decline in output of coal from the various Somerset coalpits, along with competition from the railways, dramatically reduced the canal's profitability. When the main pump at Dunkerton failed it was not replaced and there was not sufficient water for continual operation of the locks. The canal went into liquidation in 1894; it closed in 1898 and was finally abandoned in 1904 when it was sold to the Great Western Railway for £2,000,[15] and used as a branch of the Bristol and North Somerset Railway. The closure caused problems across the Somerset coalfield especially to the pits along the Paulton branch, which had relied on the canal for transportation.[16]

The Radstock branch edit

When the Radstock branch was constructed, it was intended to link it to the main line of the Paulton branch at Midford, which was at a lower level at this point. The Lock Fund created in 1802 was to have paid for the construction of the locks, but because there was little regular traffic on the branch, the company built one lock, an aqueduct over the Midford Brook, and a short tramway to bridge the gap.[10] This contributed to the economic failure of the branch, and its replacement by a tramway in 1815.[17] The tramway was laid along the former canal's towpath. It was single-line with passing places every 600 yards (550 m), and was originally laid using cast iron plates on stone block sleepers, but was relaid using wrought iron plates.[3]

Engineers and surveyors edit

 
Portrait of John Rennie, 1810, by Sir Henry Raeburn
 
William Smith

Data from Jim Shead's Waterways Information.[9]

Combe Hay and the caisson lock edit

 
Operation of caisson lock

The fall over the route is 135 ft (41 m), which meant problems with supplying adequate water. The Cam brook was an inadequate source of water above Camerton, and the mills along it had water rights. Each narrow boat travelling through the series of locks (22 of them each 6 ft (1.8 m) deep) with a 25-ton load of coal caused 85 tons of water to be discharged into the brook below the locks. As a result, the canal was designed with all 22 locks in one flight near Combe Hay and a pumping engine to raise water from the Cam; this was the first canal to depend entirely on pumping.

A potential solution to the water supply problem was the use of caisson locks as proposed by Robert Weldon, three of which could replace the 22 conventional locks, because it wasted no water, but the technology had only been tried in a one-third scale prototype. Each lock was 80 ft (24 m) long and 60 ft (18 m) deep and contained a closed wooden box which could take a barge. This box moved up and down in the 60 ft (18 m) deep pool of water, which never left the lock. The box was demonstrated to the Prince Regent (later George IV), but had engineering problems and was never successful commercially or built elsewhere.

It was temporarily replaced with an inclined plane by Benjamin Outram who had successfully installed inclined planes at the Peak Forest Canal in Derbyshire, whilst 22 locks and a Boulton & Watt Steam Pumping Station, capable of lifting 5,000 tons of water in 12 hours, were built to the latest design with metal plate clad wooden gates.[18][19][20]

Construction edit

 
Outlet view of spillway drain 25 feet (8 m) long and 10 feet (3 m) wide
 
Internal view of spillway drain about 66 feet (20 m) in length

The two images show a spillway drain from c. 1796 (uncovered in 2009–10) at Upper Midford, a location where a caisson to take the canal from the 180 ft (55 m) level to the 134 ft (41 m) level at Midford Aqueduct was proposed.

Each caisson would have had such a drain for maintenance purposes over the exit arch made to the same dimensions. The following extract from the Bath Herald newspaper provides the details of the chosen sites:

14 Jun 1798 Travel: Somerset coal canal – caisson cisterns to be formed at Combe Hay & nr. Midford. Sealed proposals reqd. on embanking & excavation with the masonry; or each separately – send to sub-committee, Waldegrave Arms, Radstock 20 Jul Plans & specs. on appl.

For further Newspaper articles see s:Bath Georgian Newspaper - Somerset Coal Canal

Paulton and Timsbury basins edit

 
The spoil tip in Paulton, referred to locally as "The Batch"

located between the villages of Paulton and Timsbury was the terminus of the northern branch of the Somerset Coal Canal and was a central point for at least 15 collieries around Paulton, Timsbury and High Littleton, which were connected to the canal by tramroads. Timsbury basin was some 600 ft (180 m) to the west of Paulton basin.

On the northern side of Timsbury basin was the terminus for the tramroads which served Old Grove, Prior's, Tyning and Hayeswood pits, with a branch line to Amesbury and Mearns pits. Parts of this line were still in use in 1873, probably all carrying horse-drawn wagons of coal. Tramroads on the southern side of the Paulton basin served Brittens, Littleborrok, Paulton Ham, Paulton Hill, Simons Hill terminating at Salisbury Colliery. In addition the Paulton Foundry used this line. The entire line was disused by 1871 as were the collieries it served.[16]

The area has been designated as an 'area of special architectural or historic interest, the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance' under section 69 of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990.[21]

Coming of the railway edit

 
Aqueduct on the Somerset Coal Canal at Dunkerton

The first railway to affect the canal was the Bristol and North Somerset Railway's Frome to Radstock line completed in 1854 which took traffic away from the tramway. It finally closed in 1874 with the Somerset and Dorset Railway's extension to Bath, built along its route from Radstock to Midford. Another branch line was constructed in 1882 from Hallatrow to Camerton, running alongside the canal for the last 1+12 miles (2 km) of its route.[3]

The Great Western Railway built a railway line (the Bristol and North Somerset Railway) over some parts of the canal route from Limpley Stoke to Camerton, where it joined the existing 1882 branch line from Hallatrow to Camerton. This opened in 1910 for passenger and goods traffic, closed for the First World War, re-opened after the war, ran for passengers only for two more years in the mid-1920s and finally closed to all traffic in the 1950s. The line was used in the 1950s Ealing comedy film The Titfield Thunderbolt.[22][23]

Present day edit

The route of the canal lies in a largely agricultural area, dotted with small villages linked by minor roads.[24] Several stretches of the Paulton and Timsbury basins branch are easily visible, and various stretches and features were surveyed in 2014.[citation needed] Full restoration of the entire length from Paulton to Dundas is being explored.[by whom?] Four locks on the original canal route at Combe Hay have been buried; one by a 20-foot (6 m) railway embankment, and three overfilled by 10 to 20 feet (3–6 m) with building waste since the 1960s. It may no longer be feasible to reinstate the original locks 16, 17, 18 and 19 structures for this section.[why?]

At Upper Midford the canal is blocked entirely at the accommodation bridge[25] by the 40-foot (12 m) high embankment of the railway that crosses it.[26] Most of the canal features along the entire route are on private land but the towpath survives in places as a right of way, while the later railway between Midford to Wellow has been surfaced to form part of National Cycle Route 24.[27] It has been proposed[by whom?] that a statue, commissioned by Sustrans, of William Smith, the father of English Geology, will be sited next to the path on the line of the canal commemorating his work as its surveyor and his recognition of the significance of rock strata.

 
The canal in 2006: moorings on the only navigable section of the canal, near its junction with the Kennet and Avon Canal. This stretch at Brassknocker, 200 metres (660 ft) long, is used for moorings, a café, and boat and cycle hire.

Restoration works edit

Limpley Stoke edit

The 14-mile (400 m) stretch at Brassknocker Basin where the canal joins the Kennet and Avon at Dundas Aqueduct was restored during the 1980s and is now a thriving marina with moorings. Excavations of the old stop lock (at the junction with the Kennet and Avon Canal) showed that this had originally been a broad (14 feet, 4.3 m) lock that at some point was narrowed to 7 feet (2.1 m) by moving the lock wall.[3]

 
Excavated canal dry dock and restored entrance arch at Paulton Basin, on the Somerset Coal Canal.

Paulton and Timsbury basins edit

Work started in 2013 to reveal and excavate the drydock next to the eastern Paulton Basin. This drydock appears to be the largest drydock anywhere on the canal system in England, being about 30 feet (9.1 m) wide and 83 feet (25 m) long, large enough for three full-length narrowboats to be worked on at the same time.[28]

The drainage culvert at the southeast corner of the drydock was rebuilt in December 2013, and the drydock itself completely excavated in April 2014. The entrance to the drydock, at the western end, was surmounted by a bridge, partially demolished in 2002 but rebuilt during 2014.[28]

Withy Mills edit

Excavations began in May 2014 at Terminus Bridge; the abutments were found to be in poor condition; an earth bund between the abutments carried the public footpath and stopped the water draining from the Paulton and Timsbury Basins. A new earth bund was installed about 25 m (27 yd) west of Terminus Bridge to stop the water and allow work to continue on the bridge.[29]

During excavations a drainage culvert was discovered about 20 m (22 yd) west of Terminus bridge.[30] Work resumed in September and November 2014 to batter and reshape the canal embankments. Excess topsoil was removed and the towpath reinstated on the stretch to the east from Terminus bridge for about 200 m (220 yd). On the same stretch a retaining wall was discovered in the south embankment continuing for about 100 m (110 yd), possibly built as a repair to a weak section of canal banking. Vertical infills of white clay have been used along this wall.

Grant to study history of the canal edit

 
The restored canal bed at Upper Midford to the west of the recently uncovered Georgian spillway drain

The canal has been studied for many years with exploration and restoration work being undertaken in Wellow and elsewhere. Particular effort, so far unsuccessful, has been put into trying to find the site of the second and third caisson locks at Combe Hay. In October 2006 a grant of £20,000 was obtained from the Heritage Lottery Fund, by the Somersetshire Coal Canal Society in association with Bath & North East Somerset Council and the Avon Industrial Buildings Trust to carry out a technical study on one of the locks and associated structures at Combe Hay.[31][32] Many of the locks and associated workings are listed buildings.[33][34]

Route and points of interest edit

Point Coordinates
(Links to map resources)
OS Grid Ref Notes
Site of basin 51°18′14″N 2°29′38″W / 51.304°N 2.494°W / 51.304; -2.494 (Site of basin) ST655563 Paulton
Site of aqueduct 51°20′02″N 2°24′32″W / 51.334°N 2.409°W / 51.334; -2.409 (Site of aqueduct) ST715595 Dunkerton
Site of caisson lock 51°20′13″N 2°22′59″W / 51.337°N 2.383°W / 51.337; -2.383 (Site of Caison lock) ST733598 Combe Hay
Junction of branches and tramway connection 51°20′35″N 2°20′35″W / 51.343°N 2.343°W / 51.343; -2.343 (Junction of branches) ST761605 Midford
Junction with Kennet and Avon Canal 51°21′40″N 2°18′43″W / 51.361°N 2.312°W / 51.361; -2.312 (Junction with Kennet and Avon Canal) ST783625 Limpley Stoke

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dunning, Robert (1983). A History of Somerset. Chichester: Phillimore & Co. ISBN 0-85033-461-6.
  2. ^ "Restoration". Somerset Coal Canal Society. from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Halse, Roger; Castens, Simon (2000). The Somersetshire Coal Canal: A Pictorial Journey. Bath: Millstream Books. ISBN 0-948975-58-X.
  4. ^ Clew, Kenneth R. (1970). The Somersetshire Coal Canal and Railways. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4792-6.
  5. ^ Simon Winchester, The Map That Changed the World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology, (2001), New York: HarperCollins, ISBN 0-14-028039-1
  6. ^ Torrens, H. S. (2004). "Smith, William (1769–1839)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25932. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ Clew (1970: 38)
  8. ^ Clew (1970: 74)
  9. ^ a b "History of Somerset Coal Canal". Jim Shead's Waterways Information. from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 9 October 2006.
  10. ^ a b L. J. Dalby (2000) The Wilts and Berks Canal, Oakwood Press, ISBN 0-85361-562-4
  11. ^ a b Priestley, Joseph (1831). Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers, Canals, and Railways, of Great Britain. from the original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved 9 October 2006.
  12. ^ Coysh, A.W.; Mason, E.J.; Waite, V. (1977). The Mendips. London: Robert Hale Ltd. ISBN 0-7091-6426-2.
  13. ^ Patch, Harry; Van Emden, Richard (2007). The Last Fighting Tommy. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-7475-9115-3.
  14. ^ Collier, Peter (1986). Colliers Way: The Somerset Coalfield. Ex Libris Press. ISBN 978-0-948578-05-2.
  15. ^ Russell, Ronald (1991). The Country Canal. David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-9169-0.
  16. ^ a b Down, C.G.; Warrington, A. J. (2005). The history of the Somerset coalfield. Radstock: Radstock Museum. ISBN 0-9551684-0-6.
  17. ^ Priestley, Joseph (1831). Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers, Canals, and Railways, of Great Britain P580. from the original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved 9 December 2007.
  18. ^ . Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution. Archived from the original on 14 November 2006. Retrieved 6 October 2006.
  19. ^ . The Somersetshire Coal Canal (Society). Archived from the original on 11 October 2006. Retrieved 6 October 2006.
  20. ^ . Aspects of Somerset History. Archived from the original on 2 May 2006. Retrieved 9 October 2006.
  21. ^ . Bath and North East Somerset Planning. Archived from the original on 18 September 2010. Retrieved 10 December 2006.
  22. ^ Castens, Simon (2002). On the Trail of The Titfield Thunderbolt. Thunderbolt Books. ISBN 0-9538771-0-8.
  23. ^ Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (June 1996). Frome to Bristol including the Camerton Branch and the "Titfield Thunderbolt". Middleton Press. ISBN 1-873793-77-4.
  24. ^ . BANES Rural Landscapes. Archived from the original on 26 November 2005. Retrieved 9 October 2006.
  25. ^ . Bath in Time. 1908. Archived from the original on 22 January 2014.
  26. ^ "Constructing the Camerton to Limpley Stoke Railway, Midford c.1907 by Dafnis, George Love at Bath in Time". from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  27. ^ . SUSTRANS. Archived from the original on 18 August 2006. Retrieved 9 October 2006.
  28. ^ a b Norbury, S. G. (17 June 2015). "Boats to use coal canal in Paulton for the first time 117 years". Somerset Guardian. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  29. ^ "Local Canal to reopen in Big History Year". Midsomer Norton, Radstock & District Journal. 17 June 2015. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  30. ^ "Restoration". Somerset Coal Canal Society. from the original on 12 October 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  31. ^ "Grant unlocks Canal's secret history". BANES News Inform 32. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2006.
  32. ^ "Canal lock restoration under way". BBC News, Somerset. 9 October 2006. Retrieved 9 October 2006.
  33. ^ Historic England. "Flight of 10 locks (1115372)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 October 2006.
  34. ^ Historic England. "Remains of the Basin at the bottom of the Inclined Plane (1320442)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 October 2006.

Bibliography edit

  • Allsop, Niall (1993). The Somersetshire Coal Canal Rediscovered: A Walker's Guide. Bath: Millstream Books. ISBN 0-948975-35-0.
  • Clew, Kenneth R (1970). The Somersetshire Coal Canal and Railways. Bran's Head Books. ISBN 0-905220-67-6.
  • Cornwell, John (2005). Collieries of Somerset and Bristol. Landmark Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-84306-170-8.
  • Halse, Roger; Castens, Simon (2000). The Somersetshire Coal Canal: A Pictorial Journey. Bath: Millstream Books. ISBN 0-948975-58-X.
  • Handley, Chris (2006). Transport & Industrial Development in the Somerset Coalfield. Radstock: Radstock, Midsomer Norton and District Museum Society.
  • Chapman, Mike (2000). The Timsbury Book – Timsbury & the Somersetshire coal canal. Timsbury: Timsbury Parish Council Millennium Committee. ISBN 0-9526225-5-6.

External links edit

  • Somersetshire Coal Canal Society website
  • Download a detailed route map of the Somersetshire Coal Canal
  • image & map of mile marker seen nr the route of the Somerset Coal Canal

51°20′02″N 2°24′32″W / 51.334°N 2.409°W / 51.334; -2.409

somerset, coal, canal, originally, known, somersetshire, coal, canal, narrow, canal, england, built, around, 1800, route, began, basins, paulton, timsbury, nearby, camerton, over, aqueducts, dunkerton, through, tunnel, combe, then, midford, monkton, combe, lim. The Somerset Coal Canal originally known as the Somersetshire Coal Canal was a narrow canal in England built around 1800 Its route began in basins at Paulton and Timsbury ran to nearby Camerton over two aqueducts at Dunkerton through a tunnel at Combe Hay then via Midford and Monkton Combe to Limpley Stoke where it joined the Kennet and Avon Canal This link gave the Somerset coalfield which at its peak contained 80 collieries access east toward London The longest arm was 10 6 miles 17 1 km long with 23 locks From Midford an arm also ran via Writhlington to Radstock with a tunnel at Wellow Somerset Coal CanalDisused locks at the Combe Hay flightMap of the Somerset Coal CanalSpecificationsLength10 6 miles 17 1 km Length of Paulton branch Maximum boat beam7 ft 0 in 2 13 m Locks23StatusUnder restorationHistoryFormer namesSomersetshire Coal CanalPrincipal engineerWilliam JessopWilliam SmithConstruction began1795Date of first use1798Date completed1805Date closed1898Date restored2012 presentGeographyStart pointPaulton TimsburyEnd pointDundas AqueductConnects toKennet and Avon CanalA feature of the canal was the variety of methods used at Combe Hay to overcome height differences between the upper and lower reaches initially by the use of caisson locks when this method failed an inclined plane trackway and finally a flight of 22 conventional locks The Radstock arm was never commercially successful and was replaced first with a tramway in 1815 1 and later incorporated into the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway The Paulton route flourished for nearly 100 years and was very profitable carrying high tonnages of coal for many decades this canal helped carry the fuel that powered the nearby city of Bath By the 1880s coal production declined as the various pits either ran out of coal or were flooded and then closed In 1896 the main pump at Dunkerton which maintained the canal water level failed The resultant lowering in level meant that only small loads could be transported which reduced revenue thus the canal company could not afford a replacement pump The canal became disused after 1898 and officially closed in 1902 being sold off to the various railway companies who were expanding their networks In September 2014 restoration work began on the canal section from Paulton to Radford with the aim of restoring the entire canal to navigation in the future The largest canal drydock in England has been revealed at Paulton culverts and bridges nearby are being reinstated or rebuilt and about 2 3 mile 1 km of canal from Paulton to Radford has been in water since mid 2015 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Construction 1 3 Operation 1 4 The Radstock branch 1 5 Engineers and surveyors 1 6 Combe Hay and the caisson lock 1 6 1 Construction 1 7 Paulton and Timsbury basins 1 8 Coming of the railway 2 Present day 3 Restoration works 3 1 Limpley Stoke 3 2 Paulton and Timsbury basins 3 3 Withy Mills 3 4 Grant to study history of the canal 4 Route and points of interest 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory editBackground edit nbsp House at Tucking Mill next to the canal reputedly lived in by William Smith In 1763 coal was discovered in Radstock and mining began in the area but transport was a major problem because of the poor state of the roads This cost and the potential for cheaper delivery of coal from south Wales via the Monmouthshire Canal 3 led to the proposal for a canal which could transport the coal to Bath and Wiltshire 4 Initial surveys were conducted during 1793 by William Jessop and William Smith under the direction of John Rennie who presented the report on 14 October 1793 estimating the cost of construction of the canal at 80 000 Smith who also worked at the Mearns Pit at High Littleton made the original observations leading to his important stratification theory by observing the dips in the geological strata through which the canal was cut 5 6 Smith became Surveyor to the company but was dismissed in April 1799 apparently because he had used his position as surveyor to buy a local house at advantageous terms 7 He then set himself up in a private practice in Bath but was re engaged by the company in 1811 to provide advice when repairs became necessary to the canal bed 8 nbsp Derelict lock next to Caisson House Combe Hay The canal was authorised by an Act of Parliament entitled An Act for making and maintaining a navigable Canal with certain Railways and Stone Roads from several Collieries in the county of Somerset to communicate with the intended Kennet and Avon Canal in the parish of Bradford in the county of Wilts of 1794 3 and further detailed surveys were carried out by Robert Whitworth and John Sutcliffe who was then appointed as chief engineer Construction edit In May 1795 tenders were invited for the first section to be built from the meadows near Goosehard or Gooseyard near Paulton to Hopyard in the parish of Camerton In June 1795 a contractor Houghton amp Son from Shropshire started the terminus at Paulton meadows using local labour This first section of the canal was completed on Monday 1 October 1798 the first load of coal carried on the canal was delivered to Bath via Dunkerton Some 14 collieries at Timsbury and Paulton were connected to their respective basins in the meadow terminus by tramways this required the construction of three tramway bridges over the Cam brook A further bridge at Upper Radford was required over the canal at this point tramways connected the Withy Mills and Radford workings The course of the Cam brook was modified at various places to protect the canal from erosion In 1799 William Whitmore and his partner Norton offered to build a balance or geometrical lift without payment on condition that if successful they were to have 17 300 and a royalty of 4 pence per ton of goods passed 9 The design of the caisson lock at Combe Hay was not a success on 15 February 1798 the first descent failed Mr Weldon the inventor made one successful descent on 7 June and said I will undertake to pass 1 500 tons of goods through the lock in 12 hrs Tenders were invited on 28 June for further constructions Two more attempts to use the lock took place on 11 April and 2 May but only the latter was successful By 22 August 1799 the second rebuilding of the caisson had been abandoned It was replaced by three locks and an inclined plane trackway but the trackway was not successful either and the company proposed to raise more money to finance the building of a flight of 19 locks to replace it the use of which would incur an additional toll of one shilling per ton on all traffic 3 This was vigorously opposed by the owners of the Kennet and Avon Canal and the Wilts and Berks Canal on the grounds that the price of coal to their customers would be too high After negotiation the company obtained a new Act of Parliament on 30 April 1802 which authorised the formation of a separate body called The Lock Fund of the Somerset Coal Canal Company with powers to raise the sum of 45 000 The money was raised by the Kennet and Avon the Wilts and Berks and the Somerset Coal Canal each contributing 15 000 and the one shilling surcharge was to be levied until the capital had been repaid after which it would cease 10 The act set the tonnage rates to be charged nbsp Somerset Coal Canal at Dundas Aqueduct Tonnage rates on the Somerset Coal Canal in 1805 11 Cargo Rate For all Coal Coke amp c 2 1 2 d per Ton per Mile For all Iron Lead Ores Cinders amp c 4d ditto ditto For all Stones Tiles Bricks Slate Timber amp c 3d ditto ditto For all Cattle Sheep Swine and other Beasts 4d ditto ditto For all other Goods 4d ditto ditto For every Horse or Ass Travelling on the Railway 1d each For every Cow or other Neat Cattle ditto 1 2 d ditto ditto For Sheep Swine and Calves ditto 5d per Score Fractions of a Mile to pay for Half a Mile and of a Ton as a Quarter of a Ton Rates for Wharfage to be determined by the Company In addition to the above Rates One Shilling per Ton is paid on all Goods to the Lock Fund which also receives Three Farthings per Ton from the Coal Canal company 11 The boats were weighed at Midford where a weigh house was built in 1831 Boats were floated into a one ended lock the gate closed and the water drained This left the boat resting on a cradle suspended by angled rods attached to a beam which took the weight of the boat One pound weights were then added to a pan with one pound being equivalent to one hundredweight 112 pounds or 51 kilograms until the system was in equilibrium then the weight was recorded The weigh house at Midford was one of only four known to have been built in England and Wales 3 vteSomerset Coal Canal Legend nbsp nbsp nbsp Kennet and Avon Canal nbsp nbsp nbsp Dundas aqueduct nbsp nbsp Stop lock nbsp nbsp River Avon nbsp Limpley Stoke moorings nbsp End of navigable section nbsp A36 bridge nbsp Tucking Mill Wharf nbsp nbsp Toll point weigh house nbsp B3110 bridge nbsp S amp D Railway from 1874 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Radstock Branch nbsp nbsp Midford Aqueduct nbsp nbsp Midford Basin nbsp nbsp Tramway nbsp nbsp Twinhoe Basin nbsp nbsp Wellow Tunnel nbsp nbsp Stoney Littleton Aqueduct nbsp nbsp Radstock Basin nbsp nbsp Combe Hay Locks 20 22 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Adit to pumping engine nbsp nbsp Temporary inclined plane 1801 1806 nbsp nbsp Combe Hay Locks 1 19 nbsp nbsp nbsp Combe Hay pumping engine nbsp nbsp nbsp Combe Hay Aqueduct nbsp Combe Hay Tunnel nbsp A367 Dunkerton Tunnel nbsp Dunkerton Big Aqueduct nbsp Dunkerton Little Aqueduct nbsp Dunkerton pumping engine nbsp Dunkerton Colliery Wharf nbsp Camerton Colliery Wharf nbsp Radford Colliery Wharf nbsp Withy Mills Colliery Wharf nbsp nbsp Dry Dock nbsp nbsp nbsp Paulton Basin nbsp Timsbury Basin Operation edit The canal opened in 1805 3 and was used for passenger traffic as well as coal In 1814 the Benedictine monks who came to Downside Abbey are said to have used the canal for the last stage of their journey 12 Another cargo carried by the canal was limestone from Combe Down 13 The peak level of cargo carried was in 1838 at 138 403 tons 14 resulting in over 17 000 of tolls being paid Cargoes of over 100 000 tons were common until the 1870s when the decline in output of coal from the various Somerset coalpits along with competition from the railways dramatically reduced the canal s profitability When the main pump at Dunkerton failed it was not replaced and there was not sufficient water for continual operation of the locks The canal went into liquidation in 1894 it closed in 1898 and was finally abandoned in 1904 when it was sold to the Great Western Railway for 2 000 15 and used as a branch of the Bristol and North Somerset Railway The closure caused problems across the Somerset coalfield especially to the pits along the Paulton branch which had relied on the canal for transportation 16 The Radstock branch edit When the Radstock branch was constructed it was intended to link it to the main line of the Paulton branch at Midford which was at a lower level at this point The Lock Fund created in 1802 was to have paid for the construction of the locks but because there was little regular traffic on the branch the company built one lock an aqueduct over the Midford Brook and a short tramway to bridge the gap 10 This contributed to the economic failure of the branch and its replacement by a tramway in 1815 17 The tramway was laid along the former canal s towpath It was single line with passing places every 600 yards 550 m and was originally laid using cast iron plates on stone block sleepers but was relaid using wrought iron plates 3 Engineers and surveyors edit nbsp Portrait of John Rennie 1810 by Sir Henry Raeburn nbsp William Smith William Bennet d 1826 John Hodgkinson Benjamin Outram 1764 1805 John Rennie 1761 1821 William Smith 1769 1839 John Sutcliffe Robert Weldon 1754 1810 Robert Whitworth d 1799 Data from Jim Shead s Waterways Information 9 Combe Hay and the caisson lock edit Main article Combe Hay Locks nbsp Operation of caisson lock The fall over the route is 135 ft 41 m which meant problems with supplying adequate water The Cam brook was an inadequate source of water above Camerton and the mills along it had water rights Each narrow boat travelling through the series of locks 22 of them each 6 ft 1 8 m deep with a 25 ton load of coal caused 85 tons of water to be discharged into the brook below the locks As a result the canal was designed with all 22 locks in one flight near Combe Hay and a pumping engine to raise water from the Cam this was the first canal to depend entirely on pumping A potential solution to the water supply problem was the use of caisson locks as proposed by Robert Weldon three of which could replace the 22 conventional locks because it wasted no water but the technology had only been tried in a one third scale prototype Each lock was 80 ft 24 m long and 60 ft 18 m deep and contained a closed wooden box which could take a barge This box moved up and down in the 60 ft 18 m deep pool of water which never left the lock The box was demonstrated to the Prince Regent later George IV but had engineering problems and was never successful commercially or built elsewhere It was temporarily replaced with an inclined plane by Benjamin Outram who had successfully installed inclined planes at the Peak Forest Canal in Derbyshire whilst 22 locks and a Boulton amp Watt Steam Pumping Station capable of lifting 5 000 tons of water in 12 hours were built to the latest design with metal plate clad wooden gates 18 19 20 Construction edit nbsp Outlet view of spillway drain 25 feet 8 m long and 10 feet 3 m wide nbsp Internal view of spillway drain about 66 feet 20 m in length The two images show a spillway drain from c 1796 uncovered in 2009 10 at Upper Midford a location where a caisson to take the canal from the 180 ft 55 m level to the 134 ft 41 m level at Midford Aqueduct was proposed Each caisson would have had such a drain for maintenance purposes over the exit arch made to the same dimensions The following extract from the Bath Herald newspaper provides the details of the chosen sites 14 Jun 1798 Travel Somerset coal canal caisson cisterns to be formed at Combe Hay amp nr Midford Sealed proposals reqd on embanking amp excavation with the masonry or each separately send to sub committee Waldegrave Arms Radstock 20 Jul Plans amp specs on appl For further Newspaper articles see s Bath Georgian Newspaper Somerset Coal Canal Paulton and Timsbury basins edit nbsp The spoil tip in Paulton referred to locally as The Batch located between the villages of Paulton and Timsbury was the terminus of the northern branch of the Somerset Coal Canal and was a central point for at least 15 collieries around Paulton Timsbury and High Littleton which were connected to the canal by tramroads Timsbury basin was some 600 ft 180 m to the west of Paulton basin On the northern side of Timsbury basin was the terminus for the tramroads which served Old Grove Prior s Tyning and Hayeswood pits with a branch line to Amesbury and Mearns pits Parts of this line were still in use in 1873 probably all carrying horse drawn wagons of coal Tramroads on the southern side of the Paulton basin served Brittens Littleborrok Paulton Ham Paulton Hill Simons Hill terminating at Salisbury Colliery In addition the Paulton Foundry used this line The entire line was disused by 1871 as were the collieries it served 16 The area has been designated as an area of special architectural or historic interest the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance under section 69 of the Planning Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas Act 1990 21 Coming of the railway edit nbsp Aqueduct on the Somerset Coal Canal at Dunkerton The first railway to affect the canal was the Bristol and North Somerset Railway s Frome to Radstock line completed in 1854 which took traffic away from the tramway It finally closed in 1874 with the Somerset and Dorset Railway s extension to Bath built along its route from Radstock to Midford Another branch line was constructed in 1882 from Hallatrow to Camerton running alongside the canal for the last 1 1 2 miles 2 km of its route 3 The Great Western Railway built a railway line the Bristol and North Somerset Railway over some parts of the canal route from Limpley Stoke to Camerton where it joined the existing 1882 branch line from Hallatrow to Camerton This opened in 1910 for passenger and goods traffic closed for the First World War re opened after the war ran for passengers only for two more years in the mid 1920s and finally closed to all traffic in the 1950s The line was used in the 1950s Ealing comedy film The Titfield Thunderbolt 22 23 Present day editThe route of the canal lies in a largely agricultural area dotted with small villages linked by minor roads 24 Several stretches of the Paulton and Timsbury basins branch are easily visible and various stretches and features were surveyed in 2014 citation needed Full restoration of the entire length from Paulton to Dundas is being explored by whom Four locks on the original canal route at Combe Hay have been buried one by a 20 foot 6 m railway embankment and three overfilled by 10 to 20 feet 3 6 m with building waste since the 1960s It may no longer be feasible to reinstate the original locks 16 17 18 and 19 structures for this section why At Upper Midford the canal is blocked entirely at the accommodation bridge 25 by the 40 foot 12 m high embankment of the railway that crosses it 26 Most of the canal features along the entire route are on private land but the towpath survives in places as a right of way while the later railway between Midford to Wellow has been surfaced to form part of National Cycle Route 24 27 It has been proposed by whom that a statue commissioned by Sustrans of William Smith the father of English Geology will be sited next to the path on the line of the canal commemorating his work as its surveyor and his recognition of the significance of rock strata nbsp The canal in 2006 moorings on the only navigable section of the canal near its junction with the Kennet and Avon Canal This stretch at Brassknocker 200 metres 660 ft long is used for moorings a cafe and boat and cycle hire Restoration works editLimpley Stoke edit The 1 4 mile 400 m stretch at Brassknocker Basin where the canal joins the Kennet and Avon at Dundas Aqueduct was restored during the 1980s and is now a thriving marina with moorings Excavations of the old stop lock at the junction with the Kennet and Avon Canal showed that this had originally been a broad 14 feet 4 3 m lock that at some point was narrowed to 7 feet 2 1 m by moving the lock wall 3 nbsp Excavated canal dry dock and restored entrance arch at Paulton Basin on the Somerset Coal Canal Paulton and Timsbury basins edit Work started in 2013 to reveal and excavate the drydock next to the eastern Paulton Basin This drydock appears to be the largest drydock anywhere on the canal system in England being about 30 feet 9 1 m wide and 83 feet 25 m long large enough for three full length narrowboats to be worked on at the same time 28 The drainage culvert at the southeast corner of the drydock was rebuilt in December 2013 and the drydock itself completely excavated in April 2014 The entrance to the drydock at the western end was surmounted by a bridge partially demolished in 2002 but rebuilt during 2014 28 Withy Mills edit Excavations began in May 2014 at Terminus Bridge the abutments were found to be in poor condition an earth bund between the abutments carried the public footpath and stopped the water draining from the Paulton and Timsbury Basins A new earth bund was installed about 25 m 27 yd west of Terminus Bridge to stop the water and allow work to continue on the bridge 29 During excavations a drainage culvert was discovered about 20 m 22 yd west of Terminus bridge 30 Work resumed in September and November 2014 to batter and reshape the canal embankments Excess topsoil was removed and the towpath reinstated on the stretch to the east from Terminus bridge for about 200 m 220 yd On the same stretch a retaining wall was discovered in the south embankment continuing for about 100 m 110 yd possibly built as a repair to a weak section of canal banking Vertical infills of white clay have been used along this wall Grant to study history of the canal edit nbsp The restored canal bed at Upper Midford to the west of the recently uncovered Georgian spillway drain The canal has been studied for many years with exploration and restoration work being undertaken in Wellow and elsewhere Particular effort so far unsuccessful has been put into trying to find the site of the second and third caisson locks at Combe Hay In October 2006 a grant of 20 000 was obtained from the Heritage Lottery Fund by the Somersetshire Coal Canal Society in association with Bath amp North East Somerset Council and the Avon Industrial Buildings Trust to carry out a technical study on one of the locks and associated structures at Combe Hay 31 32 Many of the locks and associated workings are listed buildings 33 34 Route and points of interest editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Point Coordinates Links to map resources OS Grid Ref Notes Site of basin 51 18 14 N 2 29 38 W 51 304 N 2 494 W 51 304 2 494 Site of basin ST655563 Paulton Site of aqueduct 51 20 02 N 2 24 32 W 51 334 N 2 409 W 51 334 2 409 Site of aqueduct ST715595 Dunkerton Site of caisson lock 51 20 13 N 2 22 59 W 51 337 N 2 383 W 51 337 2 383 Site of Caison lock ST733598 Combe Hay Junction of branches and tramway connection 51 20 35 N 2 20 35 W 51 343 N 2 343 W 51 343 2 343 Junction of branches ST761605 Midford Junction with Kennet and Avon Canal 51 21 40 N 2 18 43 W 51 361 N 2 312 W 51 361 2 312 Junction with Kennet and Avon Canal ST783625 Limpley StokeSee also edit nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Transport portal Canals of Great Britain History of the British canal systemReferences edit Dunning Robert 1983 A History of Somerset Chichester Phillimore amp Co ISBN 0 85033 461 6 Restoration Somerset Coal Canal Society Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 21 November 2014 a b c d e f g h Halse Roger Castens Simon 2000 The Somersetshire Coal Canal A Pictorial Journey Bath Millstream Books ISBN 0 948975 58 X Clew Kenneth R 1970 The Somersetshire Coal Canal and Railways Newton Abbot David and Charles ISBN 0 7153 4792 6 Simon Winchester The Map That Changed the World William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology 2001 New York HarperCollins ISBN 0 14 028039 1 Torrens H S 2004 Smith William 1769 1839 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford England Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25932 Subscription or UK public library membership required Clew 1970 38 Clew 1970 74 a b History of Somerset Coal Canal Jim Shead s Waterways Information Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 9 October 2006 a b L J Dalby 2000 The Wilts and Berks Canal Oakwood Press ISBN 0 85361 562 4 a b Priestley Joseph 1831 Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers Canals and Railways of Great Britain Archived from the original on 15 December 2007 Retrieved 9 October 2006 Coysh A W Mason E J Waite V 1977 The Mendips London Robert Hale Ltd ISBN 0 7091 6426 2 Patch Harry Van Emden Richard 2007 The Last Fighting Tommy Bloomsbury Publishing Plc p 15 ISBN 978 0 7475 9115 3 Collier Peter 1986 Colliers Way The Somerset Coalfield Ex Libris Press ISBN 978 0 948578 05 2 Russell Ronald 1991 The Country Canal David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 9169 0 a b Down C G Warrington A J 2005 The history of the Somerset coalfield Radstock Radstock Museum ISBN 0 9551684 0 6 Priestley Joseph 1831 Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers Canals and Railways of Great Britain P580 Archived from the original on 15 December 2007 Retrieved 9 December 2007 The Somerset Coal Canal Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution Archived from the original on 14 November 2006 Retrieved 6 October 2006 History of the Caisson Lock on the Somersetshire Coal Canal The Somersetshire Coal Canal Society Archived from the original on 11 October 2006 Retrieved 6 October 2006 Canals and Canal projects Aspects of Somerset History Archived from the original on 2 May 2006 Retrieved 9 October 2006 Paulton conservation area character appraisal Bath and North East Somerset Planning Archived from the original on 18 September 2010 Retrieved 10 December 2006 Castens Simon 2002 On the Trail of The Titfield Thunderbolt Thunderbolt Books ISBN 0 9538771 0 8 Mitchell Vic Smith Keith June 1996 Frome to Bristol including the Camerton Branch and the Titfield Thunderbolt Middleton Press ISBN 1 873793 77 4 Area 12 Cam and Wellow Brook Valleys BANES Rural Landscapes Archived from the original on 26 November 2005 Retrieved 9 October 2006 Image Constructing the Camerton to Limpley Stoke Railway Midford Bath in Time 1908 Archived from the original on 22 January 2014 Constructing the Camerton to Limpley Stoke Railway Midford c 1907 by Dafnis George Love at Bath in Time Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 4 June 2015 Bristol and Somerset SUSTRANS Archived from the original on 18 August 2006 Retrieved 9 October 2006 a b Norbury S G 17 June 2015 Boats to use coal canal in Paulton for the first time 117 years Somerset Guardian Retrieved 8 October 2015 Local Canal to reopen in Big History Year Midsomer Norton Radstock amp District Journal 17 June 2015 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 October 2015 Restoration Somerset Coal Canal Society Archived from the original on 12 October 2015 Retrieved 8 October 2015 Grant unlocks Canal s secret history BANES News Inform 32 Archived from the original on 20 July 2012 Retrieved 6 October 2006 Canal lock restoration under way BBC News Somerset 9 October 2006 Retrieved 9 October 2006 Historic England Flight of 10 locks 1115372 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 6 October 2006 Historic England Remains of the Basin at the bottom of the Inclined Plane 1320442 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 6 October 2006 Bibliography editAllsop Niall 1993 The Somersetshire Coal Canal Rediscovered A Walker s Guide Bath Millstream Books ISBN 0 948975 35 0 Clew Kenneth R 1970 The Somersetshire Coal Canal and Railways Bran s Head Books ISBN 0 905220 67 6 Cornwell John 2005 Collieries of Somerset and Bristol Landmark Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 84306 170 8 Halse Roger Castens Simon 2000 The Somersetshire Coal Canal A Pictorial Journey Bath Millstream Books ISBN 0 948975 58 X Handley Chris 2006 Transport amp Industrial Development in the Somerset Coalfield Radstock Radstock Midsomer Norton and District Museum Society Chapman Mike 2000 The Timsbury Book Timsbury amp the Somersetshire coal canal Timsbury Timsbury Parish Council Millennium Committee ISBN 0 9526225 5 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Somerset Coal Canal Somersetshire Coal Canal Society website Richard Stevens site about the canal Download a detailed route map of the Somersetshire Coal Canal image amp map of mile marker seen nr the route of the Somerset Coal Canal 51 20 02 N 2 24 32 W 51 334 N 2 409 W 51 334 2 409 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Somerset Coal Canal amp oldid 1215839542 Somersetshire Coal Canal Act 1794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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