Birmingham and Fazeley Canal

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Birmingham and Fazeley Canal
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Fazeley Jn, Coventry Canal
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Watling Street
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Fazeley Mill Marina
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A4091 road
uSWING
Drayton Swivel Bridge
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Aqueduct near Middleton Hall
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Curdworth Bottom Lock 11
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Curdworth Swivel Bridge
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Common Lock 10
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Curdworth Locks (2-9)
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A446 road
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Curdworth Top Lock 1
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M6 Toll motorway
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Curdworth Tunnel (57 yd)
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Minworth Bottom Lock
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A38 road
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Minworth Lock
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Minworth Top Lock
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A38 road
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A4040 road
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Erdington Hall Bridge
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Factory built over canal - 150 yd
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Grand Union Canal
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Salford Jn
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Tame Valley Canal
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Aston railway station
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Aston Flight (11 locks)
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Aston Jn (Digbeth Branch)
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Aston Road bridge (A38)
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Ashted locks (1)
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Ashted Tunnel (103 yd)
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Ashted locks (5)
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Branch to Grand Union
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Typhoo Basin
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Farmer's Bridge Flight - Lock 13
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Snow Hill station
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Locks 11-12
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DST legende
Brindley House over Lock 10. BT Tower
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Lock 9 (under Newhall Street)
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Lock 8
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Whitmore Arm
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Locks 1-7
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Farmer's Bridge Jn, Newhall Arm
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Stour Valley rail tunnel
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End of canal
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Oozells Loop, Old Turn Jn
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Gas Street Basin (Worcester Bar)
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Worcester and Birmingham Canal)
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BCN Main Line (Birmingham Level)
Fingerpost at Old Turn Junction, where the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal meets BCN Main Line
Fingerpost at Old Turn Junction, where the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal meets BCN Main Line
The folly-like footbridge and adjacent swing bridge at Drayton Bassett, one mile from Fazeley Junction
The folly-like footbridge and adjacent swing bridge at Drayton Bassett, one mile from Fazeley Junction

The Birmingham and Fazeley Canal is a canal of the Birmingham Canal Navigations in the West Midlands of England. Its purpose was to provide a link between Birmingham and the south east of England, by way of the Coventry Canal and the Oxford Canal.

Contents

[edit] History

The canal was authorised by an Act of Parliament obtained in 1784. This was opposed by the Birmingham Canal Company, but was granted despite the opposition. The two companies merged soon afterwards.[1] Prior to this, the company had been active in negotiation with other canal companies, to ensure that when the canal was built, it would be part of a larger network. In 1782, they obtained an agreement from the Oxford Canal Company that they would complete the route to the River Thames at Oxford, one from the Coventry Canal that they would extend their canal from Atherstone to Fazeley, and agreed that they would complete the Coventry Canal's route from Fazeley as far as Whittington, with the Trent and Mersey finishing that link by building the remainder of the route to Fradley Junction.[1] This arrangement was caused by the Coventry Canal's inability to finance the whole route.

John Smeaton was the engineer employed by the Birmingham and Fazeley, and the canal was completed in 1789.[1] The benefits of the co-operation with the other canal companies were that when all the links were completed in 1790, it immediately generated a great deal of freight traffic. This created problems, as the flights of locks at Aston and Farmer's Bridge became congested, and this became worse when the Warwick Canal built a junction onto the Digbeth Branch. The problem was not solved until 1844,[1] when the Birmingham and Warwick Junction Canal to the south east and the Tame Valley Canal to the north west were opened.

[edit] Route

The canal runs from the BCN Main Line at Old Turn Junction (near the National Indoor Arena), Birmingham to the Coventry Canal at Fazeley Junction, just outside Tamworth. The length of this stretch is 15 miles (24 km), and it includes 38 locks.[1] There is a one mile (1.6 km) branch called the Digbeth Branch Canal which runs from Aston Junction to Typhoo Basin and contains 6 locks. The 5.5 mile (8.8 km) stretch which extends northwards beyond Fazeley Junction to Whittington, near Lichfield, is still technically part of the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal, although it was built on the route authorised by the Coventry Canal's Act of Parliament.

Historically the canal started at Farmer's Bridge Top Lock (the real Farmer's Bridge Junction), where it met the already existing Birmingham Canal Newhall Branch. That branch has now been built over, with only Cambrian Wharf surviving.

The Birmingham and Fazeley Canal forms part of the Warwickshire ring.

[edit] Features


[edit] Gallery

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Perrott,David; Mosse,Jonathan (2006). Nicholson Waterways Guide 3 - Birmingham & the Heart of England. Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-721111-1. 
  • Pearson, Michael [1989]. Canal Companion - Birmingham Canal Navigations. J. M. Pearson & Associates. ISBN 0-907864-49-X.