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Grand Western Canal information


Grand Western Canal Plan
Legend
Grand Western Canal
Bristol Channel
Grand Western Canal
River Parrett
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Bridgwater
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Bridgwater and Taunton Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
River Parrett
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
River Tone
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Taunton
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
(built as tub-boat canal)
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Reservoir on River Tone
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Reservoirs on River Culm
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Tiverton Branch (open)
Grand Western Canal
(authorised but not built)
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Cullompton Branch
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Exeter
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Topsham (Jn with River Exe)
Grand Western Canal
Grand Western Canal
Exeter Ship Canal
Grand Western Canal
River Exe
Grand Western Canal
English Channel


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

Construction was in two phases. A level section, from Tiverton to Lowdwells on the Devon/Somerset border, opened in 1814, and was capable of carrying broad-beam barges, carrying up to 40 tons. The Somerset section, suitable for tub boats (which were about 20 feet (6 m) long and capable of carrying eight tons) opened in 1839. It included an inclined plane and seven boat lifts, the earliest lifts to see commercial service in the UK. The lifts predated the Anderton Boat Lift by nearly 40 years.

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

  1. ^ Hadfield 1967, p. 37.

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