Canal Boat — November 2017

(Marcin) #1
50 November 2017 Canal Boat canalboat.co.uk

Returning to Marple, we’ll now take the
other direction from the junction, heading
northwards along the length of the canal
which forms part of the Cheshire Ring. But
before setting off, now is a good time to
visit Marple: even though the closest
approach to the town centre and shops is
a little further north at Bridge 18, that
would mean stopping quarter of the way
through one of the canal’s two major
engineering features – the mighty flight
of 16 locks.
Built out of massive stone blocks, the
locks are some of the deepest on the
narrow canal network, averaging out at
around 13ft: to put that in context, these
16 chambers lower the canal almost as far
as the much longer Tardebigge flight of 30
locks on the Worcester & Birmingham.
Building costs delayed completion until
1804, four years after the rest of the canal,
during which time yet another horse
tramway linked the two halves of the
incomplete waterway (the canal’s engineer
Benjamin Outram was so keen on them
that it’s been – completely erroneously –
suggested that ‘tram’ was a contraction of
‘Outram’), and they were one of the
challenges facing the canal’s restorers
after the Lower Peak Forest and Ashton
canals fell derelict in the early 1960s.
The upper locks are in an urban setting,
with houses backing onto the locks (and
onto the offside extensions added to offset
the short length of some of the
intermediate pounds). But as the canal
descends towards the Goyt, the
surroundings become more wooded, to
the point that it’s not at all obvious that
the canal is carried on a major

of its major engineering features. The
tremendous three-arch stone-built Marple
Aqueduct has had its problems over the
years – ranging from an emergency repair
involving metal plates and bolts in the
1860s to a threat of demolition following
frost damage 100 years later – but recent
restoration, removal of vegetation and
construction of access paths and steps
have returned it to its original splendour,

embankment pierced by a railway tunnel
at one point.
Despite dropping more than 200ft, the
canal is still 100ft above the river – as
becomes obvious when it turns a bend
after the bottom lock, passes under a
railway, and launches out onto the second

Typically rural scenery on the Upper Peak Forest

Looking north from Marple Junction


THE CRUISE GUIDE
Peak Forest and Ashton canals

PORTLAND BASIN MUSEUM


Rebuilt after it was gutted
by fire in the 1970s, the
warehouse overlooking
Dukinfield Junction now
houses a free museum. It
features displays of local
insdustrial heritage, a
re-created street scene from the 1920s, and an
educational play area. Closed on Mondays

SEE ALSO

MARPLE WOODLEY

(^6) 4 MILES / 16 LOCKS
The restored Bugsworth Basin complex
TO MACCLESFIELD
HYDE BANK TUNNEL WOODLEY TUNNEL


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