Everything about The Oxford Canal totally explained
The
Oxford Canal is a 78 mile (130 km) long narrow
canal in central
England linking
Oxford with
Coventry via
Banbury and
Rugby. It connects with the
River Thames at Oxford, to the
Grand Union Canal at the villages of
Braunston and
Napton-on-the-Hill, and to the
Coventry Canal at Hawkesbury Junction just outside
Coventry.
The Oxford Canal passes mainly through the
Oxfordshire,
Northamptonshire and
Warwickshire countryside, and is often considered to be one of the most scenic canals in Britain.
The canal was once an important artery of trade between the English
Midlands and
London, but is now highly popular among pleasure boaters.
The
Oxford canal forms part of the
Warwickshire ring.
The route
The canal begins near
Hawkesbury Village at
Hawkesbury Junction, also known as
Sutton Stop, where it connects with the
Coventry Canal, four miles from the centre of
Coventry. From Hawkesbury, it runs south east through the
Warwickshire countryside for 15 miles to
Rugby.
The route between
Coventry and Rugby is on a level without any
locks, apart from the stop lock at the junction. Much of this section of the canal was straightened out in the
1820s, and remains of the original less direct route can still be seen in places.
The canal winds through the northern part of Rugby passing through the 250 metre long Newbold Tunnel, and then reaches a set of three locks at
Hillmorton just east of Rugby. In the churchyard in
Newbold-on-Avon remains can be seen of the original tunnel dating from the
1770s.
South of Rugby, the canal passes through rural scenery and doubles back on itself for several miles until it heads southwards again passing for a short distance into
Northamptonshire towards
Braunston.
At
Braunston, the Oxford connects with the Grand Junction section of the
Grand Union Canal and heads west. Grand Union traffic shares a five-mile stretch of the Oxford Canal until they diverge at
Napton junction where the Oxford turns south towards
Oxford and the Warwick and Napton section of the Grand Union turns north-west towards
Birmingham.
The Grand Junction and Oxford canal companies were bitter rivals. When
Parliament considered the
Act of Parliament for the building of the Grand Junction, the Oxford Canal successfully petitioned to make the Grand Junction pay "bar tolls" to the Oxford Canal to compensate for the loss of traffic south of Napton.
Traffic from Birmingham had to use five miles of the Oxford Canal to get from
Braunston to join the Grand Junction at
Napton. The Oxford Canal exploited this by charging high tolls for Grand Junction traffic on this short section.
After winding round Napton Hill, the canal ascends the Napton flight of nine locks to a summit level. After passing an old wharf and a pub at
Fenny Compton, the canal enters a long cutting which, until it was opened out in the nineteenth century, was a tunnel. This section is still referred to as 'tunnel straight' or the Fenny Compton Tunnel. The canal then reaches the
Claydon flight of locks and descends into the valley of the
River Cherwell at
Cropredy. It follows the river valley from here to Oxford via
Banbury, descending through a series of locks.
The section south of Napton junction was never straightened and the summit level is one of the most twisting sections of canal in England. It winds for 11 miles between two points which are under five miles apart. This is the "eleven-mile pound" mentioned in
Tom Rolt's famous
Narrow Boat.
At Oxford, the canal has two connections to the
River Thames. The first is three miles north of the city where
Dukes Cut leads to
King's Lock; the second is a few hundred metres from the city centre below
Isis Lock (known to boatmen as 'Louse Lock') through Sheepwash Channel. This leads to an unusual river crossroads at the Thames called "Four Rivers" above
Osney Lock.
Three hundred metres below Isis Lock the Oxford Canal ends abruptly at
Hythe Bridge Street near to the current
Hythe Bridge over the
Castle Mill Stream, a backwater of the
River Thames that runs parallel to the Oxford Canal for its southernmost part. The canal used to continue through a bridge under Hythe Bridge Street to a turning basin and goods wharf south of Hythe Bridge Street. It then continued via a bridge under
Worcester Street to end in a coal wharf beside New Road. The basin and wharves were filled in 1951 and
Nuffield College, Oxford now stands on part of the site (see below).
History
Construction
The
Oxford Canal was constructed in several stages over a period of more than twenty years.
The
Act of Parliament authorising the Oxford Canal was passed in
1769. The intention was to link the industrial English
Midlands to
London via the River Thames and construction began shortly after near Coventry.
Construction was originally supervised by the celebrated
engineer James Brindley, assisted by
Samuel Simcock who was also Brindley's brother-in-law. Brindley died in
1772 but Simcock took over and completed the canal. By
1774 the canal had reached Napton, but the company was already running out of money.
In
1775, a second Act was passed allowing the company to raise more funds. Construction soon started again and by
1778 the canal had reached
Banbury. Financial problems meant that work on the final stretch to
Oxford didn't begin until
1786.
The final stretch of the
canal from
Banbury to
Oxford was built as cheaply as possible. Many economy measures were used. Wherever possible, wooden lift or swing bridges were built instead of expensive brick ones. Deep
locks were used wherever possible, with single gates at both ends instead of double gates.
Stretches of the
River Cherwell were incorporated into the canal. This reduced construction costs, but the behaviour of the river makes the canal more difficult to use. This is truly a false economy and its effects continue to be felt to this day.
The Oxford Canal reached the outskirts of
Oxford in
1789, when a coal wharf was opened at Heyfield Hutts, now the site of Heyfield Road. The final section into central Oxford was formally opened on
1 January 1790.
Commercial use
For the next 15 years the Oxford Canal became one of the most important and profitable transport links in Britain, with most commercial traffic between
London and the
Midlands using the route. Its principal traffic was
coal from
Warwickshire. It also carried stone, agricultural products and other goods.
A much more direct route between
London and the
Midlands, the
Grand Junction Canal, was completed in
1805. Much of the
London-bound traffic switched to this faster route, as it avoided the passage of the River Thames which still had many
flash locks. This greatly reduced Oxford Canal traffic south of Napton. However, the short section between
Braunston and Napton became the link between the Warwick and Napton Canal and the Grand Junction Canal, making it part of the busy direct route between
Birmingham and London.
The
Oxford Canal was originally built as a
contour canal, meaning that it twisted around hills to minimise vertical deviations from a level contour. However, with one eye on the developing
railway network, in the
1820s the northern section of the
canal between Braunston and
Hawkesbury Junction was straightened out to reduce navigation time. This work reduced the distance by 20 miles. The section south of Napton was never straightened.
The northern section of the Oxford Canal between
Coventry,
Braunston and
Napton, remained an important trunk route, and remained extremely busy with freight traffic until the
1960s. The staple traffic was
coal from the
Warwickshire and
Leicestershire coalfields to
London via the
Grand Union Canal. However the southern section from
Napton to
Oxford became something of a backwater, and carried mostly local traffic.
Decline
In 1937
Baron Nuffield (Later Viscount Nuffield) bought the canal basin at
Oxford. In 1951 he filled it in and built
Nuffield College on part of the former coal
wharf. Coal traffic was relocated to a canal wharf in Juxon Street, in the Jericho
suburb of Oxford. The goods
wharf and the remainder of the coal
wharf are now under a public car park that
Nuffield College lets to Oxford City Council.
The
Oxford Canal remained independent until it was
nationalised in
1948 and became part of the
Docks and Inland Waterways Executive, later the
British Waterways Board.
Many Oxford Canal boatmen and women favoured
horse traction long after those on other canals had changed their narrowboats to diesel power. One narrowboat carrying coal on the Oxford Canal was drawn by a
mule until 1958 and was the last horse-drawn freight narrowboat in
Great Britain. This boat is preserved at the
Boat Museum in
Ellesmere Port
The Oxford Canal remained profitable until the mid-
1950s, paying a dividend right up to nationalisation. As with most of Britain's narrow canal system, the Oxford Canal suffered from a rapid decline in freight traffic after the
Second World War. By the mid-1950s very few narrowboats traded south of Napton.
The northern section from
Napton to
Coventry remained well-used by commercial traffic until the
1960s. The southern section was at one point being threatened with closure. However during the
1960s pleasure boating grew in popularity and replaced the old trading boats to ensure the canal's survival to this day. In the summer it's one of the most crowded canals on the network.
Further Information
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