Rochdale Canal Bridge 34 – Walsden, Yorkshire, UK
Posted by: dtrebilc
N 53° 41.720 W 002° 06.054
30U E 559364 N 5950000
This stone bridge carries Hollins Road over the Rochdale Canal.
Waymark Code: WMEV1D
Location: Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 07/08/2012
Views: 2
The Canal History
The Rochdale canal is 32 miles long and connects Manchester on the west side of the Pennine Hills and Sowerby Bridge on the east side.
The Rochdale Canal was completed in 1804 and is one of three canals that cross the Pennine hills. This is the only one that doesn’t use tunnels. In addition it was a broad canal with bridges and locks that allowed boats of 14 feet width to pass through.
The one downside of not using tunnels is that it originally had 92 locks. These days two of them have been combined into one deep lock.
Competition from railways and roads subsequently led to a decline in goods being carried and by 1937 the only section left in operation was at the Manchester end of the canal.
In 1965 there was talk of abandoning the canal but by this time leisure boating had become very popular in the UK and there was a campaign to keep it open. Work was started and the canal slowly re-opened in a number of different stages. The whole length finally reopened in September 2007.
All the locks on the canal have a standard length of 72 feet (22 metres).
Details of the bridge
At the time the bridge was built canal boats were still towed by horses. It is located on a slight bend in the canal and there are grooves cut in the stonework where the ropes rubbed against the bridge as the horses went round the bend.
Although the canal itself still feels quite rural at this point, the road gives access to a number of houses and old warehouses.
This bridge was made a Grade II listed building by English Heritage in 1984 before the canal was restored,
reference number 1229242.
The listing states "Hammer-dressed stone. Single span horseshoe elliptical arch has rusticated voussoirs, band and parapet with cappings."