Bugsworth Canal Basin Orientation Table - Buxworth, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member dtrebilc
N 53° 20.125 W 001° 58.167
30U E 568621 N 5910078
This 3D orientation table shows the layout of the Bugsworth Canal Basin, one of the largest inland canal ports in the UK and the only complete example of a canal and tramway terminus.
Waymark Code: WMKYDM
Location: East Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/14/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member sfwife
Views: 1

The site stopped operations in 1925, but has undergone major renovation works and much of the site has been restored. The canal itself is still used, but by leisure boats only these days.

The table shows the layout of the site in the 1890s when the tramway was still in use. Apart from the removal of the tram lines and the demolition of some buildings and the lime kilns the site layout is still largely the same.


Bugsworth Basin
The 18th Century had seen the development of the canal network in the UK to carry heavy goods, and led to towns such as Manchester become the first large industrial towns.

There was a demand for limestone and grit stone from the nearby quarries to be transported to Manchester and beyond and so the Peak Forest Canal was built with a connection to the Ashton Canal at Ashton-Under-Lyne.

The canal had a series of 16 locks to lift the canal a height of 209 feet from Ashton-Under-Lyne to this point, but the final rise to the quarries was to high for a canal. So a horse drawn tramway was built to form a connection between the canal junction here and the quarries themselves.

Much of the output from the quarries was loaded directly onto the canal boats but there was also a total of 19 lime kilns on this site to process the limestone into quick lime.

The wagons from the tramway took the limestone at a high level to the top of the kilns. After processing the processed quick lime was extracted from the bottom of the kiln and loaded onto the canal boats. A model of the site and information panel on the other side of the canal describe the operation of the site.

The site operated between 1796 until the 1920s. The canal and this basin was closed down and allowed to become derelict. However in the 1960s and 1970s leisure boating became popular and many canals were renovated and re-opened for leisure purposes.

Most of the Peak Forest Canal reopened 1974 and at that time terminated at Whaley Bridge. The remainder of the canal and this basin was reopened in 1999. However a major leak from the canal needed further renovation and it didn’t fully re-open until 2003. Much of the tramway has also been converted into a walking trail.

The basin is now protected as Scheduled Ancient Monument number 242 under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979.

It should be noted that the name of the nearby village changes its name from Bugsworth to Buxworth in 1930, but the basin continues to be called Bugsworth basin.
Date of creation: 2005

Location / Access:
There is a car park near the Navigation Inn which provides access to the canal basin and the orientation table. Navigation Inn Brookside Buxworth High Peak Derbyshire SK23 7NE


Artist / Creator: Not listed

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