Palmerston Street Stone Aqueduct On Macclesfield Canal - Bollington, UK
Posted by: dtrebilc
N 53° 17.893 W 002° 06.079
30U E 559893 N 5905822
This single arch bridge carries the Macclesfield Canal over Palmerston Street.
Waymark Code: WMQFWB
Location: North West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 02/23/2016
Views: 2
The Macclesfield Canal
The Macclesfield Canal was one of the last narrow canals to be built, indeed, it was very nearly built as a railway! A variety of ideas were proposed and the present canal was approved by Act of Parliament in April 1826. The route of the canal was surveyed by Thomas Telford and construction was engineered by William Crosley. The completed canal was opened on 9th November 1831 at a cost of £320,000.
The route takes the canal from Marple Junction with the Peak Forest Canal in the north 26¼ miles to the stop lock at Hall Green near Kidsgrove passing along the side of the most westerly Pennine hills through High Lane, Higher Poynton, Bollington, Macclesfield and Congleton, all in Cheshire, and Kidsgrove in Staffordshire in the south. Nowadays we normally regard the last 1½ miles to Harding's Wood Junction with the Trent & Mersey Canal as a part of the Macclesfield Canal although it was built as a branch of the T&MC.
link
The Bridge
This bridge is a Historic England Grade II Listed Building
link with the following text "Canal aqueduct: c1830 by William Crosley for Macclesfield Canal Company. Hammer-dressed buff sandstone with ashlar dressings. Horseshoe shaped arches with raised keystones at the ends of a barrel vault. Rough through stones project at the base of the vault. Short wing walls curve to be perpendicular to the aqueduct and end in raking square pilasters. Both have a chamfered projecting band and a plain parapet with rounded coping above. Wing walls continue as revetment walls to ground level where terminated with a square pier. Plain rectangular setting for a plaque (now missing) above each arch."