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Uttoxeter Canal

Uttoxeter Canal
LowerBasinFroghall.jpg
The basin below lock 1, restored in 2005.
Specifications
Locks 19
Status Possible restoration
History
Original owner Trent and Mersey Canal Company
Principal engineer John Rennie
Date of act 1797
Date completed 1811
Date closed 1849 (replaced by railway)
Date restored 2005 (1 lock and basin)
Geography
Start point Froghall
End point Uttoxeter
Branch of Caldon Canal

The Uttoxeter Canal About this sound pronounced (listen)  was a thirteen-mile extension of the Caldon Canal running from Froghall as far as Uttoxeter in Staffordshire, England. It was authorised in 1797, but did not open until 1811. With the exception of the first lock and basin at Froghall, it closed in 1849, in order that the Churnet Valley line of the North Staffordshire Railway could be constructed along its length. The railway has since been dismantled and there are plans to reinstate the canal.

The Uttoxeter Canal was promoted by the Trent and Mersey Canal Company and authorised by an Act of Parliament in 1797. This was a political move, designed to prevent a rival scheme for a canal to Uttoxeter. The planned Commercial Canal was intended to link the Chester Canal at Nantwich to the Ashby Canal at Moira, passing through Stoke on Trent and Uttoxeter, and would have had a serious impact on the profitability of the Trent and Mersey Company if it had been built.

Powers to alter the proposed route at Alton were included in an act of Parliament obtained in 1802, but because the new canal was not expected to be profitable, construction was delayed. Ten years after the Act was passed, work began under the direction of the canal engineer John Rennie, with the 13-mile (21 km) canal opening on 3 September 1811. It is sometimes referred to as a branch of the Caldon Canal. 19 locks were required to drop the level of the canal as it passed down the valley of the River Churnet.


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