Buckingham Arm

The Buckingham Arm is a canal that once ran from Cosgrove, Northamptonshire to Buckingham (in England). It was built as an arm of the Grand Junction Canal, in two separate phases, opening in 1800 and 1801. It was disused from 1932, but was not finally abandoned until 1964. It is now the subject of a restoration programme with the Buckingham end holding water for a length of nearly 400m.

Buckingham Canal (former Buckingham Arm)
An aqueduct carried the canal over a small stream to the east of Foscote Reservoir
Specifications
Locks2
StatusRestoration project
History
Date of act1793, 1794
Date of first use1800
Date completed1801
Date closed1932
Geography
Start pointCosgrove
End pointBuckingham
Connects toGrand Union Canal
Buckingham Arm
Grand Union Canal
-- Cosgrove lock
End of navigable section
Section under restoration
Dogsmouth Brook culvert
A5 road filled cut
Layby wharf
Hayes Basin, Old Stratford
Watling Street (old A5)
A422 road
A422 road
Thornton bridge
Thornton Wharf
Cattleford aqueduct
bridge
Hyde Lane lock
Bourton lock
Section rewatered
A413 road
Lower Wharf
bridge
Town Wharf, Buckingham
Terminus Wharf

History

On 30 April 1793, the Grand Junction Canal was authorised by an Act of Parliament, and the act made provision for an arm from the main line to Old Stratford, ending at the former Roman road of Watling Street, which was a major communications route. The continuation to Buckingham was surveyed in 1793, and included in another Act of Parliament, passed in September 1794, which authorised the construction of the Aylesbury, Buckingham and Wendover arms.[1]

The initial section to Old Stratford was to be constructed as a broad canal, capable of use by boats which were 14 feet (4.3 m) wide. The Grand Junction Canal had to cross the River Great Ouse at Wolverton, and the original plan was to construct a crossing on the level, with a flight of locks down one side of the valley and another up the other side. The Old Stratford branch would have had a junction with the main line at the lowest level, and followed the course of the Great Ouse valley. From Old Stratford, the canal was to continue as a 7-foot (2.1 m) narrow canal, which would have joined the river at Passenham, effectively becoming a navigation, as a number of locks would have been needed along the course of the river. The plans were changed when it was decided to construct a high level crossing of the Great Ouse, ruling out the possibility of a junction, and so the arm left the main line just above Cosgrove lock, following the north side of the Great Ouse valley, and resulted in a canal which was on one level for most of its length, with just two locks as it approached Buckingham.[1]

The Grand Junction Canal, which included the two flights of locks to cross the River Great Ouse, opened in August 1800, and the Old Stratford arm followed six weeks later, in September. The Buckingham branch progressed quickly and was built in 8 months. A formal opening occurred on 1 May 1801, with celebrations as Buckingham. The canal was supplied with water by a feeder from the Great Ouse in Buckingham.[1] The lock flights on the main line were replaced by two embankments and an aqueduct in 1805, but there were problems with the aqueduct, and it was replaced with an iron trough in 1811.[2] The Grand Junction public house was built (before 1830) near to the Buckingham Wharf in the High Street, marking the end of the Buckingham Arm. The pub is now known as 'Number Thirteen'

By the 1850s, the canal was suffering from competition from the railways, and the water supply from the river contained much silt, which was deposited in the canal, making navigation difficult. Buckingham Corporation also used the canal as a disposal point for sewage, which added to the problems. Trade continued to reduce, with the Grand Junction company resorting to legal action to prevent the dumping of sewage into the canal in 1890, but Bradshaw's Guide of 1904 lists the upper section as "barely navigable".[1]

Decline

In 1919, a section of the canal near Mount Mill Farm was replaced by a concrete trough, in an attempt to reduce leakage. The last recorded commercial traffic was a delivery of chemicals to Leckhampstead in 1932. The arm was blocked at the first bridge in 1944, as a precaution against further leakage, and the temporary dam was never removed.[1] Following a protest cruise on the nearby Aylesbury Arm, the Inland Waterways Association (IWA) tried to promote the idea of restoring the Buckingham Arm in 1961, but there were few local members, and closure of the canal was supported by the local authorities through which the arm ran.[3] The Northampton Chronicle and Echo ran an article on 24 March 1961, suggesting the section from the Grand Union junction to Old Stratford should be re-opened for its amenity value, following which a local IWA member called R Faulkner tried to form an action committee, but again, there was little interest locally.[4] W L Ives, a senior official of British Waterways, presented a paper which outlined the problems of the waterways on 3 November 1961, calling for changes to the way closures and abandonment of canals were handled. Later that month, the Minister of Transport, in dealing with the British Transport Commission bill, stated that no changes which would adversely affect navigation of the first section of the canal would be made immediately.[5] The Buckingham branch was formally abandoned in 1964,[1] but the Old Stratford branch was not. Despite this, the Old Stratford branch was severed by the new route of the A5 road, constructed in 1975/6, and Old Stratford basin was sold in 1991. The route of the Buckingham branch was severed by the construction of the A422 Old Stratford Bypass in 1989/90.

Today

The overall arm is closed, with the exception of a short stretch (about 200 metres) running westwards from the junction with the Grand Union Canal at Cosgrove towards the A5 dual carriageway and a 400-metre section at Buckingham which was restored in 2013. (The Grand Junction Canal became part of the Grand Union Canal in 1929.[6]) Beyond this point the canal can still be followed as a trench running through open fields as far as Old Stratford, where a housing estate has been built over the canal's route. Other remnants of the route are decipherable in the landscape as far as Buckingham.

Buckingham Canal Society was formed in 1992,[7] initially with the aim of clearance and photography of the remains. With encouragement from British Waterways, who still owned part of the route, cutting down of the vegetation began on the section from Cosgrove to the A5 road.[8] As the society grew, the restoration of the remains and reinstatement of navigation along the arm became the new aim.[7] Other sections of the route have been tackled as negotiations with landowners have resulted in permissive access. In 2008, the structure of Hyde Lane lock was refurbished, following a grant of £38,000 from Waste Recycling Environmental Limited (WREN) towards the £44,000 cost of the project.[9] This enabled the lock to be restored professionally.[10]

In 2010, Halcrow Engineering produced a report, which assessed whether the aim of restoration was realistic. While it identified a number of significant issues, including the crossings of the A5 road and the A413 ringroad, it concluded that reinstatement was feasible, and would bring economic, environmental and social benefits to the area. One possible solution to the A413 crossing would be to terminate the canal outside the ringroad, where there would be room for a new terminal basin which could form the centrepiece of other development. The estimated cost for the restoration was put at £64 million.[11] One interesting aspect of the project is that the original Act of Parliament, granted in 1794, has not been repealed, and therefore its powers still apply. This should make it somewhat easier to achieve the aims of the society than might otherwise be the case.[12] The first section of canal that the group intends to reopen is the stretch from Cosgrove to the A5 road near Old Stratford.

Buckinghamshire County Council have produced a leaflet entitled The Ouse Valley Walk, which describes a walk from Buckingham to Milton Keynes, and covers most of the canal's route.[13]

Following a grant of £7,000 from the Aylesbury Vale Community Chest, which unlocked a grant of £70,000 from WREN, work began in January 2013 on the relining, restoration and rewatering of a 425-yard (389 m) section of the canal at Bourton Meadow, close to Buckingham. The canal is largely intact at this location, and although in private ownership, the restoration is fully supported by the landowners. A ceremonial first sod was cut on 25 January by Lord Boswell of Aynho and John Bercow, the local MP and Speaker of the House of Commons. The bed has been lined with a Bentoline liner, and the towpath has been reconstructed after the works [14] Bentoline is a product which consists of a thick, reinforced fibre layer, into which a layer of bentonite clay is embedded. The clay is retained by an upper layer of synthetic geotextile material.[15] In order to maintain water levels on this section, a solar powered pump was installed during the winter of 2016/2017, which pumps water from the River Great Ouse.[16]

Points of interest

gollark: Sure. However, I think it would be better if it didn't obligate you to take any job you're offered and do interviews etc. constantly.
gollark: This would probably be bad.
gollark: It is making people do extra busywork for no valid reason.
gollark: This is actually bad, though; it wastes the time of everyone ever.
gollark: The current setup of a market economy and tax-collectingy government is not... backed well by theory/stricter ethical systems, but kind of sort of works?

See also

Bibliography

  • Cumberlidge, Jane (2009). Inland Waterways of Great Britain (8th Ed.). Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson. ISBN 978-1-84623-010-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Riden, Philip; Insley, Charles, eds. (2002). "A History of the County of Northampton: Volume 5: The Hundred of Cleley". Victoria County History. British History Online.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Squires, Roger (2008). Britain's restored canals. Landmark Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84306-331-5.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

References

  1. "History". Buckingham Canal Society.
  2. Riden & Insley 2002, pp. 77–98
  3. Squires 2008, p. 44.
  4. Squires 2008, p. 46.
  5. Squires 2008, p. 47.
  6. Cumberlidge 2009, p. 128
  7. Cumberlidge 2009, p. 139
  8. Michael Freeman (Summer 2010). "How it all began" (PDF). Buckingham Navigator. Buckingham Canal Society. pp. 9–10.
  9. Athina Beckett (Spring 2008). "Chairman's Chat" (PDF). Buckingham Navigator. Buckingham Canal Society. p. 2.
  10. "Grant for Buckingham Canal Society". Buckingham Canal Society.
  11. Helen Preston (Summer 2010). "Restoration gets a green light" (PDF). Buckingham Navigator. Buckingham Canal Society. p. 7.
  12. Terry Cavender (Summer 2010). "The 'Outline Feasibility Study' by Halcrow" (PDF). Buckingham Navigator. Buckingham Canal Society. p. 6.
  13. "Ouse Valley Walk" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
  14. Buchingham Canal Restoration begins at Bourton Meadow. Waterways World. April 2013. p. 35. ISSN 0309-1422.
  15. "Geocomposite Clay Liner". Ponds UK. Archived from the original on 27 February 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  16. "Current Projects". Buckingham Canal Society. Retrieved 24 December 2016.

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