- Portsmouth and Arundel Canal
The Portsmouth and Arundel Canal was a
canal in the south ofEngland that ran betweenPortsmouth andArundel . The plan for the canal was completed in1815 and theAct of Parliament passed in1817 . Ted Cuthbert "Portsmouth's Lost Canal" Portsmouth: Environmental Education Project] At this stage costs were estimated at £119,000 rising to 125,452 in1818 . Construction started in1818 and the canal was finished in1823 , at a cost of £170,000. The canal was made up of three sections: a pair of ship canals one on Portsea island and one to Chichester and a barge canal that ran from Ford on the Arun to Hunston where it joined the Chichester section of the canal.P.A.L Vine "Hampshire Waterways" page 109 ISBN 0-906520-84-3] . The Portsea section was connected to the rest via a 13 mile channel dredged through Chichester harbour, across the bottom of Thorney Island (original plan was to go around the top) and the top ofHayling Island and finally acrossLangstone harbour . In order to allow the passage of masted ships iron swing bridges were fitted to the Chichester and Portsea sections rather than the more typical hump back canal bridge. In order to facilitate the passage between the Chichester section and the Portsea section a steam vessel called the Ergemont was constructed with the plan to tow 40 ton barges in trains of six.From day one, the canal was plagued with various problems and in
1827 the Portsea section of the canal had to be drained, due to complaints about salt water contamination in some of Portsmouth's wells. In1845 parts of this section were sold off to the London and Brighton railway company with another section being sold to the company in1851 .In 1830 tolls were reduced and for a while traffic picked up with cargos including 20 tons of marble from the Mediterranean for the King. The canal was also used to transport gold and silver for the Bank of England.F. D. Heneghan "The Chichester Canal" page 14] The canal was unable to compete with the sea routes and by
1832 the canal company was being forced to do the carrying itself. By1847 the canal, with the exception of the Chichester arm, had ceased to be navigable.P.A.L. Vine "West Sussex waterways" ISBN 0-906520-24-X] Of the remaining Portsea Section the issue of maintaining the various bridges became an issue of concern until the company managed to buy itself out of the requirement to maintain them.The Chichester arm was transferred to the Chichester corporation in1892 , the same year in which the canal company was wound up (the winding up order having been applied for in1888 ).See also
*
Canals of Great Britain
*Chichester Canal - Originally an arm of the Portsmouth and Arundel Canal now treated as a canal in its own right
*Wey and Arun Canal - the two canals together being intended to give secure inland waterway access betweenLondon and the naval base at Portsmouth.References
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