CanalPlanAC

Trent and Mersey Canal

 
 
Information about the waterway

Long and hard lobbying by the potter Josiah Wedgwood lead to the Trent and Mersey Canal, or "Grand Trunk" as it was often known, being authorised in 1766. With James Brindley as engineer work soon started but the canal was not completed when Brindley died in 1772 and it was not open end-to-end until 1777.

The navigational authority for this waterway is Canal & River Trust

Relevant publications — Waterway Maps:

Relevant publications — Waterway Guides:

Relevant publications — Waterway Histories:

This waterway page is a summary of other waterway pages, and so no linear map is shown.
 
 
Maps
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External websites
 Trent & Mersey Canal Society – founded in 1974 — associated with this page
 
Wikipedia

Wikipedia has a page about Trent and Mersey Canal

The Trent and Mersey Canal is a 93 12-mile (150 km) canal in Derbyshire, Staffordshire and Cheshire in north-central England. It is a "narrow canal" for the vast majority of its length, but at the extremities to the east of Burton upon Trent and north of Middlewich, it is a wide canal.

The narrow locks and bridges are big enough for a single narrowboat 7 feet (2.1 m) wide by 72 feet (22 m) long, while the wide locks can accommodate boats 14 feet (4.3 m) wide, or two narrowboats next to each other.

Other Wikipedia pages that might relate to Trent and Mersey Canal
[Caldon Canal] Caldon Canal (or more properly, the Caldon Branch of the Trent & Mersey Canal), opened in 1779, runs 18 miles (29 km) from Etruria, in Stoke-on-Trent (where [Shropshire Union Canal] Wardle Canal with the Trent and Mersey Canal, and the River Dee (in Chester). With two connections to the Trent and Mersey (via the Middlewich Branch and the [Macclesfield Canal] through the towns of Macclesfield and Congleton, to an end-on junction with the Hall Green Branch of the Trent and Mersey Canal. There is a stop lock at the [Bridgewater Canal] the Rochdale Canal in Manchester; to the Trent and Mersey Canal at Preston Brook, southeast of Runcorn; and to the Leeds and Liverpool Canal at Leigh. It [Stone, Staffordshire] The Canal Cruising Company today operates from the historic site of the canal maintenance and boat building operations of the Trent and Mersey Canal Company [Coventry Canal] Trent and Mersey Canal. It also has connections with the Ashby Canal, the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal and the Oxford Canal. Some maps show the canal [James Brindley] years to drive the tunnel. The Trent and Mersey Canal was the first part of this ambitious network, and the later Chester Canal, started in 1772, was also [Westport Lake, Stoke-on-Trent] the Trent and Mersey Canal. It is owned by the Canal and River Trust, and is operated by the Staffordshire Wildlife Trust and Stoke-on-Trent City Council [Shardlow] and from the River Trent to the Trent and Mersey Canal, during its heyday from the 1770s to the 1840s it became referred to as "Rural Rotterdam" and "Little
 
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