Camlin River - Southern Arm
Early plans for the Camlin River - Southern Arm between Edinburgh and Stroud were proposed by John Smeaton but languished until Thomas Telford was appointed as chief engineer in 1835. In his autobiography Charles Wood writes of his experiences as a lock-keeper in the 1960s

The Camlin River - Southern Arm is a small river and is part of the Camlin River.
It runs for 2 miles and 1¾ furlongs from Camlin - Royal Junction (where it joins the Royal Canal - Main Line) to Division of Camlin River (where it joins the Camlin River - Northern Arm).
The exact dimensions of the largest boat that can travel on the waterway are not known. The maximum headroom is not known. The maximum draught is not known.
It has a junction with the Camlin River - Cloondara Canal at Camlin - Cloondara Junction.
| Camlin - Royal Junction Junction of the Camlin River and the Royal Canal |
|||
| Camlin - Cloondara Junction Junction of the Camlin River and the Cloondara Canal |
¾ furlongs | 0 locks | |
| N5 Bridge (Cloondara) | 1 furlong | 0 locks | |
| Division of Camlin River River divides into two channels to the Shannon. The main river is not navigable. |
2 miles and 1¾ furlongs | 0 locks |
There are no links to external websites from here.
Why not log in and add some (select "External websites" from the menu (sometimes this is under "Edit"))?
Why not log in and add some (select "External websites" from the menu (sometimes this is under "Edit"))?
There is no page on Wikipedia called “Camlin River - Southern Arm”
