Edinburgh Canal Society

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Edinburgh Canal Society is a canal society and a Scottish charity on the Union Canal where it is based at Ashley Terrace Boathouse at Lockhart Bridge, near Harrison Park in the Polwarth area of Edinburgh.

The society was founded in 1985 and is a founder member of the Scottish Inland Waterways Association. Along with the Forth Canoe Club, the Linlithgow Union Canal Society, the Bridge 19-40 Canal Society and other canal societies on the Scottish lowland canals, Edinburgh Canal Society campaigned to have the Union Canal re-opened.

The culmination of the campaign was the joining of the Union Canal and the Forth & Clyde Canal. Edinburgh Canal Society was one of the official Millennium Link Project Partners.

Contents

[edit] Boats and Boathouse

The society owns two wooden historical launches with Kelvin engines; the original launch had sunk in the early 1990s in Fisherrow harbour at Musselburgh after a violent storm. A society member happened to be passing just as the disposal lorry arrived, and the vessel was rescued. In 1999, she was removed to Mackay's boatyard in Arbroath, with help from the Heritage Lottery Fund. The same boatyard had earlier restored Robert Scott's RRS Discovery in Dundee. Obtaining the correct Kelvin engine at first seemed impossible, but by another chance encounter, a Kelvin E2 engine was obtained from a warehouse in Kuwait.

A second replica launch was built to meet demand for more boat trips in both directions of the Union Canal. The society also owns a fleet of wooden rowing boats.

The society's boathouse is one of several iconic buildings on the Scottish Lowland Canals.

[edit] Journeys and Rallies

[edit] External links

[edit] References

"Adrift in Caledonia", by Nick Thorpe; publ. Little, Brown, ISBN-10 0316726885

[edit] See also