Fairbottom Branch Canal

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Fairbottom Branch Canal (in context)
ugWHARF ePUMPHOUSE
Old Lane colliery
ugSTR + POINTERl
Werneth Branch Canal
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Hollinwood basin
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23-26 Hollinwood Locks (4)
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1792 proposed link to --
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-- Rochdale Canal
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route cut by M60 motorway
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Cutler Hill Road bridge
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Crime Lake
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Crime Lane aqueduct
ueSTR + POINTERl
Hollinwood Branch Canal
ueSTR ugWHARF
Fenny Fields Bridge wharf
ueSTR ugAROADu
A627 Bardsley Bridge
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Valley aqueduct
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ueSTR + POINTERl
Fairbottom Branch Canal
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Fairbottom Junction
ugLOCKSu
19-22 Waterhouses Locks (4)
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River Medlock aqueduct
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un-watered section
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route cut by M60 motorway
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watered section
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Railway aqueduct
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A662 Manchester Road bridge
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Marina (under construction)
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18 Fairfield Lock and Jn
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Ashton Canal

The Fairbottom Branch Canal was a canal near Ashton-under-Lyne in England.

Contents

[edit] Route

The canal left the Hollinwood Branch Canal at Fairbottom Junction immediately above lock 22. It was just over one mile long (1.82km) and it was lock free. It terminated at Fenny Fields Bridge, Bardsley, which is situated in the Medlock Valley between Ashton-under-Lyne and Oldham.

[edit] History

Although this canal was mainly rural, its main purpose was to carry coal so there was a loading stage for coal and a short private branch for the same purpose. There was also a mill.

Immediately north east of the terminus at Fenny Fields Bridge an industrial community was founded at Park Bridge and a tramway, which included a small-bore tunnel 150 yards long (137 m), connected the two together. This community was founded in 1783 by Samuel Lees to make rollers for the textile industry. This community expanded rapidly as the demand for textile machinery increased. Following the premature death of Samuel in 1804 the factory was successfully run by his widow Hannah Lees nee Buckley and in later years the company was renamed Hannah Lees & Sons in her honour. The last part of this works closed in 1963 due to the decline in the textile industry.

Fairbottom Branch
Fairbottom Branch


At first, waggon haulage on the tramway was by means of horses but early in the 1840s a steam locomotive called ‘The Ashtonian’ replaced them. Because of the narrow-bore tunnel, the driver needed to be of short stature and even then he had to kneel down to pass through the tunnel. The locomotive’s funnel also had to be removed. This tramway remained operational into the 1880s.

In the early 1930s two leakages occurred that made it necessary to lower the water level in the canal and this, coupled with mining subsidence, caused its unofficial closure in 1932. By 1948 the canal was completely unnavigable but it did remain in water.

Much of the line of the former canal remained intact and there are now plans to re-open part of it again as an amenity canal along with much of the Hollinwood Branch Canal.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links