Manchester Bolton & Bury Canal

53°30′30″N 2°17′45″W / 53.5082°N 2.2959°W / 53.5082; -2.2959

Manchester Bolton & Bury Canal
The Grade II Listed steam crane at Mount Sion, on the Bury arm
Specifications
Maximum boat length68 ft 0 in (20.73 m)
Maximum boat beam14 ft 2 in (4.32 m)
(originally 7 ft 0 in or 2.13 m)
(Widened from 1794)
Locks16
(originally 12 and later 17)
(5 added for Irwell extension making 17 total, as of 2008 a single deep lock has replaced locks 1&2)
Maximum height above sea level247 ft (75 m)
StatusUnder restoration
Navigation authorityCanal and River Trust
History
Original ownerManchester Bolton & Bury Canal Company
Principal engineerMatthew Fletcher
Other engineer(s)Hugh Henshall, Charles Roberts, John Nightingale
Date of act1791
Date of first use1797
Date completed1808 (1808)
Date closed1924, 1941, 1961
Geography
Start pointRiver Irwell, Salford
(originally Oldfield Road, Salford)
End pointBury and Bolton
Branch(es)Fletcher's Canal

The Manchester Bolton & Bury Canal is a disused canal in Greater Manchester, England, built to link Bolton and Bury with Manchester. The canal, when fully opened, was 15 miles 1 furlong (24 km) long. It was accessed via a junction with the River Irwell in Salford. Seventeen locks were required to climb to the summit as it passed through Pendleton, heading northwest to Prestolee before it split northwest to Bolton and northeast to Bury. Between Bolton and Bury the canal was level and required no locks. Six aqueducts were built to allow the canal to cross the rivers Irwell and Tonge and several minor roads.

The canal was commissioned in 1791 by local landowners and businessmen and built between 1791 and 1808, during the Golden Age of canal building, at a cost of £127,700 (£12.5 million today). Originally designed for narrow gauge boats, during its construction the canal was altered into a broad gauge canal to allow an ultimately unrealised connection with the Leeds and Liverpool Canal. The canal company later converted into a railway company and built a railway line close to the canal's path, which required modifications to the Salford arm of the canal.

Most of the freight carried was coal from local collieries but, as the mines reached the end of their working lives sections of the canal fell into disuse and disrepair and it was officially abandoned in 1961. In 1987 a society was formed with the aim of restoring the canal for leisure use and, in 2006, restoration began in the area around the junction with the River Irwell in Salford. The canal is currently navigable as far as Oldfield Road, Salford.

Manchester Bolton
& Bury Canal
Woodhill Road
Bury Arm terminates
A58 Bolton Street
Bury Wharf
Daisyfield Viaduct
Daisyfield Dam
Elton reservoir
Bank Top Bridge
Rothwell Bridge
Withins Bridge
Whittaker's Bridge
Water Lane
Radcliffe Wharf
Water Street Bridge
(culvert)
Victoria St Footbridge
Scotson Fold Bridge
(School St)
Nickerhole Bridge
(Cams Lane)
Sion Bridge
Steam Crane
Ladyshore Bridge
(Hayward Ave)
Ladyshore Colliery
Ladyshore Dam
Bailey Bridge
(Mytham Road)
Canal breached
Junction of three arms of canal
Bridge 51 and Meccano Bridge
Nob End Cottages
Salt Wharf
Farnworth Bridge Aqueduct
(demolished)
Fogg's Aqueduct
(demolished)
Damside Aqueduct
(demolished)
Burnden Viaduct
Church Wharf
Bolton Arm terminates
Prestolee Locks (12 – 17)
Basin – Salford Arm
Dry dock
Prestolee Aqueduct
Hall Lane Aqueduct
(demolished)
Prestolee Bridge
Ringley Locks (10 & 11)
Ringley Canal Bridge/
Ringley Road
Giants Seat Locks (8 & 9)
Rhodes Lock (7)
M60
Clifton Aqueduct
Junction with Fletcher's Canal
Clifton Viaduct
Lumn's Lane Aqueduct
(demolished)
Agecroft Road
Agecroft Dock
Park House Bridge Road
Cock Robin bridge
Broughton Road
Frederick Road
Stop lock
Windsor Bridge Wharf
A6
Salford Crescent/
Windsor Bridge
Oldfield Road
Lock 6
Oldfield Road Terminus
Locks 4 and 5
Salford tunnel no.2
Limit of navigation
Turning basin
Site of old lock 4 and
later, Salford tunnel no.1
Lock 3
Oldfield Road
New basins
Deep Lock 1
(replaces river locks 1&2)
Margaret Fletcher Tunnel
Bloody Bridge
River Irwell
– entrance to canal