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Glasgow, Paisley and Johnstone Canal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Glasgow, Paisley and Johnstone Canal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Glasgow Paisley and Johnstone Canal
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Glasgow Central Station
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River Clyde bridge
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Port Eglinton basin
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M77 motorway
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Drumbreck station
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Corkerill station
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White Cart Water
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Mosspark station
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Crookston station
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Hawkhead Road
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Hawkhead station
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White Cart aqueduct
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Paisley Canal station
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B775 bridge
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Aqueduct
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Johnstone basin

The Glasgow, Paisley and Ardrossan Canal was a canal in the west of Scotland running between Glasgow, Paisley and Johnstone which later became a railway. Despite the name, the canal was never completed down to Ardrossan, the termini being Port Eglinton in Glasgow and Thorn Brae in Johnstone. Within months of opening, the canal was the scene of a major disaster.

Contents

[edit] Construction

The canal was first proposed by Hugh Montgomerie, 12th Earl of Eglinton in 1791. He wanted to connect the booming industrial towns of Glasgow, Paisley and Johnstone to his new deep sea port at Ardrossan and his Ayrshire coal fields. His fellow shareholders included William Dixon of Govan who wished to export coal from his Govan colliery.[1] The Earl had spent £100,000 on creating Ardrossan's harbour and intended to make it the principal port for Glasgow.[1] Interest was also shown by Lord Montgomerie and William Houston who would also benefit from the canal passing through their lands and connecting their own coal and iron mines to nearby industrial consumers. In this pre MacAddam period, the roads around Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire and Ayshire were not suitable for heavily loaded traffic. The other alternative route, up the Clyde river estuary to Glasgow, was not navigable by large ships as the river was too shallow.

Engineers John Rennie, Thomas Telford and John Ainslie were employed to design the canal, survey a route, and estimate the costs. The original design was in three parts. The first section would be a contour canal of about 11 miles in length. Following the lay of the land, a contour canal is entirely level and requires no locks or lifts making navigation quick and easy. Additional, contour canals require only a small water supply since no water is lost to locks. However, this method of construction would make the canal longer than it need have been. The second section would see a series of 8 locks lift the level up to a summit near Johnstone. The third and last section would use 13 locks to bring the canal down to sea level at Ardrossan Harbour. When complete the canal have been just shy of 33 miles long. The dimensions of the cutting were to be 30 feet broad at the top and at bottom, 18 feet. The depth was to be 4 feet 6 inches.

The Company of the proprietors of the Glasgow, Paisley and Ardrossan canal was incorporated by an Act of Parliament which received Royal assent from George III on the 20 June 1806.[2] This bill allowed for funding to be raised by the sale of two thousand eight hundred shares of £50 each. Of these shares, £30,000 worth as bought by the proprietors, the Earl of Eglinton, Lord Montgomerie and Lady Jane Montgomerie. This made the capital available for the project a total of £140,000.

Construction began in 1807 and the first boat, the passenger boat, 'The Countess of Eglinton,' was launched on the 31 October 1810. The passenger service initially only ran between Paisley and Johnstone. The full length to Glasgow's Port Eglinton was complete sometime in 1811. The original plans to extend the canal to Ardrossan were soon suspended. The costs of completing the first 11 mile contour canal had consumed all the available funds — the initial estimates having been grossly understated. Further estimates indicated that £300,000 additional funding would need to be secured to complete the project. Hugh Montgomerie, 12th Earl of Eglinton, had already spent £100,000 on a separate project to build a dead sea harbour at Ardrossan, at the proposed terminus of the canal. The Harbour project would eventually be competed by his son, the 13th Earl, for a total cost of £200,000.[3] Attempts were maid to raise extra funds but other major investors, such as William Houston, were reluctant to invest as the canal already linked his own coal and iron mines, around Johnstone, to Glasgow and Paisley.

[edit] Operation

The canal ran from Port Eglington; and an inn was built there in 1816.[4] A wharf was built on the north bank of the White Cart near Crookston Castle; and canal basins provided at Paisley and Johnstone.[4]

[edit] Disaster

Saturday 10 November 1810 was the Martinmas Fair. Many people, with the day off work, took the opportunity to travel the short distance of 6 miles by canal between Paisley and Johnstone. As The Countess of Eglinton docked at the Paisley wharf, there was a rush of people trying to get onto the boat.[4] At the same time, people from Johnstone were attempting to disembark.[4] Despite the attempts of the boat men to push off again, the weight of people pushing onto the boat caused it to suddenly overturn, throwing many passengers into the cold water of the wharf.[4]

Even though the wharf was only 6 feet deep, the coldness of the water and the sheer sides of the embankments compounded the problem that few people of the time could swim. 85 people died in this disaster.[4]

Another sad point to note at the beginning of the canal. The well-known poet Robert Tannahill (born in Paisley on 3 June 1774) drowned himself in the canal in a bout of depression. A group of poems had just been rejected by an Edinburgh publisher. He was well known for periods of depression. He burned many of his writings at this time. His body was found on 17 May 1810 in the Candren Burn tunnel under the canal.

[edit] Popularity

Despite the disaster, the canal became a popular service for passenger transport. Fast, narrow, iron hulled boats of an innovative design and pulled by 6 horses allowed 80 to 100 passengers to travel at a rate of 10 miles per hour. An extraordinary speed at the time. The price of just one penny per mile for first class and three farthings per mile for the second class cabins was also highly competitive - less than half that charged by the new Liverpool Railway. At its height, in 1834, boats carried 397,375 passengers during the year. In July and August of that year, 2,500 passengers were recorded in just one day.[5]

Freight also made a significant part of the traffic on the canal. Basin dues were set at 2 pence per ton. Stone, dung and earth were charged at 2 pence per mile per ton; coal, coke culm and lime were 3 pence per mile per ton; Bricks, tiles, slates, orers, iron and metal were rated at 5 pence per mile per ton; and all other goods were charged 2 pence per mile per ton.[6] In 1840, the canal handled 76000 tons of goods.[7]

However, the initial costs were so high that the canal never made an issue of dividend on it's shares. Even after 20 years of operations, the accounts showed an outstanding debt of £71,208, 17 shillings and 6 pence.[5]

[edit] Canal versus railway

In 1827, a second bill passed parliament and gained Royal Assent on 14th of that year. This bill allowed for the financing and construction of a railway from the Johnstone canal basin to Ardrossan. This Railway was to have been 22 miles and 3 furlongs in length. Parliament dictated that due to the failure to complete the canal past Johnstone, that work on the railway should be started at the Ardrossan harbour end. However the line did not progress past Killwining before running out of funds. The railway, owned and operated by the canal company, was built to the Scotch gauge of 4 feet 6 inches (1,422 mm). It used pairs of horses to pull carriages of up to 22 people each. The fairs were initially 1 pence per mile but in 1937, due to the application of a government duty, the fair was raised to 8 pence per 6 miles. In the 3 years preceding September 1939, the railway transported an average of 30,000 people each year. Apart from passengers, the main freight was coal form Eglington's mines.[8]

However, the dredging of the River Clyde and other navigation improvements, allowing ships to sail directly to the centre of Glasgow, meant Eglinton's dream that, "Ardrossan would be to Glasgow what Liverpool is to Manchester."[9] would not be fulfilled.

A second railway line was opened, in 1840, by the Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock and Ayr Railway Company (GPK&A), in direct competition with the canal. This new railway linked with the Ardrossan Railway near Killwining and later purchased the Ardrossan Railway, the railway company's debts and the harbours. The canal continued to compete with the railways for many decades, but in 1869, the canal was purchased by the Glasgow and South Western Railway Company (the successor to GPK&A). In 1881, an Act of Parliament closed the canal. Much of the route was used to construct the Paisley Canal railway line.

[edit] Conversion to a railway

[edit] The Ardrossan Railway

In the 1820s the canal company planed to build a railway between Johnstone and Ardrossan to finish the link.[1] They raised further capital and started building the railway from Ardrossan; reaching Kilwinning before running out of money.[1] In the 1830s they planned to turn their canal into a railway and complete the link from Kilwinning to Johnstone; but allowed the scheme to fold.[1] In the 1840s they split off their railway to form a separate company, the Ardrossan Railway, and transferred their debt to the new company.[1]

[edit] Closure of the canal

The canal was purchased in 1869 by the Glasgow and South Western Railway Company. In 1881, an Act of Parliament closed the canal. Much of the route was used to construct the Paisley Canal Line. This line still uses the River Cart Aqueduct (which it crosses at a skewed angle). This makes the former aqueduct the world's oldest railway bridge that is still in active use.

[edit] Closure and partial reopening of the Paisley Canal Line

The Paisley Canal railway line closed to passengers in 1983. The rails between Elderslie and the original Paisley Canal Station were uplifted in 1986; and the station became a steakhouse. However, in 1990, passenger services resumed on the section from Glasgow Central station to a new Paisley Canal station. Much of the abandoned track bed beyond Paisley has now be developed into a cycle and walkway operated by Sustrans.

Short sections of the original canal can still be seen at the Millarston and Ferguslie Mills area of Paisley. Houses in Tenenter Way and Cropton Grove face across the remnants. Traces of the old canal are also visible in fields between Hawkhead and Rosshall.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Robertson (1983), Chapter 2: The coal railways
  2. ^ Guide to canalrecords- The National Archives of Scotland website (HTML). National Archives of Scotland (2006-6-19). Retrieved on 2008-5-26. “NAS reference: BR/GPA, CS96/2002”
  3. ^ Lee, Sidney (2001). Dictionary of National Biography. Adamant Media Corporation, 465 pages. ISBN 1402170653. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f Lindsay (1968)
  5. ^ a b Priestley, Joseph (1831). Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers, Canals, and Railways, Throughout Great Britain. Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green;, 702 pages. 
  6. ^ (1841) The Statistical Account of Lanarkshire. W. Blackwood, 968 pages. 
  7. ^ Thomas, John (1971). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain, Volume 6: Scotland: The Lowlands and the Borders. Newton Abbot: David & Charles, Page 116. ISBN 0-7153-5408-6. 
  8. ^ Whishaw, Francis (1842). The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland Practically Described and Illustrated. J. Weale, 500 pages. 
  9. ^ Slaven, Anthony (2006). The Development of the West of Scotland, 1750-1960. Routledge. ISBN 0415286190. . Originally published in London by Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1975

[edit] Sources


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