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Somersetshire Coal Canal

The Somersetshire Coal Canal was originally a very profitable canal, providing a means of transport for coal from the Somerset mines, and feeding traffic to the Kennet & Avon and Wilts & Berks canals.

Map showing the Somersetshire Coal Canal

From the Somerset mines to the Kennet & Avon Canal

The Somersetshire Coal Canal was originally a very profitable canal, providing a means of transport for the coal from the Somerset mines, and feeding traffic to the Kennet & Avon and Wilts & Berks canals.  Only a very small portion of it now remains in water, at its junction with the Kennet & Avon Canal, where it is used as private moorings.   

The canal had to pass over hilly ground and initially was designed to operate using three caissons rather than conventional locks.  At the time a caisson lock, designed by Robert Weldon, was undergoing trials on the Shropshire Canal.  It had the advantage of saving water, reducing the number of locks from twenty-two to three and speeding up the journey.  One caisson lock was built at Combe Hay but proved to be unstable. Two others were planned but were not completed. As a result, an inclined plane was constructed as a temporary measure whilst 22 locks were built.  The canal was opened in 1805.

By 1892 the trade was dying and the canal was closed in 1898. It was finally abandoned in 1904 when it was sold to The Great Western Railway.

Today some of these locks have been cleared and excavated and much of the stonework is now exposed.

The Somersetshire Coal Canal Society was formed in 1991 with the aim of preserving and conserving the canal.  The Society has prevented the remains of the canal from disappearing and the society’s long-term aspiration is to restore the whole canal.  In 2002, a £700,000 Heritage Lottery Fund grant enabled the restoration of the Grade II listed Midford Aqueduct, an important link between the two branches of the canal.

 

 

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