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Heybridge Basin (Cannibal
Island) |
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Click
on underlined blue names for link to more details |
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The
Canal Origin & History |
The navigation runs from Springfield
Basin in Chelmsford to the sea lock at Heybridge Basin near Maldon.
It has 13 locks, including a flood lock, six bridges and drops
23 metres (75.4 feet) from Springfield Basin to the sea.
Prior to the actual construction of the navigation, there had
been almost 120 years of proposals for such a scheme, and opposition
from the port of Maldon, which anticipated that its revenues
would fall if vessels could travel to Chelmsford. The first such
scheme was proposed in 1677 by Andrew Yarranton, who published
his idea in a work entitled England's Improvements by Sea and
Land. Maldon objected and the scheme came to nothing. In July
1733, John Hore, who was involved in the Kennet, Stroudwater,
and the Avon Navigation at Bristol, proposed two schemes, one
to make the river navigable, and another to create a new cut
between Chelmsford and Maldon. Despite the projected extra costs
for a canal, Hore favoured the canal scheme, as he believed there
would be less objection from the millers along the river route.
Maldon again objected on commercial grounds, and the scheme was
dropped. |
The next schemes were
proposed in 1762, when the canal engineers John Smeaton and Thomas
Yeoman both carried out surveys for a possible route. Yeoman
produced a second plan in 1765, and this was presented to Parliament.
Yeoman had a high standing as a civil engineer, and the opponents
to the scheme tried to engage a suitable engineer to counter
the proposal, but many of the obvious choices, including James
Brindley, declined because they were too busy. Eventually, Ferdinando
and William Stratford took on the task, but both caught ague
and fever, from which Ferdinando died, while William was ill
for a year but then recovered. An Act of Parliament to authorise
the plan was passed on 6 June 1766, with the stipulation that
the work must be completed within 12 years, and that no work
could start until 25 per cent of the capital had been raised.
The scheme foundered because the required capital had not been
subscribed.
Peter Muilman called a meeting in Chelmsford on 2 October 1772,
to propose improvements to the river, but a subsequent meeting
decided that a new cut would be a better solution. Muilman announced
that this scheme would probably not require any locks, and advocated
that he should build it once Robert Whitworth had surveyed it,
but nothing came of this. Finally in 1792, with navigations in
other parts of the country bringing increased prosperity to the
towns they served, the people of Chelmsford decide to avoid the
opposition of Maldon by bypassing it, and terminating the navigation
at Heybridge, on the River Blackwater below Maldon. Under the
direction of John Rennie Charles Wedge surveyed the route in
1792 and Matthew Hall surveyed it in 1793. The new route would
increase the length of the navigation by about 2 miles (3.2 km),
but this plan formed the basis of a Parliamentary Bill. Despite
spirited opposition by Maldon, the bill became an Act of Parliament
on 17 June 1793, creating The Company of the Proprietors of the
Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation, with powers to raise £40,000
by the issuing of shares, and a further £20,000 if required.
Work started soon afterwards, and although John Rennie was officially
Chief Engineer, the project was managed by Richard Coates, who
had also assisted Rennie on the Ipswich and Stowmarket Navigation.
The grave of Richard Coates stands in Springfield churchyard,
while Rennie's original survey book for the canal has been preserved. |
The port of Maldon now
tried to mitigate their loss, and with advice from Benjamin Latrobe,
produced a plan to improve the Blackwater through Maldon to its
junction with the Chelmer at Beeleigh, which was submitted to
Parliament in 1793. Realising that this would make the final
cut to Heybridge redundant, the Navigation Company opposed the
Bill, and it was defeated. Latrobe submitted a revised scheme
in April 1795, which was also defeated. This marked the end of
his engineering career in Britain, as he emigrated to America
shortly afterwards. Work continued on the navigation, with the
first section from Heybridge Basin to Little Baddow opening in
April 1796 and the completed navigation opening on the 3rd of
June 1797. The final cost was around £50,000.
When completed, the length of the navigation was 13.8 miles (22.2
km). 12 locks lowered the level of the navigation by 75 feet
(23 m) from Springfield Basin in Chelmsford to the sea lock at
Heybridge Basin. An additional stop lock protected the new cut
from flooding at Beeleigh. Here, the navigation left the course
of the River Chelmer, and joined that of the River Blackwater,
before entering the final 2.5 miles (4.0 km) of cut to Heybridge
Basin. The waters of the River Blackwater were diverted into
the Chelmer, flowing over a weir between Beeleigh Lock and the
stop gates. The navigation was constructed with only 2 feet (0.61
m) of water, which was the lowest statutory draught for any of
the English commercial waterways. The locks were constructed
to take barges which were 60 by 16 feet (18.3 by 4.9 m) and each
could carry around 25 tons. They were horse-drawn, and remained
so until the 1960s, when diesel outboard motors were fitted.
The only branch was a cut to Langford Mill, built privately by
Mr Westcomb. It was well used until the 1870s, but was unused
after 1881. |
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There were teething problems,
with floods in 1797 creating shoals which prevented the passage
of barges. These got steadily worse, until Rennie was called
back in 1799 to address the problem. Rennie was again recalled
in 1805, when the mill owners complained about leakage through
the locks and requested damages. Further improvements were made,
including the rebuilding of the Heybridge Basin sea lock by James
Green, and trade developed steadily. The first inland gasworks
in Britain was built in Chelmsford in 1819, using coal brought
up the navigation. Besides coal, bricks, stone, timber and general
cargo was carried from Heybridge Basin to Chelmsford, and the
major cargo in the reverse direction was grain and flour. Local
wharfs served the communities of Little Baddow, Boreham, Ulting
and Heybridge. At its peak in the mid 19th century, the canal
was carrying over 60,000 tons of cargo per year. |
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The Eastern Counties Railway
reached Chelmsford in 1843, and a branch line from Witham reached
Maldon in 1848, but there was never a direct line between the
two towns. Although trade declined, the impact of the railways
was less significant than on many canals. Following the Second
World War, the sea lock into Heybridge Basin was extended to
107 by 26 feet (32.6 by 7.9 m), so that coasters carrying timber
from the continent could enter the basin to transfer their cargo
to barges. Traffic slowly declined until the last load of timber
was delivered to Browns Yard (now Travis Perkins) on Springfield
Basin in 1972. |
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Although commercial traffic
ceased, the navigation continued to derive income from water
abstraction and from the sale of wood from the willows which
grow along the banks. The willow is used for making cricket bats,
the trees were first planted in the 1880s when one of the directors
saw the need for alternative sources of income. Also of course
was the income from pleasure craft mooring both in the Basin
and along a stretch of the Southern side of the canal, plus the
rental on the adjacent storage sheds. The Company although only
purchasing a minimal area at first for the canal construction
and immediate sides from the Lords of the Manor, the Dean and
Chapter of Saint Paul's in London, later in 1812 under another
'Enclosures Act' covering the lands of 'Tiptree Heath' and 'Borough
Marsh' purchased a large area of land which much of the older
part of the village currently stands. This land was leased and
rented out which also created an income for the Company for over
a hundred years, until hard times in 1916 forced it to sell all
but the immediate sides to the canal and Basin. |
The navigation is unusual
in that it was not nationalised in 1948 when most of the other
waterways in the UK were, and remained under the control of the
original Company of Proprietors of the Chelmer & Blackwater
Navigation Ltd.
Prior to the cessation of commercial traffic in 1972, pleasure
craft were prohibited from using the upper canal locks, but leisure
use of the navigation was encouraged afterwards. |
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For ease of writing and
space, the 'Chelmer & Blackwater Navigation Ltd' will be
referred to as just 'the Canal Company' in most instances throughout
this website. |
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