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The Birmingham Canal Navigations

As a registered charity, the Canal & River Trust (CART) now has control of over 2000 miles of navigable inland waterways without reliance on central government for funding. It can fundraise and collect money from the populace and plough it back into the system anyway it sees fit, potentially improving the network and reviving an important part of world history that, up until the 1950s and '60s, was so dilapidated and neglected it was almost destroyed for good. 



Considering it's only 70 years since the canals were first thought of as worthy of tourism, it's impressive to think there are now over 35,000 pleasure boats cruising about on the network, creating a significant industry and quite a few congestion issues at some flights of locks. Although, this still pales in comparison to the number of working boats that once populated the lines, basins and locks in their industrial heyday of the 19th century. 


Stretching out from their centre at Gas Street Basin like arteries, these waterways wind through the former industrial heartland of Britain.

This project aimed to document the current state of the Birmingham Canal Navigations: over 150 miles of navigable canals in the Birmingham metropolitan area. This is the largest urban area in the world to be serviced by such an extensive canal network, even if the network today is nearly half its original size. Hence the name "the Venice of the Midlands". It's an interesting time for the canals, and important to document these living parts of our heritage.


Having grown up in Birmingham in the UK's West Midlands, the canals have been an integral part of my, and many other Brummies' lives. From a childhood spent cycling along muddy towpaths, crawling over dangerous derelict bridges (the fact I'm still alive is a small miracle) and watching the few remaining wharves and quaysides being demolished, rebuilt and renovated as luxury apartments, entertainment facilities and public spaces, it's always seemed normal to have a canal nearby. 


There's something eerie about an urban canal. It's a place that is strangely isolated from the modern world.

Stretching out from their epicentre at Gas Street Basin like arteries, these waterways wind through the former industrial heartland of Britain. It was these links that fuelled the growth and wealth of the city and the nation. Today, they provide a tranquil haven from the grime and noise of city life, or offer a unique way to view the urban landscape. They also provide a far quicker way of getting from one place to another (if you cycle) at rush-hour. 


There's something quite eerie about an urban canal; a place strangely isolated from the modern world. Walkers, cyclists, joggers and anglers all use them but there never seems to be a real tangible link to the modern world. Very often there are minimal signs of life, as if the area were frozen in time, years ago. Anyone who knows their history will be able to spot the Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian engineering which still dominates the networks, and the general lack of modern construction draws you back into a different era. The slower, peaceful atmosphere creates an impression of being in a forgotten, past world, something any city dweller should relish. 


Of course, this modern sense of calm is completely false. The canals would have been dirty, functional places teeming with horses pulling boats, the towpath echoing with the shouts and rumbles of wharves and factories and choked by mile after mile of smokestacks and steaming boats. Thousands of boatmen and women, the looming presence of heavy industry, towering chimneys and industrial detritus dominated this landscape, and very few people outside this world ventured near them.


Few alive have any real experience of this history, we can only imagine and try to picture a world that no longer exists. In doing so, we make the canals a poignant, sad and isolated world which detaches us from modernity and acts as a vital link to the past, haunted as they are by their own history.


This is why CART is in an excellent position. Just like the National Trust saves ancient, ancestral buildings and preserves ways of life that barely exist anymore, much to the delight of pensioners and to the general dismay of school children, CART now has the same responsibility to the canals, which are arguably just as important as our many historic buildings and form the largest heritage asset we have beside the railway.


The difference, however, is that canals are far more accessible and do not need "Do Not Touch" signs on everything, just the odd "Do Not Swim" sign here and there. To put it simply, CART has the potential to appeal to a much wider audience than the (generally) white, middle class that offers its patronage to the NT- itself a Victorian institution. 


To document the Birmingham Canal Navigations I have divided the canals up into their designated names and routes, although there are loops and basins and branches here and there. Given that canals have to be explored by foot, bicycle or boat, everything must be done in relatively small sections. So to order things and make it manageable, I chose fourteen individual routes to cycle or walk along (boats are a bit too slow, ironically). They are as follows:


Birmingham & Fazeley Canal


Birmingham Mainline Canal 1 (New)


Birmingham Mainline Canal 2 (Old)


Digbeth Branch Canal*


Dudley Canal No 1


Dudley Canal No 2


Grand Union Canal (Kingswood Junction to Salford Junction)*


Rushall Canal & Daw End Branch


Stourbridge Canal


Tame Valley Canal


Walsall Canal


Birmingham & Worcester Canal (Gas Street Basin to Alvechurch)*


Wyrley & Essington Canal


Stratford Upon Avon Canal (King's Norton Junction to Kingswood Junction)*


   *These routes actually fall outside the BCN area but are part of the Birmingham network and so have been included.


The canals of the UK are an integral part of history, not only nationally but globally. They changed the face of the planet and yet we barely even notice them as an historical relic. The Canal & River Trust is a charity which could change this and bring about a renaissance for the canals, or it could create another NT style industry. Either way, the canals are there to be enjoyed and offer a great link to the past, or simply an escape from modern life. And anyone who has been to the excellent Black Country Living Museum will know how interesting this history really can be, and how much fun can be had on a canal. In fact, if you want a unique, interesting, entertaining, informative and enjoyable day out, then go there anyway and pretend to live in the past for a few hours.


This article was first published in January 2013.

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