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Anson Branch

Coordinates: 52°34′39″N 2°01′20″W / 52.5775°N 2.0221°W / 52.5775; -2.0221
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anson Branch
The canal near Bentley Mill Bridge
Map
Specifications
Locks0
Statusderelict but watered
History
Original ownerBirmingham Canal Navigations
Date of act1768
Date of first use1830
Geography
Start pointBentley Mines
End pointWalsall Canal
Branch(es)Bentley Canal (defunct)
Branch ofWalsall Canal
Anson Branch
Bentley mines and quarry
Basin
Bentley Lane
Bloxwich Lane
M6 motorway Jn 10
Bentley Mill Way
Bentley Canal
River Tame Aqueduct
Walsall Canal
Aqueduct
Foresters Bridge

The Anson Branch is a short canal in the West Midlands, England. It runs for just over one mile from its junction with the Walsall Canal near Forster's bridge. It forms part of the Birmingham Canal Navigations.

The canal is only partially watered and is no longer navigable. It formerly connected with the now defunct Bentley Canal which, in turn, connected with the Wyrley and Essington Canal. The canal has no locks.

History

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The branch was authorised by the Birmingham Canal Navigation Act 1768 (8 Geo. 3. c. 38), but was not completed until 1830.[1] It was surveyed by Thomas Telford, who estimated that it would cost £9,499 to build. The route had to cross the River Tame, just to the north of the junction with the Walsall Canal, and this required an aqueduct and an embankment. Telford wanted Thomas Townsend to build it, but he was not keen to accept the contract, as he believed that Telford's estimate was too low. However, he was persuaded, and the contract was signed in March 1830.[2]

It was built to serve the coal mines and a limestone quarry in Bentley,[3] which were owned by the Earl of Lichfield. From the Walsall Canal, it headed in a north-easterly direction, and was almost straight for most of its length, apart from near the mines, where it turned to the north to reach a wharf, from which horse tramways connected to the Bentley mines and furnaces. By 1832, several blast furnaces had also been built near to the terminal basin. In order to tap into the mineral resources further to the north, the Bradford Branch was proposed, but only a small section was built as a canal, and the rest was constructed as a narrow-gauge tramway. It was completed in 1840, and was owned and operated by the canal company.[2]

Following the amalgamation of the Wyrley and Essington Canal with the Birmingham Canal Navigations on 9 February 1840, the new company were keen to create junctions between the two systems. The Bentley Canal was one of these, and ran from the Anson Branch to the Wyrley and Essington at Wednesfield.[4] It opened in 1843.[1]

By the 1890s, many of the mines had been worked out, and the local industry was in serious decline in the early twentieth century. However, the canal found a new use, when a power station was built at Birchills. Construction began in 1914, and some of it was operational by 1916, although it was not officially finished until 1922. It required a water supply, and a pumping station with two Mather and Platt pumps was installed beside the canal. The pumps could deliver 10.6 million gallons (48 Megalitres) per day, and once the water had passed through the power station, it was discharged into the Wyrley and Essington Canal to supply the Wolverhampton level of the Birmingham Canal Navigations. As a result, a pumping station near the top of Birchills locks was switched off and dismantled. From 1927, the power station became the responsibility of West Midlands Joint Electricity Authority, and then the British Electricity Authority following nationalisation in 1948. A second power station was commissioned in 1949.[2]

The section above the Bentley Canal junction was abandoned as a navigation in 1956, and the Bentley Canal and the rest of the Anson Branch were abandoned in 1961.[1] When the M6 motorway was built, it crossed the route of the branch, but because of its water supply function, a culvert was provided. It was large enough for small maintenance craft to pass through, although would not be considered large enough for modern pleasure craft. The power station was decommissioned in 1980, and the pumps were switched off, since when the branch has gradually deteriorated.[2]

The remains of the branch, covering an area of 13.6 acres (5.5 ha), have been designated as a site of local importance for nature conservation (SLINC) by Walsall Council.[5]

The junction with the Walsall Canal, which runs left and right

Points of interest

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Point Coordinates
(Links to map resources)
OS Grid Ref Notes
Northern terminus 52°35′34″N 2°00′24″W / 52.5929°N 2.0067°W / 52.5929; -2.0067 (Northern terminus) SO995994 Bentley mines and quarry
Bentley Canal Junction 52°34′52″N 2°01′06″W / 52.5812°N 2.0182°W / 52.5812; -2.0182 (Bentley Canal Junction) SO987981
Anson Branch Junction 52°34′39″N 2°01′20″W / 52.5775°N 2.0221°W / 52.5775; -2.0221 (Anson Branch Junction) SO986977 Southern terminus at junction with Walsall Canal

See also

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Bibliography

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  • Hadfield, Charles (1985). The Canals of the West Midlands. David and Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-8644-6.
  • Russell, Ronald (1971). Lost Canals of England and Wales. David and Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-5417-9.
  • Shead, Jim. "Anson Branch". Archived from the original on 1 July 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Shill, Ray (2011). "BCN Branches and Byeways: Ansons Branch". Boundary Post. 191. Birmingham Canal Navigations Society. Archived from the original on 1 October 2011.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Hadfield 1985, pp. 318–319
  2. ^ a b c d Shill 2011
  3. ^ Russell 1971, p. 141
  4. ^ Hadfield 1985, p. 99
  5. ^ "Walsall Council: SLINCs". Archived from the original on 29 May 2008. Retrieved 11 May 2008.

52°34′39″N 2°01′20″W / 52.5775°N 2.0221°W / 52.5775; -2.0221