The Forgotten Canals of Yorkshire: Wakefield to Swinton via Barnsley
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The Forgotten Canals of Yorkshire - Roger Glister
CHAPTER ONE
The Barnsley Canal
Introduction
In July 1792 the Aire & Calder Navigation Company instructed its manager, William Martin, to obtain a plan and estimate for the building of a canal from Barnsley to Wakefield. This scheme was to facilitate the exploitation of the vast coal reserves beneath the environs of these two towns. Thus on 7 August the Aire & Calder Navigation shareholders’ meeting asked William Jessop, the company’s consulting engineer, to survey a route to be presented at a public meeting. Jessop at this time was heavily committed to other canal projects and was too busy to survey either the Barnsley Canal or the Dearne & Dove Canal that had also been offered to him. Subsequently the job fell to William Martin and his assistants, John Gott and Elias Wright, who promptly surveyed several routes between the Aire & Calder and Barnsley.
They do not appear to have wasted a lot of time, for, on 20 September the shareholders were told by Jessop that he had perused the various routes surveyed and in his opinion one line in particular, from Wakefield to Barnsley, with a branch to Silkstone, ‘Will be Practicable, be a very eligible Line to be Adopted and that the Expense upon a cursory View wou’d not exceed the Sum of Fifty Thousand Pounds’.
A public subscription meeting was held at the White Bear Hotel in Barnsley, now the Royal Hotel, on 15 October 1792 with a leading Aire & Calder Navigation proprietor, John Smyth of Heath, in the chair. The route and estimate, now revised to £60,000, was presented to those in attendance and no fewer than eighty-six investors quickly subscribed the capital sum.
The principal shareholder, who invested £1,600, was Walter Spencer-Stanhope of Cannon Hall. He stood to gain vast sums with the building of the Barnsley Canal due to his ownership of the land around Silkstone beneath which lay the rich Silkstone coal seams.
Born plain Walter Stanhope in 1749, the son of a Leeds cloth merchant, he added Spencer to his name upon succession to the Cannon Hall estates from his uncle, ironmaster John Spencer. Already a trustee of the A & C N due to stock he gained by his marriage in 1738, he was made chairman of the Barnsley Canal Company, a position he enjoyed throughout the building of the waterway. There can be little doubt that it was he who lobbied for the five tramroads linking points on the coalfield with the canal at Barnby that were included in the Parliamentary Bill that was now prepared.
The Barnsley Canal duly received its Royal assent on 3 June 1793, at a cost of £2,000 to the promoters, with confirmed capital of £80,000 to cover the latest estimate of £72,000. On the same day the Dearne & Dove Bill was also given assent.
The first sod was cut on Heath Common by William Martin, who had been appointed company treasurer, on 27 September 1793. The contractor was John Pinkerton, well known for his work on a number of canals and closely associated with William Jessop. Pinkerton’s weakness was a well developed ability to miscalculate estimates which resulted in skimped works and disputes with his employers. The Barnsley commission was to be no different and Samuel Hartley, the company surveyor, was soon at odds with the contractor.
A loaded coal barge exits the Barnsley Canal onto the Calder & Hebble Navigation and turns toward Castleford and Goole. This picture, taken in the late 1800s shows the toll house on the right and the lock-keeper closing the head gate to prepare the lock for the next boat. The small but wide rowing boats in the foreground were probably for hire.
Lock number 1 again with clinker-built barges tied up awaiting orders. This, and the previous picture, show this lock in its final position, close to the river, having been relocated in 1816.
By the summer of 1794 Pinkerton was experiencing great difficulty in the Cold Hiendley cutting and needed large amounts of gunpowder for blasting that had not been anticipated which meant very slow progress being made in this area. The making of the whole line, excluding locks, had been expected to cost about 6d (2.5p) per yard in the main and no-where more than 1s 4d (6.66p). However, no less than 5,000 yards had cost almost 2s (10p) and one stretch at Cold Hiendley over 4s (20p) per yard, therefore vastly over budget.
Despite the bickerings, specification changes and construction setbacks, the majority of the earthworks were completed by the middle of 1793 and Hartley was able to report that the canal was in water from the top of the Walton flight of locks to Barnsley. He also had to report that the top five locks on the flight may have to be demolished and rebuilt due to the puddle not being carried under the foundations correctly.
The completion of the works resulted in the opening of the Barnsley Canal on 8 June 1799, from the Aire & Calder at Heath to Barnsley Basin. The remaining length to the terminus at Barnby Basin was finally opened in early 1802. The total expenditure by the company from the canal’s inception to its completion was £95,000. The litigation between the Canal Company and John Pinkerton was not resolved until 1812 when the contractor paid £3,137 to the Company in compensation for unfinished and remedial work.
The waterway was sixteen miles in length with a navigable depth of five feet. There were fifteen locks between the Calder and the summit level with three at Agbrigg and twelve at Walton which were built originally to accommodate craft of 58 feet long by 14 feet 10 inches in width. These were increased in size to 79 feet by 14 feet 10 inches