![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Junctions of the BCN.....Phil ClaytonPart One A junction is always an inviting place, an intriguing temptation to leave the straight and narrow, to veer away from the planned route, and on that wonderfully intricate network we call the BCN this is especially so. There is such a variety on the system that the traveller passing a junction may glimpse, through the towpath bridge, a concrete canyon of factories or a distant black and white balance beam or open land or a supermarket. In 1983 the BCN Society, under the then Chairman John Phillips, undertook to signpost the main junctions. The first post was erected on the island at Old Turn Junction (then known as Farmers Bridge Junction but we won't go into all that again!) on May 21st, 1983 and was soon followed by many others. The most recent was at Horseley Fields in Wolverhampton, which appeared in the summer of 2004. The BCNS's Explorer Scheme was set up to encourage people to visit those junctions which have, over the years, been graced with the slender signposts erected by the Society. This series of articles intends to have a fresh look at the junctions, see what has changed in the intervening years and, hopefully, to encourage others to go out and become Explorers themselves. The scheme is still in operation and details are available from the coordinator, Phil Clayton, address:-211 Marsh Lane, Wolverhampton WV10 6SA. The junctions were all numbered in the BCNS Signpost Trail booklet published and this series will follow that order.See below at the foot of this article a copy of the information minus photographs and original contained in the booklet. This is just one idea of how to see all the junctions, half the fun is working out your own route. So if you wish to start you have something to go on with.... Web EdUse the Photo Gallery in Views around the BCN to see the area described after reading Bordesley Junction Waypoint Number 1 on the BCN Signpost Trail - and it's not even on the BCN ! In fact it's never had a signpost but is next in line. Bordesley Junction, a workaday sort of place hemmed in by factories, is where the Birmingham and Warwick Junction Canal joined the Warwick and Birmingham Canal at the foot of Camp Hill locks. A short cut with a long name, the B & WJC was opened on St Valentine's Day, 1844. It enabled boats passing between the Fazeley and Warwick lines to avoid climbing the Aston flight only to have to drop down the Ashted locks. The Saltley cut as it is also known falls down the five Garrison locks on its way to Salford Junction. It is obviously a canal of the railway age as can be seen from its broad brick bridges which are numbered, Grand Union style, from Braunston. These are a contrast to the fine cast iron bridge which spans the junction itself. This was made by Lloyds and Foster who worked the Old Park Furnaces and Ironworks in Wednesbury until being taken over taken over by the Patent Shaft concern in 1866. The journey down the Saltely cut is not every boater's idea of a pleasant cruise but it is an area of great historical interest and was one of the most industralised stretches with gas works at Nechells and Saltley, a power station near Salford Bridge and a plethora of railway related works. As late as the end of August 1966 there were 44 steam locomotives in Saltley shed as well as 38 of the diesels which were ousting them. The gas works closed in the late sixties with the introduction of natural gas. This world of smoke, steam and smells is gone now and the passer by does sometimes wonder what is replacing the giants of old. Hereabouts it is the ubiquitous housing developments and business parks. Heading towards the city centre from Bordesley Junction the River Rea passes under the canal in its brick and concrete lined channel. This is a particularly interesting stretch with two fine warehouses on the offside just before the next junction. Digbeth Junction The junction was effected in 1799 with the opening of the BCN's Digbeth Branch to join the Warwick and Birmingham Canal which later became part of the Grand Union canal here starting its long trek to London. It heads off south eastwards from Warwick (otherwise Birmingham)Bar where the stop lock gates have been reinstated. Another example of a necessarily miserly regard for water, the BCN had a pumping engine to recirculate their water back up the Ashted locks and was several times in dispute with the Warwick and Birmingham over water supply. The area around the junction is of considerable canal interest and is worth exploring. Under Fazeley Street bridge, at the end of the branch, is Digbeth Basin, also known as Typhoo or Bordesley basin. The 1912 Ordnance Survey map shows three large basins but they have mostly been built over. What remains is open to boats but inaccessible for walkers. On the corner of Digbeth Junction stands the former Pickfords warehouse with an awning over a basin. New Warwick Wharf with the curved wall of Fellows, Morton and Clayton's warehouse is nearby and further down Fazeley Street can be seen the company's 1935 depot. Also known as Proof House Junction because of the proximity of that fine old building of 1813, the Gun Barrel Proofing House seems to have its date emblazoned all over on gates and even drainpipe hoppers. Not visible from the canal it is well worth the short diversion up Fazeley Street and in between the murals at the end of Andover Street to take a look through the gates at the building's fine decorated frontage. Not shown on the original Signpost Trail, Digbeth Junction was given its signpost in December, 1998; rightly so as this is one of the entrances to the BCN system, the others being Worcester Bar, Delph, Fazeley and Aldersley Junctions. Thank you Phil for the start of what I'm sure will prove to be a very interesting series. If you have not completed The BCN Explorer do give it a go. You don't need a boat! You can walk, cycle, get around the BCN in whatever way you like just get to all the signposts! You'll know the BCN after that!" Give Phil a ring he'll sort it out with you. telephone: 01902 780920.....B.P Ed For those interested below is a copy minus Photographs and a map of the text of the Signpost Trail.It has been altered slightly as the original document is a few years old now.... Web Ed Signpost Trail Introduction In 1983 the B.C.N.S under the guidance of John Phillips, Chairman at the time, undertook to Signpost the junctions of the BCN. Being a very complicated system, many boaters and walkers tended to stick to the Main Line to avoid getting lost. It was felt that given an indication of their destination they would be encouraged to explore the little used branches and loops which are a feature of the BCN. This booklet issued by the Society is designed to show you some of the signposts, via Kevin Maslins first class photographs, at the same time give you some ideas for cruising, with a route round the BCN designed to take in the whole system. Perforce some parts are repeated, but you can pick up the route where ever you join the system. All the signposts, a list appears on the reverse of the fold out map, were manufactured orginally by the Royal Label Factory (Ceased trading in 2001, patterns now held by another company) and in 1983 cost around £400 each, paid for mainly by the BCNS with the occasional Sponsor. (We wish they cost that much today, ie double that and add a bit more). Typically they stand 14 feet above ground level, with a steel post and aluminuim cast arms. A few practical words about the use of the guide, junctions are given Way Point numbers. Distance/Locks/Time are shown, for example as 1/8/3. (parts of a mile are treated as decimals ie half a mile= 0.5) Followed by some relevant remarks. OPTIONS, if taken, will push you down some arms or take you to the joining extremities of the system. The only real answer is GO AND SEE FOR YOURSELF Finally it is recommended that you use this booklet in conjunction with a BCN guide , like Pearsons BCN Canal Companion or the many others to give you in depth information.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Home | The BCNS | Boundary Post Journal | Pumphouse HQ | Workboat Phoenix | Events | Photo Gallery | Sales | Membership © The Birmingham Canal Navigation Society - 2002. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||