The Bond End Canal - A short history
Researched and complied by Harry Hines
Brewing
in Burton upon Trent started around 1000AD with the foundation of
the Benedictine Abbey and the discovery of local water with a high
Gypsum content, this being excellent for the making of ale. Whilst
the fame of Burton Ales spread, expansion of the trade slowed due to
difficulties with the transport of the heavy and bulky product.
Use of the river Trent, which runs through the
town, had been tried since Roman times but the further inland, the
smaller the boats that could be used. The winter flooding and
shallows in the summer proved insurmountable, however cargo could be
carried from the sea as far south as Wilden Ferry, where the river
Derwent joins the river Trent and increases the quantity of water,
then onwards by road. For example Staffordshire Waterways, by
Staffordshire County Council Education Department, makes reference
to (1765) "Great quantities of flint stones used by the potteries in
Staffordshire brought to Hull and thence to Willington in Derbyshire
to be forwarded by packhorse; and the fine ale made at Burton upon
Trent and exported to Germany and several parts of the Baltic".
Hops, grain and malt were also carried to Burton via the river
Trent.
In the early 1700s, improvements were made between
Wilden Ferry and Burton to increase the depth of navigable water.
Locks were built and the Burton Boat Company, under Henry Haine,
prospered. Cheese, ale and pottery moved downstream and iron and
timber upstream to and from the wharves and warehouses built on the
river Trent at Bond End, just south of Burton Abbey. Bond End was
so-called after the area outside the Abbey walls where the bondsmen
and serfs, who served the Abbey, lived. Burton was now said to be
the inland port the furthest from the sea.
Canals were gaining favour. A note found in the
archives of the Staffordshire County Council says "It is another
circumstance not unworthy of our notice in favour of canals, when
compared with river navigation that is the conveyance on the former
is more speedy and without interruptions and delays to which the
latter are liable, opportunities of pilfering and other small goods
stealing and adulterating wine and spirituous liquors are thereby to
a great measure prevented." With this thinking in mind, a canal to
join the rivers Trent, Mersey and Weaver was proposed and surveyed
in 1758. The Enabling Act was passed in 1766 for the canal to be
constructed from Wilden Ferry to Preston Brook.
The Burton Boat Company, concerned at the loss of
trade from their warehouses and wharves at Bond End, approached
James Brindley, the engineer, to terminate the canal near Burton at
Bond End. Brindley, considering the fluctuating water levels north
of Burton to Wilden Ferry, refused the Burton Boat Company's
proposition.
By 29th September 1772 (Brindley died on 27th
September), 48 miles of the Grand Trunk Canal (now known as the
Trent & Mersey) from Wilden Ferry to Stone was navigable - the
length past Burton-on-Trent being completed in 1770. Having been
unsuccessful in persuading the promoters of the Grand Trunk Canal to
modify the route, the Burton Boat Company, in 1769/70, built a 11/8
mile canal from their wharf at Bond End to Shobnall (the name
deriving from Schobinhale, a family of Saxon knights) to connect the
river Trent to the new Grand Trunk Canal. However, the canal company
refused to allow a connection to the canal and a situation, known as
the Shobnall Bar, ensued with boats each side of the bar having to
be unloaded and reloaded. Whilst the reason of the canal company may
have been to deprive the Burton Boat Company of trade and keep it on
the canal, this was only partly successful as goods could pass both
ways on the river using broad beam barges, whereas the canal was
only broad to Horninglow and was narrow passing through Burton and
onwards to Middlewich. The Burton Boat Company tried to gain trade
by breaking through the bar overnight, but litigation followed and
the bar was reinstated. Eventually a connection was allowed in 1794
and, as the Bond End Canal was at a lower level, a lock with a fall
of 3ft 9in was constructed.
In 1792/93 plans were published to build a canal
from Burton, on the east side of the river to transport coal from
the Derbyshire coal field. It was further proposed to join this to
the Ashby Canal at Ashby Woulds and plans included an inclined plane
near Newhall (predating the Foxton Inclined Plane by 7 years). There
were also plans published around the same time for a canal to be
built to the west of the Turnpike (now the A38) in competition to
the Grand Trunk on the west side. This canal would have started
where Bridge 88 now stands on the Coventry Canal, have 8 locks,
cross the river Trent downstream of the present canal river crossing
and join "Mr Peel's Cut" at Bond End. "Mr Peel's Cut" was made on
the river Trent to supply power for the water wheels and water to
the cotton mills opened by Robert Peel, a forebear of Sir Robert
Peel MP - known as father of the police force. This cutting was also
the termination of the Bond End Canal.
None of these plans came to fruition. It is
interesting to note that these plans show the continued existence of
the Shobnall Bar; indicating that the connection had not been made
at that date.
In 1840 plans were published in another attempt to
extend the Ashby Canal to join up with the Bond End Canal across the
river Trent. About the same time there were plans to extend the
Caldon Canal from its terminus at Uttoxeter to joint the Grand Trunk
at Horninglow.
By 1843 the canal was used in a different way to
solve a common problem of the times - sewage. The brick sewer built
sometime after 1788 was liable to blockage and in 1843 the system
was extended 2,159 yards to reach from the Trent Bridge to the Bond
End Canal. A system was built connecting the sewer to the lock
alongside the river so that every time the lock was used, water was
forced through the sewer acting as a flushing agent. The quoted
number of boats using the lock was 12 per day so allowing the sewer
to be flushed 12 times a day.
The Birmingham & Derby Junction Railway brought
their lines to Burton in 1839 with the first train arriving on 1st
August. A spur line was built, from where Burton Station now stands,
turning 90 degrees to terminate at the wharf alongside the canal.
The main line crossed the canal on a moveable, probably swing,
bridge. This was the site of an accident in 1846 when a railway
porter, forgetting the imminent arrival of a train from Derby,
turned the bridge to allow a boat through and the train engine ended
up in the canal. Fortunately there were no fatalities but this led
to the building of a fixed bridge that remained in existence until
1986.
The junction of the Bond End and Grand Trunk
canals became a busy wharf and a public house, Mount Pleasant Inn,
stood at the junction. There was never any road access to this
establishment, known locally as "Bessie Bull's", nor was it equipped
with beer pumps. Until its closure in 1961, beer was delivered from
Marston's Brewery across what is now the Trent & Mersey Canal and
was drawn from the wood in the cellar. Thomas Bull, the landlord at
the time of the pub's closure, was the last of a family line to hold
the pub's licence that went back 102 years. The nickname of "Bessie
Bull's" dates to the last landlord's grandmother, who took over the
licence when she was widowed. It is thought that the pub may date to
before the canal when it was understood to be called The Gateway to
Sinai, a reference to nearby Sinai Park where a retreat was built
for the Abbott and monks from Burton Abbey. The public house was
demolished in 1962 and the Hines' family home now stands on the
site. The original tiled cellar was exposed during the modern
bungalow's building.
The Bond End Canal inevitably succumbed to the
railways and by 1872 had become more or less disused. In 1874, one
mile was infilled leaving the wharf at Shobnall as a transhipment
point and sidings. Five railway lines were built around the basin
and were in use until the 1950s. The North Staffs Railway Company
laid its lines to Burton alongside the Trent & Mersey Canal, turning
at right angles at Shobnall to enter Burton on the infilled bed of
the Bond End Canal. A railway complex was built to serve the local
breweries and the last train to use the line from Burton into Bass &
Co's maltings up the bed of the old canal to Shobnall was in 1974.
Jannel Cruisers started business in 1973 in the
tiny part that was left of Shobnall Basin. The Hines family reopened
the basin and in 1980 created a dry dock on the line of the Bond End
Canal. The original lock entrance walls can be seen at the entrance
to the dry dock. The track of the Bond End Canal can be followed
from Shobnall Marina, down Shobnall Road, over the railway bridge,
along Evershed Way to St Peter's Bridge at Bond End. However,
Shobnall Marina is the only section still in water - hence anyone
who uses Shobnall Marina's dry dock can be said to have truly
travelled to the 'head of navigation' of the Bond End Canal.
The Bond End Canal - A Short History © Jannel
Cruisers Ltd., |