Bridgwater and Taunton Canal

Bridgwater and Taunton Canal
Firepool Lock, where the canal joins the River Tone
Map
Specifications
Length14.5 miles (23.3 km)
Maximum boat length51 ft 10 in (15.80 m)
Maximum boat beam13 ft 7 in (4.14 m)
Locks7
(originally 6)
StatusNavigable
Navigation authorityCanal and River Trust
History
Original ownerBridgwater and Taunton Canal Company
Principal engineerJames Hollinsworth
Date of act1811, 1824
Date of first use1827
Date completed1841
Date closed1907
Date restored1994
Geography
Start pointTaunton
End pointBridgwater Docks
Connects toisolated
Bridgwater and Taunton Canal
River Parrett
ship and barge locks
(former) Tidal basin
1841 Bascule bridge
(lock now always open)
Bridgwater Docks
(Inner Dock)
Newtown Lock
 A39 
 A38 
old route to R Parrett
Entrance Lock
Huntworth Basin
Huntworth Lock
original course
Crossways swing bridge
 M5  motorway
Mead's Buildings swing bridge
Huntworth Lane bridge
Fordgate swing bridge
Standards Lock
Kings Lock
Lower Maunsel Lock
Higher Maunsel Lock
 A361 
River Tone
Chard Canal
 M5 
 A38 
 A358 
Bristol–Exeter line
Grand Western Canal
Firepool Lock and weir
River Tone
Taunton
French Weir

The Bridgwater and Taunton Canal is a canal in the south-west of England between Bridgwater and Taunton, opened in 1827 and linking the River Tone to the River Parrett. There were a number of abortive schemes to link the Bristol Channel to the English Channel by waterway in the 18th and early 19th centuries. These schemes followed the approximate route eventually taken by the Bridgwater and Taunton Canal, but the canal was instead built as part of a plan to link Bristol to Taunton by waterway.

The early years of operation were marred by a series of legal disputes, which were resolved when the Bridgwater and Taunton Canal Company and the Conservators, who managed the River Tone Navigation, agreed that the canal company should take over the Tone Navigation. The canal originally terminated at a basin at Huntworth, to the east of Bridgwater, but was later extended to a floating harbour at Bridgwater Docks on its western edge. Financially this was a disaster, as the extension was funded by a mortgage, and the arrival of the railways soon afterwards started the demise of the canal. The canal was rescued from bankruptcy by the Bristol and Exeter Railway in 1866.

Despite commercial traffic ceasing in 1907, the infrastructure was maintained in good order, and the canal was used for the transport of potable water from 1962. The Countryside Act 1968 provided a framework for Somerset County Council to start the restoration of the canal as a leisure facility, which was completed in 1994, when the canal was reopened throughout. Bridgwater Docks have been restored as a marina, but there is no navigable connection to the River Parrett, as the canal still transports drinking water for the people of Bridgwater.