Donnington Wood Canal

Donnington Wood Canal
The basin at the foot of the Lilleshall incline now serves as a pond
Specifications
Locks7 + 1 inclined plane
Statusparts still traceable
History
Date of actPrivately built
Date of first use1767
Date closed1904
Geography
Start pointPave Lane
End pointDonnington Wood
Connects toWombridge Canal, Shropshire Canal
Donnington Wood Canal
Pave Lane wharf
Pitchcroft Limeworks wharf
Pitchcroft Lane bridges
Locks (4)
Little Hales Bridge
Lilleshall Limeworks wharf
Lilleshall Limeworks wharf
Locks (3)
Pitchcroft branch junction
Lilleshall Branch incline
Hugh's Bridge
Lilleshall Abbey
Abbey Bridge, Lilyhurst Road
Muxton golf course
Old Lodge basin
Old Lodge furnaces
tramway bridge
Coal and ironstone mines
tramway bridge
wharf
tramway and road bridge
Shropshire Canal junction
wharf
Wombridge Canal

The Donnington Wood Canal was a 5.5-mile (8.9 km) private canal in East Shropshire, England, which ran from coal pits owned by Earl Gower at Donnington Wood to Pave Lane on the Wolverhampton to Newport Turnpike Road. It was completed in about 1767 and abandoned in 1904. The canal was part of a larger network of tub-boat canals, which were used for the transport of raw materials, particularly coal, limestone and ironstone, from the locations where they were mined to furnaces where the iron ore was processed. The canal was connected to the Wombridge Canal and the Shropshire Canal.