Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation

Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation
The Navigation from Colchester Road, Maldon
Map
Specifications
Length13.75 miles (22.13 km)
Maximum boat length60 ft 0 in (18.29 m)
Maximum boat beam16 ft 0 in (4.88 m)
Locks12
StatusNavigable
Navigation authorityEssex Waterways
History
Original ownerChelmer and Blackwater Navigation Co
Principal engineerJohn Rennie
Other engineer(s)Richard Coates
Date of act1793
Date completed1797
Geography
Start pointChelmsford
End pointHeybridge, Maldon
Connects toBlackwater estuary
Chelmer and Blackwater
Navigation
River Can
Chelmsford
River Chelmer
Springfield Basin
Weir and proposed lock
Lockside Marina
1
Springfield Lock
A138 road
2
Barnes Mill Lock
3
Sandford Lock
A12 road
4
Cuton Lock
5
Stonham's Lock
6
Little Baddow Mill Lock
Church Road
7
Paper Mill Lock
North Hill
8
Rushes Lock
River Ter
9
Hoe Mill Lock
The Causeway
10
Rickets Lock
River Blackwater
Langford Mill
Langford Cut
11
Beeleigh Lock
Stop gates
Beeleigh Mill
A414 road
A414 road
Holloway Road
Old course of Blackwater
Maldon
B1022 Colchester Road
12
Heybridge Sea Lock
Blackwater estuary
Northey Island

The Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation is the canalisation of the Rivers Chelmer and Blackwater in Essex, in the east of England. The navigation runs for 13.75 miles (22.13 km) from Springfield Basin in Chelmsford to the sea lock at Heybridge Basin near Maldon. Initial plans faced spirited opposition from Maldon, which were overcome by avoiding the town and terminating at Heybridge, and the navigation opened in 1797. There were some teething problems, and the engineer John Rennie was called back on two occasions to recommend improvements. The impact of the railways was less severe than on many canals, as there was never a direct line between Chelmsford and Maldon. The sea lock at Heybridge was enlarged after the Second World War, but trade gradually declined and ceased in 1972.

Unlike most canals, it was not nationalised in 1948, and remained under the control of the original company. The first leisure boats to use the navigation did so in 1973, when the Inland Waterways Association organised a rally at Chelmsford. Springfield Basin was restored in 1992, but the proprietors faced bankruptcy in 2003, and after two years of negotiation, Essex Waterways Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Inland Waterways Association, took over responsibility for management, although the proprietors retained ownership.

Because Essex and Suffolk Water abstract water from the navigation to supply Hanningfield Reservoir, they have a statutory obligation to maintain the outer gates at Heybridge sea lock, to prevent salt water entering the drinking water supply. They undertook major refurbishment work at the lock during the winters of 2016/17 and 2017/18, including replacement of the outer sea gate with a new design. A long-standing ambition, first proposed in 1985, has been to provide a better destination at Chelmsford, by providing access for boats to the town centre. A proposed link from Springfield Basin has been thwarted by road building in the area, but a plan to replace the automatic weir below Chelmsford Town Centre with a new structure incorporating a navigation lock was recommended in 2020.