Engine Arm

Engine Arm
The roving bridge at the junction with the Old Main Line
Specifications
Length0.5 miles (0.80 km)
Maximum height above sea level473 ft (144 m)
StatusNavigable
Navigation authorityCanal and River Trust
History
Principal engineerBCN engineers
Other engineer(s)Thomas Telford
Date of first use1790
Geography
Branch ofBirmingham Canal Navigations
Connects toOld Main Line
Engine Arm
Smethwick New Pumping Stn
Brasshouse Bridge
Telford's New Main Line
Birmingham Level
Smeaton's Old Main Line
Engine Arm Aqueduct
Gauging station island
Smethwick Locks (3)
Smethwick Engine House
Rolfe Bridge (Bridge St North)
Engine Arm
Smethwick Junction
BCN Main Line
Engine Arm Basin
Feeder
(not navigable)
Edgbaston (Rotton Park) Reservoir

The Engine Arm or Birmingham Feeder Arm near Smethwick, West Midlands, England, is a short canal which was originally part of a feeder tunnel for a pumping engine. When the Smethwick flight of locks were reduced from six to three, the pumping engine was moved to a new site, which allowed part of the feeder tunnel to be opened up and made navigable, so that coal supplies for the engine could be delivered by barge. The Engine Arm also supplied the pumped water to the 473-foot (144 m) Wolverhampton level of the lowered summit. The arm was extended between 1825 and 1830 by Thomas Telford to carry water from Rotton Park Reservoir (now called Edgbaston Reservoir) to the Old Main Line of the BCN Main Line Canal, and the Engine Arm Aqueduct was inserted to carry it over the new main line constructed at that time, which was 20 feet (6.1 m) lower. The arm is now managed by the Canal and River Trust and the basin beyond the site of the pumping station, which was replaced by a new engine house near Brasshouse Lane bridge in 1892, is used for residential moorings.