Grantham Canal

Grantham Canal
A dry lock on the canal near Cropwell Bishop
Map
Specifications
Maximum boat length75 ft 0 in (22.86 m)
Maximum boat beam14 ft 0 in (4.27 m)
Locks18
StatusParts restored
Navigation authorityCanal and River Trust
History
Original ownerGrantham Canal Co
Principal engineerWilliam Jessop
Other engineer(s)James Green, William King
Date of act1793
Date completed1797
Date closed1936
Geography
Start pointGrantham
End pointWest Bridgford
Connects toRiver Trent
Grantham Canal
Grantham Basin
(under scrap yard)
Canal filled in
 A1  road
Proposed Basin
Denton Reservoir feeder
Casthorpe bridge
Ironstone Tramway
Woolsthorpe Wharf
14-18
Woolsthorpe Flight
(Restored)
12-13
Woolsthorpe Flight
Knipton Reservoir feeder
Belvoir Tramway
Muston Gorse Wharf
LNWR/GNR Joint Railway
dismantled)
River Smite
Hickling Basin
20 mile pound
dry section
11
Cropwell Locks
 A46  Fosse Way
9-10
Cropwell Locks
8
Joss's Lock
road to Cotgrave
7
Hollygate Lane Lock
(Restored)
6
Cotgrave Lock
(Restored)
road to Cotgrave
5
Sanders Lock
4
Skinners Lock
Polser Brook
Proposed new route to R Trent
 A52  road
3
Gamston Lock
2
Bridgford Lock
 A6011  road
1
Trent Lock
(Restored)
River Trent, Trent Bridge
Nottingham Canal

The Grantham Canal ran 33 miles (53 km) from Grantham through 18 locks to West Bridgford, where it joined the River Trent. It was built primarily for the transportation of coal to Grantham. It opened in 1797 and its profitability steadily increased until 1841. It was then sold to a railway company, declined, and was finally closed in 1936. It was used as a water supply for agriculture, and so most of it remained in water after closure, although bridges were lowered. Since the 1970s, the Grantham Canal Society have been working to restore parts of it. Two stretches are now navigable to small vessels. A new route will be required where the canal joins the Trent, as road building has severed the original one.