Monkland Canal

Monkland Canal
Weir at Old Palacecraig
Specifications
Maximum boat length71 ft 0 in (21.64 m)
Maximum boat beam14 ft 0 in (4.27 m)
Locks1 descent of four double locks; two other locks
(The descent was duplicated for a period by a rope-worked inclined plane)
StatusUnnavigable, partly culverted
History
Original ownerMonkland Canal Company
Principal engineerJames Watt
Date of act1770
Date of first useProgressively from 1771
Date closed1942
Geography
Start pointCalderbank, near Airdrie
End pointTownhead Basin, Glasgow
(Later connected to the Forth and Clyde Canal by the "cut of junction")
Branch(es)Four short branches
Connects toForth and Clyde Canal
Official nameMonkland Canal, Gartsherrie Branch, Summerlee
TypeIndustrial: inland water
Designated16/12/2013
Reference no.SM11340
Monkland Canal
Hillend Reservoir
N Calder Water feeder
(culvert)
Calderbank
Upper Faskine bridge
Faskine basin
Lower Faskine bridge
Palacecraig weir
culverted section
Sykeside Road bridge
Caledonian Line viaduct
Sheepford top lock
 B753  Locks Street bridge
Sheepford basin
Sheepford bottom lock
Calder Ironworks branch
Dundyvan branch
Howes Basin
Summerlee Heritage Park
Gartsherrie branch
Langloan branch
watered section
Blair Road, Coatbridge
Drumpellier Country Park
Drumpeller Colliery basin
railway bridge
culverted section
 A752  embankment
 M73  motorway embankment
Netherhouse Road bridge
 M8  built over route from here
Blackhill locks (2+2)
Graving Dock
Blackhill locks (2+2)
Blackhill locks (2+2)
Blackhill inclined plane
Blackhill locks (2+2)
Townhead basin
cut to Forth and Clyde Canal

The Monkland Canal was a 12+14-mile-long (19.7 km) canal designed to bring coal from the mining areas of Monklands to Glasgow in Scotland. In the course of a long and difficult construction process, it was opened progressively as short sections were completed, from 1771. It reached Gartcraig in 1782, and in 1794 it reached its full originally planned extent, from pits at Calderbank to a basin at Townhead in Glasgow; at first this was in two sections with a 96-foot (29 m) vertical interval between them at Blackhill; coal was unloaded and carted to the lower section and loaded onto a fresh barge. Locks were later constructed linking the two sections, and the canal was also connected to the Forth and Clyde Canal, giving additional business potential.

Maintaining an adequate water supply was a problem, and later an inclined plane was built at Blackhill, in which barges were let down and hauled up, floating in caissons that ran on rails. Originally intended as a water-saving measure to be used in summer only, the inclined plane was found to pass barges more quickly than through the locks and may have been used all the year.

In the second and third decades of the nineteenth century, technical advances in iron smelting coupled with fresh discoveries of abundant iron deposits and coal measures encouraged a massive increase in industrial activity in the Coatbridge area, and the Canal was ideally situated to feed the raw materials and take away the products of the industry.

The development of railways reduced the competitiveness of the canal, and eventually it was abandoned for navigation in 1952, but its culverted remains still supply water to the Forth and Clyde Canal. Much of the route now lies beneath the course of the M8 motorway, but two watered sections remain, and are well stocked with fish. Additionally, the Gartsherrie branch of the canal, which passes through Summerlee Heritage Park, was designated a scheduled monument by Historic Environment Scotland in 2013.[1]

  1. ^ "Monkland Canal, Gartsherrie Branch, Summerlee (SM11340)". portal.historicenvironment.scot. Retrieved 27 May 2024.