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Chesterfield Canal : ウィキペディア英語版
Chesterfield Canal

The Chesterfield Canal is in the north of England and it is known locally as 'Cuckoo Dyke'.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title= Waterscape - Chesterfield Canal )〕 It was opened in 1777 and ran from the River Trent at West Stockwith, Nottinghamshire to Chesterfield, Derbyshire. It is currently only navigable as far as Kiveton Park near Rotherham, South Yorkshire, plus an isolated section near Chesterfield. Tapton Lock Visitor Centre is located on the Chesterfield Canal to the north of Tapton Park.〔(Tapton Lock Visitor Centre - official website )〕
The canal was built to export coal, limestone, and lead from Derbyshire, iron from Chesterfield, and corn, deals, timber, groceries, etc. into Derbyshire. The stone for the Palace of Westminster was quarried in North Anston, Rotherham, and transported via the canal.〔Richardson, Christine (2007).''Yorkshire Stone to London: To Create the Houses of Parliament''. Richlow Histories. ISBN 978-0-9552609-2-6〕
==Construction==

The route of the canal was surveyed by James Brindley and John Varley, who estimated the cost at £94,908 17s. Brindley presented his proposals to a meeting in Worksop on 24 August 1769. The investors asked John Grundy to carry out a second survey. He proposed a rather shorter course, from Stockwith in a straight line to Bawtry and then by Scrooby, Blyth and Carlton, to join Brindley's line at Shire Oaks. Grundy's line was shorter, and the cost estimated at £71,479, 6s. 9½d. Although Grundy's line was considerably cheaper, it achieved this by missing Worksop and Retford, and the investors decided in favour of Brindley's route.
An application was made to Parliament and the Act of Parliament received the Royal Assent on 28 March 1771, entitled ''An Act for making a navigable Cut or Canal from Chesterfield, in the county of Derby, through or near Worksop and Retford, to join the River Trent, at or near Stockwith, in the county of Nottingham.''
The promoters consisted of one hundred and seventy-four persons, amongst whom were the Duke of Devonshire, the Duke of Newcastle, Lord Scarsdale, the Dean of York, and Sir Cecil Wray. They were incorporated by the name of ''The Company of Proprietors of the Canal Navigation from Chesterfield to the River Trent'', and empowered to raise among themselves the sum of £100,000, in one thousand shares of £100 each, to fund the construction.〔Richardson, Christine (ed) (1996). ''Minutes of the Chesterfield Canal Company 1771-80''. ISBN 0-946324-20-4.〕
Immediately on the passing of the act, construction began under the direction of Brindley. Upon his death in September 1772, John Varley moved from Clerk of Works to Resident Engineer with Hugh Henshall, Brindley's brother-in-law, appointed Chief Engineer in 1773. The canal was to be built as a narrow canal, but in 1775, nine shareholders offered to fund the extra cost of making it a broad canal from Retford to Stockwith. Retford Corporation joined them, and each contributed £500. The additional cost exceeded £6000. The canal was opened throughout in 1777, but the only record of wide-beamed boats using it at Retford is prior to 1799.〔''Stamford Mercury'' 12 July 1799, column 3.〕
As built, the canal was almost long, being from the Trent to Worksop〔''Inland Waterways of Great Britain'', 8th Ed., (2009), Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson, ISBN 978-1-84623-010-3〕 with a rise of .〔''Chesterfield Canal map and elevations'', Chesterfield Canal Society〕 From Worksop to the entrance to Norwood Tunnel it was 〔 with a further rise.〔 From there to Chesterfield it was a further 〔 with a fall of followed by a rise of .〔 There were 65 locks in all, with two tunnels: a short tunnel near Gringley Beacon, and the major 2,880 yard long Norwood Tunnel. At the time of construction, Norwood Tunnel was the joint longest canal tunnel in Britain, and it was sixth longest by the time it collapsed. The canal was a typical Brindley contour canal, following the contours to avoid costly cuttings and embankments, which resulted in a less than direct route in places.
The canal was initially fairly successful, with dividends being returned to the investors. However, the building of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway line parallel to the canal (1849) left much of the navigation redundant, and the Worksop to Chesterfield stretch ceased to serve commercial traffic in 1908, when problems with mining subsidence necessitated the closure of Norwood Tunnel. The stretch between the tunnel and Worksop subsequently fell into ruin and became un-navigable, while parts of the isolated section from the tunnel to Chesterfield were infilled and redeveloped.

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