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View from South-East.

B 55496 CN

Description View from South-East.

Date 8/1991

Catalogue Number B 55496 CN

Category Photographs and Off-line Digital Images

Copies SC 792965

Scope and Content Wyndford Lock, Forth & Clyde Canal, North Lanarkshire, from south-east This shows a bridge spanning the lock with the remains of lock gates on the right and the lock-keeper's cottage in the background. The lock and the cottage were built around 1770 but the bridge was added around 1970 and replaced a bascule bridge (drawbridge). In the 1990s the cottage and the lock gates were restored, the bridge removed and a new bridge built at the east end of the locks. There are 39 locks on the Forth & Clyde Canal and each one is almost 21m long and 6m wide with an average water rise of 2.4m. Initially this lock was the terminus for pleasure steamers that ferried people on day trips along the canal. The terminus was subsequently moved about 4km to the west to Craigmarloch. The Forth & Clyde Canal was built between 1768 and 1790. It could have been completed sooner but funds ran out in 1777 and more money was not found by the government until 1784. John Smeaton (1724-92) was the designer and first chief engineer for the project. He was replaced in 1777 by Robert Mackell (d.1779), and in 1785 Robert Whitworth (1734-99) took over the building of the final section of the canal from Glasgow. When the canal was completed in 1790 it ran from the River Forth at Grangemouth, in the east, to Bowling on the River Clyde in the west of Scotland. The canal was linked to Edinburgh when the Union Canal was opened in 1822. The Forth & Clyde Canal was closed in 1963 and the Union Canal in 1965 and the construction of new roads meant that it was impossible for boats to travel along the full length of these watercourses. However, the £84.5m Millennium Link project enabled the canals to reopen in 2002. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.

Medium Colour negative

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/724428

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