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The Great Britain Guide

Canals · North West England

Douglas Navigation

Free admission

Douglas Navigation is a canal in the United Kingdom.

Douglas Navigation, canals in Lancashire

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Plan your visit

Typical visit
1 h–2 h
Nearest railway station
Appley Bridge · 1.8 km
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly

About

Douglas Navigation is a canal in the United Kingdom. Coordinates: 53.5837°, -2.7458°. This entry is part of The Great Britain Guide, a free, ad-free, open-data tourist directory.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

The Douglas Navigation was a canalised section of the River Douglas or Asland, in Lancashire, England, running from its confluence with the River Ribble to Wigan. It was authorised in 1720, and some work was carried out, but the undertakers lost most of the share money speculating on the South Sea Bubble. Alexander Leigh attempted to revive it eleven years later, and opened it progressively between 1738 and 1742. Leigh began work on a parallel canal called Leigh's Cut to improve the passage from Newburgh to Gathurst, but progress was slow and it was unfinished in 1771. The working life of the navigation was short, as it was bought out by the Leeds and Liverpool Canal Company in 1772, to prevent a rival scheme to build a canal from Liverpool to Wigan. The canal company could not really afford the purchase price, but needed to secure the water supply to prevent the rival scheme from using it. The Leeds and Liverpool completed Leigh's Cut, built locks to enable sailing boats on the river to avoid having to pass under the aqueduct which carried the canal over the river at Newburgh, and improved the upper river into Wigan in time for a formal opening in October 1774. The final 3 miles (4.8 km) of river section into Wigan was replaced by a parallel canal, completed in 1780, and the lower river was superseded by the Rufford Branch, opened in 1781. The navigation was not a financial success, but most of the investors had interests in coal mines, and improvements to the river enabled them to get their coal to wider markets. Leigh in particular continued to invest in the navigation until its takeover, presumably using profits from his coal interests. The navigation was abandoned by 1801, but because the canal company had not been able to buy all the original shares, the new cuts were known as the Upper and Lower Douglas Navigations, and were accounted for separately, until the final two shares were purchased in 1893. Thus on paper the Douglas Navigation lasted for 173 years,…

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

Cannel coal, which burns with a bright yellow flame, producing little ash, was being mined in the Wigan coalfield, and there was an increasing market for coal around the edges of the Irish Sea, but the industry was hampered by the lack of an efficient way to transport the coal to the coast. The roads were primitive, but the River Douglas ran from Wigan to the River Ribble below Tarleton, and in the early 18th century, there was growing interest in making it into a navigation. In 1712, Thomas Steers, a civil engineer and surveyor who had arrived in Liverpool in 1710 to work on building the docks, surveyed the Douglas and recommended that it be made accessible to ships, enabling the transport…

Visiting

With the decline in commercial trade on the canal system, even the final river section became little used, with most pleasure craft venturing only as far as Tarleton Lock, and it was not until 2002, with the opening of the Ribble Link that this section of the navigation began to see any appreciable traffic. Below Tarleton Lock, boats must navigate 4 mi of the tidal River Douglas to reach the River Ribble. Asland Lamp is located in the Ribble, and boats heading upstream to the Ribble Link must keep it on the starboard side, to avoid an area of shallow water, which can be treacherous when the tides are running fast. Despite having been abandoned for 200 years, traces of the navigation can…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
53.5837, -2.7458
County
Lancashire
Parish
Dalton
Postcode
WN8 7RD
Parliamentary constituency
West Lancashire
Established
1742
Nearest railway station
Appley Bridge1.8 km

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Douglas Navigation?
Douglas Navigation is in Lancashire, North-West England, United Kingdom (postcode WN8 7RD), in the parish of Dalton.
When was Douglas Navigation built?
Built or established in 1742.
Is Douglas Navigation free to visit?
Yes, Douglas Navigation is free to enter.
How do I get to Douglas Navigation?
The nearest railway station is Appley Bridge, about 1.8 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode WN8 7RD.