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Title: A Canal Boat at Waterside, 1904. - MOT00126

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Title

A Canal Boat at Waterside, 1904. - MOT00126

Description

A canal boat off-loading stone at the corporation yard at Waterside, 1904.

With the use of water power, the output of cloth increased. This increase in trade saw the opening up of the valleys and the construction of Turn Pike Roads, with their toll bars, which made journey times shorter. The toll board at Steanor Bottom is evidence of the type and variety of vehicle using the roads, circa 1769.

The opening of the Rochdale - Sowerby Bridge Canal (1798-1802) for the conveyance of goods, virtually eliminated the use of the packhorse roads, except for local use. Even the Turn Pike Trust experienced a drop in revenue. Goods could be transported in greater quantities, and more quickly by canal barge than by road.

Hardly had the canal revealed its advantages over road transport, than the railway appeared. In this area one of the greatest engineering feats of the 19th Century can be seen in the Summit Tunnel. In its day, 1841, it was the longest tunnel in Europe.

The Tait prints provide an excellent record of the building of the line from Manchester to Normanton.

Creator

Unknown

Source

Todmorden Information Centre Trust

Date

1904, 1900s

Rights

PHDA - Todmorden Information Centre Trust

Relation

Pennine Horizons Digital Archive

Identifier

MOT00126.tif

Citation

Unknown, “A Canal Boat at Waterside, 1904. - MOT00126,” Pennine Horizons Digital Archive, accessed April 24, 2024, https://penninehorizons.org/items/show/10454.

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