Posts Tagged ‘Oakamoor’

The Caldon Canal

October 25th, 2012

The Caldon Canal passing through Hanley Park

A major tourist attraction, the Caldon Canal, which passes through Hanley Park, links The Potteries with Leek and Froghall.

Branching from the Trent and Mersey Canal at Etruria’s Summit Lock, the Caldon Canal was constructed by Scottish civil engineer John Rennie.

John, who designed London Bridge, Southwark Bridge and Waterloo Bridge, was born at Phantassie near Edinburgh on June 7th, 1761. He began his career building flour mills and constructing drainage systems on the Solway Firth. Moving to England, he worked on projects to drain East Anglia’s fens and built roads, bridges and canals, including the Kennet and Avon Canal, the Lancaster Canal and the Rochdale Canal.

Opened in 1779, the Caldon Canal meanders for 17 miles through the Trent and Churnet valleys.

Boats brought coal from Kidsgrove to forges in the Churnet Valley and flint stones to flint mills where they were ground, bake-dried and turned into slop, which the pottery industry used to make earthenware more durable.

The canal terminates at Froghall Wharf, where a tramway had been laid to limestone quarries at Cauldon Lowe.

Between 1779 and 1797  two thousand boats were loaded with 40,000 tons of limestone which was used as a flux to smelt iron ore, to make fertiliser or to build houses, town halls and churches.

Towards the end of the 18th century, the Trent & Mersey Canal Company, which owned the Caldon Canal, decided to build a reservoir at Rudyard and construct branch canals to Leek and Uttoxeter.

The Leek branch opened in 1802 but work stopped on the Uttoxeter branch in 1809 when the company ran out of money. It borrowed £30,000 to complete the branch which opened on September 3rd, 1811 when six or seven boats took the directors and their guests from Uttoxeter to Crump Wood Weir (between Denstone and Alton) for a picnic lunch.

Large wharfs and dry docks were constructed at Uttoxeter where boats were built and repaired.

The branch, which carried coal, copper and brass from Alton, Kingsley and Oakamoor, was not a commercial success. It closed in 1847 The bed was drained and used by engineers constructing the section of the Churnet Valley Railway that ran between Uttoxeter and Froghall.

Like the Uttoxeter branch, the Leek branch was not economically viable although it continued to carry coal until the late 1930s.

Copyright Betty Cooper – The Phoenix Trust 2012

Photograph © Copyright Stephen McKay and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.

PH/BC

 


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Churnet Valley NewsDesk – Friends of the Churnet Valley’s Christmas Fayre

November 15th, 2011

The Friends of the Churnet Valley are holding their Christmas Gift and Craft Fayre at Oakamoor Village Hall on Sunday, 20th November at 12 noon.

Come along and you will have the chance to win a Christmas Cake or a bottle of wine. There will be craft stalls where you can buy unique gifts for your family and friends. Mulled wine and mince pies will be served at the refreshment stall and you can try your luck in the bran tub.

Donations from the proceeds will be given to two local charities, Buxton Mountain Rescue Service and Greyhound Gap.


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£1.65m for Moorland’s rail link

November 1st, 2011

Moorland & City Railways has been awarded £1.65m from the Government’s Regional Growth Fund towards the cost of creating a rail network linking Alton Towers, Cauldon Low and Leek with the mainline at Stoke-on-Trent.

The news was announced on the railway company’s website at http://www.mcrailways.co.uk/news/5018/rgf.html on October 31st.

Moorland & City Railways Director David Kemp said the grant was fantastic news for the project and recognised the importance of the railway’s plans in providing jobs. He went on to say: “In addition to our direct workforce, the railway will unlock a whole series of employment sites along its route by providing sustainable transport facilities.”

The project will increase employment opportunities in North Staffordshire by paving the way for 1,000 jobs in the area. Locations which will benefit from the railway include the proposed Moneystone leisure complex near Oakamoor in the Churnet Valley, the Cornhill site in Leek and a number of sites in Stoke-on-Trent.

Moorland & City Railway’s scheme to restore the rail link between the Staffordshire Moorlands and Stoke-on-Trent will create a link with the West Coast Main Line and provide a sustainable and low-carbon freight and passenger route that will benefit Leek, Alton Towers and major quarries in the district.

The company has already re-opened the eight-mile stretch between Leekbrook and Cauldon Lowe and is working to restore the line from Leekbrook towards Stoke-on-Trent which it plans to open as far as Endon early in 2012.

 

 


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Will the railway destroy the Churnet Valley?

August 26th, 2011

Moorland & City Railways’ plans to construct a railway line from Oakamoor to Alton are controversial.

Writing on Facebook, a spokesperson for the Friends of the Churnet Valley says:

Moorland & City Railways are pushing to get the Churnet Valley. One of the ways we can stop them is by showing them how much we love the valley. We cannot let them ruin this very special part of Staffordshire.”

Do you agree with the Friends of the Churnet Valley? Will extending the line from Oakamoor to Alton destroy the valley’s character or will it benefit people living there?

Visit our discussion forum at www.northstaffordshire.co.uk/discuss and tell us what you think.

 


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Consultation event at Oakamoor over subscribed

July 14th, 2011

River Churnet at Oakamoor

VILLAGERS have been urged not to turn up unannounced for the latest two events in a series giving people a big say on how their neighbourhoods shape up over the next two decades.

The plea was made this week by Staffordshire Moorlands Community and Voluntary Services, the organisation behind Community Conversations being held in Oakamoor Village Hall on Wednesday (July 20) and Whiston Village Hall on Thursday, July 28 for the District Council.

Cllr Edwin Wain, portfolio holder for planning, revealed that the Oakamoor session had been over subscribed, explaining that the interactive style of the round-table discussions meant that space was at a premium.  In addition, the Whiston session is almost full.

An extra event will now take place at Oakamoor Village Hall on Wednesday, September 7. If there is further demand, Whiston residents will also have an opportunity to attend an additional session.

Residents’ views are helping the council write a crucial document to:

  • Allocate land for development
  • Identify areas to be protected
  • Support community services including schools and local shops
  • Improve parks and green areas.

The emerging Site Allocations Development Plan will sit alongside a Core Strategy as critical parts of a Local Development Framework guiding how the Staffordshire Moorlands changes over the next 20 years for the benefit of residents, visitors and employers alike.

The community conversations are also influencing a Masterplan to steer sustainable development in the Churnet Valley.

Events have taken place so far in Meerbrook, Rudyard, Alton, Cheddleton and Ipstones.

Sessions will continue after the school summer holidays, ensuring that the 41 villages and three towns are all covered. The consultations run from 7pm to 9.15pm, giving as many people as possible a chance to join in.

Cllr Wain said: “We’ve been overwhelmed by the response so far but we appreciate that full houses are frustrating for those unable to attend. We want people to have their say but it’s difficult to ensure this happens if the groups are too big.

“We’re convinced that the interactive approach is the right way to go as it gives residents much more chance to comment than would be the case with an old-style public meeting.

“I would now urge residents to contact Michelle Reynolds (SMCVS) on 01538 381356 to reserve a place at any of the events and to keep an eye on the media and on our website at www.staffsmoorlands.gov.uk to ensure they don’t miss out when we announce our autumn events”, he advised.

Photograph © Copyright Gary Rogers and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.

 

 


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