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The Pensnett Canal, also called Lord Ward's Canal was a private long canal near
Brierley Hill Brierley Hill is a town and electoral ward in the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley, West Midlands, England, 2.5 miles south of Dudley and 2 miles north of Stourbridge. Part of the Black Country and in a heavily industrialised area, it has a pop ...
, West Midlands, England, which opened in 1840 and served the industrial enterprises of Lord Dudley's Estate. The engineer was Mathew Frost. Since its closure to navigation in 1950, much of it has been lost by overbuilding, but a small section at its junction with the
Dudley Canal The Dudley Canal is a canal passing through Dudley in the West Midlands of England. The canal is part of the English and Welsh connected network of navigable inland waterways, and in particular forms part of the popular Stourport Ring narrowboat ...
was restored in 1995, and the section through Brierley Hill remains in water, although it is polluted and not navigable.


History

In the early 1800s, the
Earl of Dudley Earl of Dudley, of Dudley Castle in the County of Stafford (now the West Midlands), is a title that has been created twice in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, both times for members of the Ward family. History Dudley was first used for a p ...
owned a large number of mines, from which coal, ironstone, limestone and fireclay were extracted. Although many were leased to other operators, there was a trend to bring control of them back to a central agency. John William, who had been Earl of Dudley since 1827, died in 1833, and control of his estate passed to his executors, of which the Earl of Stafford was one. The mineral agent at the time was Francis Downing, but he was replaced by Richard Smith in 1836, and it was Smith who built up an industrial empire by taking back control of leasehold properties. This required better transport links, and in 1839 contractors were invited to submit quotations for building the private Pensnett Canal. The contract for construction was awarded to Matthew Frost, a colliery owner, contractor, land-owner, and surveyor who lived at Bilston. His brother James was also a contractor, who was involved in constructing the Sandhills Branch of the Birmingham Canal and of the Stourbridge Extension Canal at around the same time, but this was one of the first canal projects that Matthew had managed, although he also worked on the Hatherton Branch of the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal at the same time. Work is known to have begun by November 1839, and the canal was probably completed in 1840. It was constructed at the 473ft
Wolverhampton Level The Birmingham Canal Navigations (BCN), a network of narrow canals in the industrial midlands of England, is built on various water levels. The three longest are the Wolverhampton, Birmingham, and Walsall levels. Locks allow boats to move from ...
of the
Birmingham Canal Navigations Birmingham Canal Navigations (BCN) is a network of canals connecting Birmingham, Wolverhampton, and the eastern part of the Black Country. The BCN is connected to the rest of the English canal system at several junctions. It was owned and opera ...
, as it joined the
Dudley Canal The Dudley Canal is a canal passing through Dudley in the West Midlands of England. The canal is part of the English and Welsh connected network of navigable inland waterways, and in particular forms part of the popular Stourport Ring narrowboat ...
at Parkhead junction, just to the south of the
Dudley Tunnel Dudley Tunnel is a canal tunnel on the Dudley Canal Line No 1, England. At about long, it is now the second longest canal tunnel on the UK canal network today. ( Standedge Tunnel is the longest, at , and the Higham and Strood tunnel is now ...
. The junction was a three way affair, with another private branch to the east serving the Blowers Green furnaces of M & W Grazebrook, which was known as the Grazebrook Arm. As built, the canal was long with no locks. It ran from Parkhead Basin at the southern portal of the Dudley Canal tunnel to the Wallows Wharf to serve the Earl of Dudley's Old Park and Wallows Collieries and the northern part of his (now demolished) Round Oak Ironworks, where a short railway ran to the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal. For most of its length, it ran parallel to the Dudley No. 1 Canal, which ran close to the southern part of the Round Oak Ironworks.Ordnance Survey, 1:2500 map, 1884 Despite the fact that it was soon surrounded by railways, the canal continued in use for about 100 years, and there was an interchange wharf with the railway at its far end. Development took place along its line, which included the building of brickworks, coke ovens and lime kilns. Hartshill Iron Works, on which work began in the late 1840s, was the largest of these developments, and the output from its forges and rolling mills was an important source of traffic for the canal. Much of the traffic was taken to Wallows Wharf, but the canal was also used by railway boats, which carried iron goods to various parts of the Birmingham Canal Navigations, for transshipment to railway wagons. The canal was the location of at least one iron and steel boatbuilding yard. It was owned by Samuel Horton of Netherton, and was listed in a trade catalogue in 1903. As well as building new boats, he carried out repairs at the yard, and had a reputation for good workmanship, which he had built up over 35 years. Horton also made boilers, tanks, colliery tubs and wagons among other iron or steel goods. Parts of the canal becoming disused in the 1940s, although the section to Harts Hill Iron Company continued to be used until 1950. It was also known as Lord Ward's Branch although there is an identically named branch near the northern portal of the Dudley Tunnel, which is now part of the
Black Country Living Museum The Black Country Living Museum (formerly the Black Country Museum) is an open-air museum of rebuilt historic buildings in Dudley, West Midlands, England.
. Baron Ward was another title of the Earl of Dudley.


Remains

The canal is mostly unnavigable, having been partly infilled and in many places built upon by industrial premises. A short length, now called Pensnett Basin, runs between Parkhead Junction and an arch of the disused Parkhead Viaduct, where the arch has been closed off. This section was bought from the Lord Dudley's Estate in 1995 by the Dudley Canal Trust. At the time it was filled in, but it was re-excavated and a brick lining constructed. At the same time the Grazebrook Arm was dredged, the towpath bridges were reconstructed, and the towpaths in the area were resurfaced. Much of the canal within Brierley Hill town centre remains in water. Some of this section is owned by Dudley Metrolpolitan District Council, and some by C B Brown, who also own nearby industrial units. The water is known to be contaminated, both by discharges from industrial sites, and by fly-tipping. In 2008 the council commissioned the consulting engineers
Arup Group Arup (officially Arup Group Limited) is a British multinational professional services firm headquartered in London which provides design, engineering, architecture, planning, and advisory services across every aspect of the built environment ...
to carry out a wide-ranging study of the remains, known as the Pensnett Canal Feasibility Study. Four options were identified, which were to do nothing, to fill in the canal to create additional land for development or green spaces, to fill in parts of the canal, and to restore and retain the whole of the remaining watered section. The report also suggested that how the canal was treated could act as a catalyst for development in the area. There is no further access to the former canal although a public footpath follows a short distance over the course between factories. The course of the canal can also be observed from a number of road bridges. The Harts Hill Iron Works ran a fleet of boats based on the canal, which amounted to some 40 vessels during the life of the works. One of their boats, built of wrought iron in 1895, either in the dock at the works or at Noah Hingley's dock at Withymore, has survived. Originally numbered 17, it became number 18 and acquired the name ''Bessie'' at some point. Ownership passed to Stewarts and Lloyds of Halesowen some time probably in the late 1920s or early 1930s, and it worked at the Coombeswood Tube Works, becoming their number 112. After the works closed in the 1970s, British Steel donated the vessel to the Black Country Living Museum in 1976.


Points of interest


Bibliography

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References


External links

{{coord, 52.49099, -2.11276, display=title, region:GB_dim:1000, name=Pensnett Canal - nominal location Canals in the West Midlands (county) Canals opened in 1840