Calder and Hebble Navigation

The Calder and Hebble Navigation is a broad inland waterway, with locks and bridgeholes that are suitable for 14-foot-wide (4.3 m) boats, in West Yorkshire, England. Construction to improve the River Calder and the River Hebble began in 1759, and the initial scheme, which included 5.7 miles (9.2 km) of new cuts, was completed in 1770 and has remained navigable since it was opened. Significant improvements were made, including the Salterhebble branch to Halifax, opened in 1828, and ever-longer cuts to bypass river sections. Trade was assisted by the opening of the Rochdale Canal in 1804, which provided a through route from Sowerby Bridge to Manchester. There were plans to abandon the river sections completely in the 1830s, but these were modified as the needs of mill owners and other riparian landowners were recognised.

Calder and Hebble Navigation
Looking towards the terminal basin of the Calder and Hebble Navigation, from a point near the junction with the Rochdale Canal
Specifications
Maximum boat length57 ft 6 in (17.53 m)
Maximum boat beam14 ft 2 in (4.32 m)
StatusOpen
Navigation authorityCanal and River Trust
Calder and Hebble Navigation
River Calder and Rochdale Canal
Sowerby Bridge basins
Gas Works Road
Weir
Walker Lane
Canal Road
Hollas Lane
Weir
Calder Valley line
Copley Lane
Halifax Basin
Halifax Branch locks (14)
A629
Exley Quay
Calder Valley line
A6026
Halifax Branch
27
Salterhebble upper lock
Salterhebble upper basin
26
Salterhebble middle lock
Salterhebble lower basin
Hebble Brook
25
Salterhebble guillotine lock
B6112 Stainland Road
24
Long Lees lock
23
Woodside Mills lock
B6114 Elland Bridge
A629
Calder Valley line
22
Elland lock
21
Park Nook lock
20
Cromwell lock
Tag lock (disused)
19
Brookfoot lock
Disused lock
18
Ganny lock
A643 Rastrick Bridge
weir
A641 Brighouse Bridge
weir
Wharf Street
Brighouse marina
17
Brighouse upper lock
16
Brighouse lower lock
Blakeborough's Bridge
To Cooper Br
Anchor Pit flood lock
weir
M62
15
Kirklees Top lock
weir
Brearly Bridge
14
Kirklees Low lock
Caldervale Line
Cooper Bridge flood gates
A62 Cooper Bridge Road
weir
--
13
Cooper Bridge lock
To Greenwood
Caldervale Line
Battye Cut
Battyeford flood lock
weir
Cut Bridge (Wood Lane)
Battyeford marina
12
Battyeford lock
Ledgard flood lock
Newgate bridge
Hurst Lane bridge
11
Shepley Bridge lock
Greenwood flood gates
weir and access road
10
Greenwood lock
Calder Road bridge
Thornhill flood lock
weir
Savile Town Basin
Dewsbury Arm
8,9
Thornhill Double locks (2)
7
Mill Bank lock
Disused lock
5,6
Figure of Three locks (2)
Disused lock
A642
Disused Railway
4
Broad Cut Top lock
weir
Railway
3
Broad Cut Low lock
M1
Thornes flood lock
weir
A636 Derby Dale Road bridge
2
Thornes lock (Originally 2 chambers 1 disused)
Railway bridge
Wakefield flood lock
weir
A61 Doncaster & Barnsley Roads
A638 Doncaster Road
1
Fall Ings lock (original lock replaced)
Railway bridge
A6194 Wakefield Eastern Relief Road
Railway bridge
--

With the coming of the railways, the canal was leased to the Manchester and Leeds Railway in 1843, but this was subsequently deemed to be illegal, and the Aire and Calder Navigation with which the Calder and Hebble Navigation connected at its eastern end, leased the canal from September 1847 until 1885. Some of the locks were enlarged, but many were not, and having been designed for Yorkshire Keels, they remain among the shortest on the English connected waterways network, at 57 feet (17 m). The navigation became a cul-de-sac in the 20th century, but with the burgeoning interest in leisure use of the canals, the trans-Pennine Rochdale Canal was reopened in 1996 and the Huddersfield Narrow Canal followed in 2001, resulting in the navigation becoming part of three Pennine cruising rings.

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