The
Edinburgh & Glasgow Union Canal was constructed
between 1818 and 1822 which was late in the 'Canal Age'.
The Canal ran from Edinburgh to Falkirk where it was
joined by a series of eleven locks to the Forth and Clyde
Canal to continue the journey to Glasgow. It is famous
for three magnificent aqueducts and the only canal tunnel
in Scotland. Although the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union
Canal is not straight it is unique in being a contour
canal. It runs along the lie of the land, contour
242 feet above sea level, so there are no locks between
Edinburgh and Falkirk and you can walk the whole 31½
miles all on one level The canal was designed and built
by Hugh Baird with advice from Thomas Telford who, while
this canal was being built, was building the great
Caledonian Canal from Fort William to Inverness.
Hugh
Baird's design of a contour canal meant that when he
arrived at river valleys he was not always at a narrow
part and the result was he had to build large aqueducts.
The Avon Aqueduct to the west of Linlithgow offers
spectacular views. It is the second largest aqueduct in
the United Kingdom. Only the aqueduct at Pontcysyllte in
North Wales is larger. The Avon aqueduct is 810 feet long
and 86 feet high above the river. It has twelve arches
and was built to the design of Thomas Telford. The water
is carried in a metal trough and, unlike the English and
Welsh ones, it has towpaths on either side. This is the
largest, but there are similar beautiful aqueducts over
the river Almond between Broxburn and Ratho with five
arches and in Edinburgh at Slateford over the Water of
Leith with eight arches.
When
the canal was opened in 1822 you could travel to Glasgow
by day or night taking eight hours and the canal was
divided into four stages with milestones every half-mile
of which some remain The journey included travelling
through Scotland's first canal tunnel at Falkirk, and
going down the eleven locks to the Forth and Clyde
Canal.
By
1836 the railways had come to Scotland, and the Slamannan
to Airdrie line had been built. The canal company thought
it would be a good idea to build the Slamannan Basin just
beyond the Avon Aqueduct. so passengers could get off
there and take the train to Airdrie, thus cutting four
hours off the journey. It is now a beautiful, quiet
peaceful spot and hard to imagine it once was a hive of
activity. The success of the basin was short lived.
In 1842 the railway company opened the line between
Edinburgh to Glasgow Railway running parallel to the
canal. The basin however was extensively used for
transhipment of coal and other goods. On either side of
the basin were an iron foundry and an ironworks. The
basin is 150 feet square and remains of the railway can
be seen, the large slagheap to the south-west is waste
from Steins brickworks.
The failure
of the Slamannan Basin was the beginning of the end of
the canal 's commercial life. By 1848 all passenger
traffic had died out. Shortly after that the canal passed
into the ownership of the railways. When British
Transport was split up into British Rail and British
Waterways, it passed to British Waterways who own it
today. It is also now a scheduled Historic Monument.
The
locks joining it to the Forth & Clyde Canal were
filled in in 1933 and the commercial life ceased in
1936. The canal was finally closed to through
navigation in 1965 and is now blocked in several places.
The worst is at Wester Hailes where it is piped and
pumped for 1¼ miles and where the M8 motorway crosses
it. However, things are changing. In 1986 a new aqueduct
was built over the outer city bypass and a magnificent
new bridge in 1990 replaced the 1965 culvert at Preston
Road in Linlithgow. The buildings at the canal basin in
Linlithgow, which are the headquarters of Linlithgow
Union Canal Society, were originally two single
houses and two stables and are leased by the Society from
British Waterways
Now
at the end of the 20th century the canal is being
rejuvenated and is beginning a new life. The
Millennium Link project has restored of the
Edinburgh & Glasgow Union and Forth & Clyde
Canals from Edinburgh to Glasgow and from the Forth to
the Clyde. The locks at Falkirk have been replaced by the Falkirk Wheel. The
only rotating boat lift in the world
At present the Union Canal is suitable for boating, angling and
walking. It is administered by British Waterways who
issue boat licences and permits for fishing. Their
telephone number is 0141 332 6936.