Authors: Stephen Rowson & Ian L. Wright
Volume one of a two
volume history of these most interesting of waterways. Whilst the Aberdare
Canal mostly struggled throughout its 88 year existence, the Glamorganshire
Canal which it fed into was, for a time, financially the most successful
waterway in Britain. Although built on the cheap by the Merthyr ironmasters,
it was a triumph of design, a tribute to the ability of its engineer Thomas
Dadford. It qualifies as a contour canal, despite the fact it rose some 568
feet in its 25.5 mile length but Dadford's genius was not appreciated by his
masters and he left the canal under a cloud.
Sadly, today almost all
of the routes of both canals have been obliterated due to pressure of space
in the narrow valleys they occupied. Heavily illustrated, with a wealth of
maps, plans, paintings, prints and photographs, most of which have not
previously been published, this promises to be one of the best canal
histories ever compiled. Covered are the inception and building of the
canals; their architecture, bridges and water supply; the connecting
tramroads; the traffic carried; and the ironworks, mines, quarries and other
industries they served.
Volume 1 covers the
Glamorganshire from Merthyr down to Pontypridd and the whole of the Aberdare
Canal. The book concludes with 'A View from the Boat', which describes a
journey down the Glamorganshire from Merthyr to Abercynon in 1898 and from
there to Pontypridd in 1914. A down journey on the Aberdare Canal to
Abercynon in 1898 is also described. These are illustrated with a series of
maps hand-drawn by Ian Wright, who walked the whole of the canal in the
1940s in the company of a GCC boatman. His interviews with ex- GCC men make
him one of the last links with the working canal!
The Glamorganshire & Aberdare Canals
Price: £30.00p
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