Birmingham Canal Navigations


Birmingham Canal Navigations 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.
At its working peak, the BCN contained about 160 miles of canals; today just over 100 miles are navigable, and the majority of traffic is from tourist and residential narrowboats.

History

The first canal to be built in the area was the Birmingham Canal, built from 1768 to 1772 under the supervision of James Brindley from the, then, edge of Birmingham, with termini at Newhall Wharf and Paradise Wharf near to Gas Street Basin to meet the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal at Aldersley.
The Birmingham and Fazeley Canal, from Birmingham to Tamworth, followed in 1784 with the Birmingham Canal Company merging with the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal Company immediately, to form what was originally called the Birmingham and Birmingham and Fazeley Canal Company. This cumbersome name was short-lived, and the combined company became known as the Birmingham Canal Navigations from 1794, as the network was expanded.

Levels

The BCN is built on three main levels, each with its own reservoir.
These levels are linked by locks at various places on the network.
There are also stretches on their own levels.

Linking canals

The BCN Society is a registered charity formed in 1968, which exists to conserve, improve and encourage a wide range of interests in the BCN. It publishes a quarterly journal. Boundary Post. From 1983, it erected signposts at most of the canal junctions on the BCN.