
The Eastern Portal of Butterley Tunnel in 2006
'Butterley Tunnel' is a one and three quarter mile long canal tunnel on the
Cromford Canal below
Ripley, in Derbyshire, England, opened to traffic in 1794.
[ Butterley Tunnel - The Illustrated Report Robin Witter ].
Origins

The Midland Railway Centre's mainline steam locomotive, ex-British Rail 4-6-0 Class 5MT 73129 crossing the stone causeway over Butterley Reservoir
The tunnel was 2,966 yard (2712m) long, 9ft wide at water level, and 8ft from water to
soffit (depending on the water level).
At the time of building it was the third longest canal tunnel in the World after
Sapperton and
Dudley.
[ Cromford Canal Jim Shead ][ The World's Longest Navigation Canal Tunnels ] Thirty-three shafts were sunk during construction with the workings dewatered using a Woodhouse steam engine. Water was provided for the
Cromford Canal from the 50 acre
Butterley Reservoir situated on the hill above the tunnel.
The Butterley Reservoir is itself crossed by a stone railway embankment currently used by the locomotives of the
Midland Railway Centre's preserved steam railway.
[1] Water flowed from the reservoir directly into the tunnel via an
adit 600 yards along the tunnel from the Western Portal. Above the Eastern portal the Butterley Park Reservoir once provided water to the canal. This Reservoir was filled in during 1935. Both the tunnel and reservoirs were constructed by the
Butterley Company, formed in 1790 by
Benjamin Outram (1764-1805) and Francis Beresford (died 1801) with
William Jessop (1745-1814) and John Wright (1758-1840) joining by 1793.
[ Benjamin Outram (1764 – 1805): A tribute to the life of Benjamin Outram of Alfreton, Derbyshire — Civil Engineer and Industrialist The Inland Waterways Protection Society Limited ]
There is no towpath within the tunnel, therefore
narrow boats were propelled through the tunnel using the musclepower of the
narrow boat's crew. This process is called Legging. The external link listed below shows men Legging It through Butterley Tunnel.
Underground wharf

This is a Replica of a Little Eaton Tramway Wagon. The box can be detached. Similar boxes were lowered down and raised up the loading shafts in Butterley Tunnel
About 880 yards from the tunnel's Western Portal there is an underground wharf about 60 yards long with the tunnel here widened to about 16 feet. One of the horizontal tunnels departing from the tunnel at this point used to run to the Butterley Company's Butterley Carr Pit which opened in 1812 and loaded its coal directly into
narrow boats at the underground wharf. There were also vertical shafts from the wharf which allowed goods in tram boxes to be lowered directly from and lifted up to the Butterley Company's works (on the hill above the tunnel) to and from the underground wharf. These tram boxes were used by
Benjamin Outram on the
Little Eaton Tramway. The box could be lifted from the tram chassis and loaded directly into
narrow boats or barges on the
Derby Canal. Similar designs were used in other undertakings in which
Benjamin Outram had an interest. Initially the boxes were lowered with the aid of a large water bucket descending or ascending a parallel shaft to act as a counter balance. This system was later replaced by a steam engine winding the boxes up and down the shafts. Reputable sources cited here consider the presence and mode of use of this underground wharf to be if not unique, extremely rare within the United Kingdom.
[ Butterley Tunnel Underground Wharf Roger Cragg ].
In the mid 1980s, demolition of the
Butterley Company's old foundry buildings exposed the original
blast furnace, dating to 1790. In front of the furnace is at least one vertical shaft, now capped off, which leads down to a short tunnel which connects with the canal tunnel close to the wharf area. Additionally, a number of deep drains below these buildings probably link to the canal tunnel. The site is now occupied by
Butterley Engineering, one of the successors to the
Butterley Company.
Decline in use

Tunnel Roof Supported by Timbers about 60 yards from East Portal photographed in 2006
In 1889
subsidence caused the tunnel to be closed for a period of four years with the tunnel reopening after repairs in 1893. This closure resulted in the permanent loss of some of the canal's customers to competing railway companies. A partial collapse of the Butterley Tunnel in 1900 due to mining related subsidence split the
Cromford Canal into two.
The tunnel has not yet been repaired. Rudolph de Salis undertook a government funded survey of the tunnel in 1904 but his report was not favourable. Rudolph de Salis was a director of Fellows, Morton and Clayton a prominent canal freight company. A third tunnel collapse in 1907 and a government report by Sir William Matthews
KCMG in June 1907 ended hopes of repairing the tunnel at this time and the tunnel was pronounced beyond economical repair in 1909. Commercial traffic on the canal ceased in 1944.
After closure

Sketch Map Showing Butterley Tunnel in Context with the Rest of the Cromford Canal
"The Friends of Cromford Canal" is a group of volunteers whose aim is to fully restore the Cromford Canal and the Butterley Tunnel. A horse drawn
narrowboat is brought into service by "The Friends of Cromford Canal" occasionally on the only navigable section of the
Cromford Canal near to the Derbyshire village of
Cromford itself.
[2]
The tunnel has been extended twice since it was originally built. The
Midland Railway's Ripley to
Heanor branch was built across the front of the Western portal with a new section of tunnel passing underneath bringing the total length at this time to 3063 yards (2801m). After the tunnels closure the
A38 road was built over the old railway track. The extra width required by the road brought about the introduction of an extra 6 foot 8 inch wide, 20 yard long cylindrical culvert to the Western end of the tunnel bringing the new length to about 3083 yards (2819m).
.

The View from inside Butterley Tunnel in 2006
The Golden Valley Light Railway (GVLR) passes less than 30 yards North of the tunnel's Eastern Portal. This 24 inch
narrow gauge railway terminates at a station behind Newlands Inn approximately 100 yards East of the Butterley Tunnel's Eastern Portal. This section of the GVLR's track crosses the site of the Butterley Park Reservoir. The GVLR operates for the benefit of tourists and is part of the
Midland Railway Centre. The Newlands Inn served the Cromford Canal as a place where the
narrow boat horses were changed and probably where the
narrow boat crews were refreshed prior to or after legging it through the tunnel.
[ Golden Valley Light Railway ]
References

View of the second Air Shaft on the Butterley Tunnel line
1. Stone Railway Embankment Midland Railway Centre
2. Horsedrawn Narrowboat Brian L Dominic
Further reading

The Butterley Reservoir Adit where it enters the Butterley Tunnel about 600 yards along the tunnel from the Western Portal in 2006
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Butterley Brick, , R., Christian, Henry Melland Publishing, ,
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General View of the Agriculture and Minerals of Derbyshire, , John, Farey, , ,
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Portal to Portal, A Short History of the Butterley Tunnel, , Des, Greenwood, The Friends of Cromford Canal, ,
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William Jessop, Engineer, , Skempton, A.W., Hadfield, Charles and, David & Charles, ,
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The Cromford Canal, , Hugh, Potter, NPI Media Group, ,
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Promotion of the Cromford Canal Act of 1789 : A Study in Canal Engineering, , Reginald Bryan, Schofield, J.Rylands Univ.Lib of Manchester, ,
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Benjamin Outram, 1764-1805: An Engineering Biography, , Reginald Bryan, Schofield, Cardiff: Merton Priory Press, ,
External links
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SK4251 : Eastern portal of the Butterley Tunnel on the Cromford Canal near to Golden Valley, Derbyshire, Great Britain Alan Walker — a photograph (
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The Friends of Cromford Canal Brian L Dominic
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Legging It through Butterley Tunnel
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Photographic Survey of Butterley Tunnel in 1979
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The World's Longest Navigation Canal Tunnels
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Canal Tunnels in the United Kingdom Jim Shead
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Butterley Reservoir Engineering Timelines
See also
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Butterley
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Worsley Navigable Levels
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Speedwell Cavern
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Wet Earth Colliery