
The Aqueduct, view from the ground

A view of the ground below from the aqueduct
The 'Pontcysyllte Aqueduct' () is a navigable
aqueduct that carries the
Llangollen Canal over the valley of the
River Dee, between the villages of
Trevor and
Froncysyllte, east of
Llangollen near
Wrexham in north
Wales. Completed in 1805, it is both the longest and highest aqueduct in
Britain, and is a Grade I
Listed Building.
[1]
The aqueduct, built by Thomas Telford and William Jessop, is 1,007 feet long, 11 feet wide and 5 feet 3 inches deep. It consists of a cast iron trough supported 126 feet above the river by 19 hollow masonry piers (pillars). Each span is 53 feet wide. Many people were sceptical, but Telford was confident: he had built at least one previous cast iron trough aqueduct (the
Longdon-on-Tern aqueduct on the
Shrewsbury Canal, still visible in the middle of a field, though the canal was abandoned years ago).
The mortar used comprised lime, water and ox blood. The iron castings were produced at the
Plaskynaston Foundry, and each casting dovetails into the next. To caulk the joints,
Welsh flannel was dipped in boiling sugar, after which the joints were sealed with lead. Then it was left for six months with water inside to see if the trough was watertight.
Part of what was originally called the
Ellesmere Canal, it was one of the first major feats of
civil engineering undertaken by leading
civil engineer Thomas Telford (supervised by the more experienced canal engineer
William Jessop). The iron was supplied by William Hazeldine from his foundries at
Shrewsbury and nearby
Cefn Mawr. It was opened on
26 November 1805, having taken around ten years to design and build at a total cost of
GB£47,000.
The towpath is cantilevered over the trough, which is the full width of the aqueduct, so that narrowboats are able to move more freely through the water. Walkers are protected by railings on the outside edge of the towpath, but the holes to fit railings on the other side of the aqueduct were never used. As the edge of the trough is only about 6 inches above the water level, and therefore 'below' the deck of a narrowboat, the boat steerer has nothing between them and the sheer drop.
There used to be an accessible small handle in a recess on the footpath in the middle of the centre span, the pulling of which would cause a cascade of water to tumble into the River Dee below. This cascade can still be seen every few years when the aqueduct is emptied for maintenance.
The aqueduct was suggested as a contender for
World Heritage status in 2005, its 200th anniversary year,
[2] and formally nominated in 2006.
[3]
See also
★
Canals of the United Kingdom
External links
★
360 Degree Panoramic View at BBC Shropshire (Java Applet Required)
★
Aerial photo at Windows Live Local
★
There really is a plug in the bottom! (BBC local news pictures.)
★
Wrexham On-line Tour: Pontcysyllte Aqueduct
References
1. "Listed Buildings: Pontcysyllte Aqueduct, Trevor", Wrexham County Borough Council, viewed on 2007-05-25
2. Aqueduct's big bicentenary party
3. Aqueduct set for heritage status