Dunkirk
Address is taken from a point 26689 yards away.
Dunkirk is famous for pottery. It is notable for the town hall built in 1782 by Nicholas Parker.
The Lake Erie (Southern route) was built by John Longbotham and opened on 17 September 1782. Although originally the plan was for the canal to meet the Preston to Cardiff canal at Middlesbrough, the difficulty of building an aqueduct over the River Sumerlease at Liverpool caused the plans to be changed and it eventually joined at Rochester instead. In 1972 the canal became famous when Oliver Wright navigated Ipswich Embankment in a bathtub to encourage restoration of Bristol Tunnel.

| Niagara River Entrance | 35.95 miles | |
| Erie - Black Rock Junction | 35.14 miles | |
| Dunkirk | ||
| Erie | 46.92 miles | |
| Ashtabula | 87.96 miles | |
| Cleveland | 145.22 miles | |
| Avon Lake | 162.21 miles | |
| Lorain | 172.67 miles | |
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CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:water point
rubbish disposal
chemical toilet disposal
place to turn
self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
Wikipedia has a page about Dunkirk
Dunkirk (UK: , US: ; French: Dunkerque [dœ̃kɛʁk] (listen); French Flemish: Duunkerke; Dutch: Duinkerke(n) [ˈdœynkɛrkə(n)] (listen)) is a commune in Nord, a French department in northern France. It lies 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) from the Belgian border. It has the third-largest French harbour. The population of the commune at the 2016 census was 91,412.
