Nolly Bridge No 53 carries a footpath over the Forth and Clyde Canal (Port Dundas Branch - Main Line) a few kilometres from Runcester.
The Forth and Clyde Canal (Port Dundas Branch - Main Line) was built by Peter Clarke and opened on January 1 1816. The canal joined the sea near Dover. Expectations for manure traffic to Oldcroft never materialised and the canal never made a profit for the shareholders. Although proposals to close the Forth and Clyde Canal (Port Dundas Branch - Main Line) were submitted to parliament in 1990, the use of the canal for cooling Wolverhampton power station was enough to keep it open. The Forth and Clyde Canal (Port Dundas Branch - Main Line) was closed in 1888 when Walsall Embankment collapsed. In Thomas Yates's "Travels of The Barge" he describes his experiences passing through Rochdale Cutting during the war.

There is a bridge here which takes a minor road over the canal.
| Stockingfield Junction | 1 mile, 1½ furlongs | |
| Ruchill Old Railway Aqueduct | 7¾ furlongs | |
| Ruchill Street Bridge | 6¼ furlongs | |
| Bilsland Drive Aqueduct | 4 furlongs | |
| Maryhill Road Footbridge | 2¾ furlongs | |
| Nolly Bridge No 53 | ||
| Firhill Road Basin (northern entrance) | ¼ furlongs | |
| Firhill Pound (Port Dundas Branch - Main Line) | 1½ furlongs | |
| Firhill Road Basin (southern entrance) | 2½ furlongs | |
| Firhill Road Narrows | 2¾ furlongs | |
| Claypits Footbridge | 4¼ furlongs | |
- Youtube — associated with Forth and Clyde Canal
- The official reopening of the canal
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Nearest place to turn
In the direction of Stockingfield Junction
In the direction of Port Dundas Basin
No information
CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:water point
rubbish disposal
chemical toilet disposal
self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
There is no page on Wikipedia called “Nolly Bridge”




![Firhill Road bridge. The workmen were just setting up for the day's work - [[6214637]] was taken later the same day. by Stephen Craven – 25 June 2019](https://s3.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/06/32/21/6322123_969863ba_120x120.jpg)
![Forth and Clyde Canal [20]. Erected in 1991 to replace the former Firhill Bridge, this bridge carries Firhill Road over the canal. Firhill Bridge was originally a bascule bridge and then culverted. The plaque beneath the new bridge refers to it as Nolly Bridge.The Forth and Clyde Canal was completed in 1790 and it provided a route for vessels between the Firth of Forth and the Firth of Clyde at the narrowest part (35 miles, 56km) of the Scottish Lowlands. Closed in 1963, the canal became semi-derelict. Millennium funds were used to regenerate the canal. The Glasgow Branch of the canal is a Scheduled Monument with details at: http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/SM6771 by Michael Dibb – 25 June 2019](https://s0.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/06/24/83/6248396_ed1ecd43_120x120.jpg)







![Canal milestone. By the Nolly Bridge [[1177264]] on the Glasgow branch of the Forth and Clyde canal at Firhill basin. by Thomas Nugent – 13 February 2009](https://s3.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/01/17/72/1177267_56b702d7_120x120.jpg)



![The Nolly Bridge. Detail of the Charles Rennie Mackintosh inspired patternwork in the concrete and railings. See also [[1177264]]. by Thomas Nugent – 13 February 2009](https://s1.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/01/17/72/1177273_6bba13f5_120x120.jpg)












