CanalPlanAC

Witham Navigable Drains (East Fen Catchwater Drain)

 
 
Information about the waterway

The Witham Navigable Drains (East Fen Catchwater Drain) is a broad canal and is part of the Witham Navigable Drains. It runs for 4 miles and 4 furlongs from Stickford Road Bridge (which is a dead end) to Stonebridge Drain - East and West Fen Catchwater Drains Junction (where it joins the Witham Navigable Drains (Stonebridge Drain) and the Witham Navigable Drains (West Fen Catchwater Drain)).

The maximum dimensions for a boat to be able to travel on the waterway are 60 feet long and 11 feet wide. The maximum headroom is not known. The maximum draught is not known.

Relevant publications — Waterway Maps:

Stickford Road Bridge
Limit of Navigation
The Cul-de-Sac Footbridge 3 furlongs 0 locks
Midville Lane Bridge 7½ furlongs 0 locks
East Fen Catchwater Drain - Short Drain Junction
Junction of Short Drain and East Fen Catchwater Drains
1 mile and ¾ furlongs 0 locks
Midville Lane Footbridge 1 mile and 5¾ furlongs 0 locks
Stickney Bridge 2 miles and 1¼ furlongs 0 locks
Main Road Field Bridge No 2 2 miles and 7½ furlongs 0 locks
Main Road Field Bridge No 1
Possible limit of navigation
3 miles and 3¼ furlongs 0 locks
A16 Main Road Bridge 3 miles and 7¾ furlongs 0 locks
Northlands Lane Field Bridge 4 miles and 3¾ furlongs 0 locks
Stonebridge Drain - East and West Fen Catchwater Drains Junction
Junction of Stonebridge Drain and East and West Fen Catchwater Drains
4 miles and 4 furlongs 0 locks
 
 
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Wikipedia

Wikipedia has a page about Witham Navigable Drains

The Witham Navigable Drains are located in Lincolnshire, England, and are part of a much larger drainage system managed by the Witham Fourth District Internal Drainage Board. The Witham Fourth District comprises the East Fen and West Fen, to the north of Boston, which together cover an area of 97 square miles (250 km2). In total there are over 438 miles (705 km) of drainage ditches, of which under 60 miles (97 km) are navigable. Navigation is normally only possible in the summer months, as the drains are maintained at a lower level in winter, and are subject to sudden changes in level as a result of their primary drainage function, which can leave boats stranded. Access to the drains is from the River Witham at Anton's Gowt Lock.

The area is bounded by the River Witham to the south and west, and the Steeping River to the north. Since the 11th century, there have been attempts to prevent the fens from flooding, so that they could be used for agriculture. A major advance was made in the seventeenth century, when Adventurers built drains in return for rights to some of the reclaimed land, but the success was short-lived, as Fenmen and Commoners rioted in 1642 and destroyed the works. Further attempts to drain the fens were made in the eighteenth century, and the first proposals to use the drains for navigation were made in 1779.

Most of the drainage ditches that are now evident were constructed under the authority of an Act of Parliament obtained in 1801. The plans for the scheme were drawn up by the civil engineer John Rennie. Better drainage was achieved from the 1860s, with the building of steam pumping stations. The steam engines were later replaced by diesel engines, and now many of them use electric pumps. Sensitive restoration of some of the pumping stations in the 1980s and 1990s resulted in the Witham Fourth District IDB being given a Design Award.

There were originally five locks on the system, including Anton's Gowt Lock. Cowbridge Lock is the only other one still operational. Access by boat to Cowbridge Drain and Hobhole Drain which drain the East Fen is no longer possible, because East Fen Lock, which connected Cowbridge Drain to the rest of the system has been filled in, while the lock chamber at Lade Bank Pumping Station has been reused to house extra pumps. Many of the structures built as part of Rennie's upgrade in the early 1800s survive in near-original condition, and are Grade II listed.

Other Wikipedia pages that might relate to Witham Navigable Drains
[River Witham] provides access for boaters to the Witham Navigable Drains, to the north of Boston, and to the South Forty-Foot Drain to the south, which was reopened as [The Haven, Boston] River Witham and of several major land drains of the northern Fens of eastern England, which are known collectively as the Witham Navigable Drains. (TF [List of rivers of England] Waring (L) Witham Navigable Drains (L) Maud Foster Drain Stone Bridge Drain West Fen Catchwater Drain East Fen Catchwater Drain Newham Drain Castle Dike [Anton's Gowt] at the junction of the River Witham and the Frith Bank Drain (part of the Witham Navigable Drains) – Anton's Gowt Lock provides access between these two [South Forty-Foot Drain] 1946, when the Black Sluice pumping station was commissioned. The Drain was navigable until 1971, when improvements to the pumping station led to the entrance [Transport in Lincolnshire] drains in the Fens, such as the South Forty-Foot Drain and the Witham Navigable Drains. The Fens Waterways Link is a scheme for waterways improvement [The Fens] supported by a system of drainage channels and man-made rivers (dykes and drains) and automated pumping stations. There have been unintended consequences [Angling records in the United Kingdom] caught by rod and line. 5 lb 2oz Rudd caught Adrian Cannon from a Fenland Drain 2012. No independent witnesses. Dean Fletcher's 68lb 1oz British record [Foss Dyke] navigable sluice or lock at Torksey, and warehousing and wharves were built at Brayford Pool in the centre of Lincoln. Connection to the River Witham
 
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