SJ8698 : Ashton Canal, Eastlands
taken 12 years ago, near to Cheetham Hill, Manchester, England

Up until the late 1960s, the landscape here was heavily industrialised, dominated particularly by the gasworks together with Bradford Colliery and Bradford Ironworks (Richard Johnson and Nephew) on Forge Lane. Most have now disappeared and the Eastlands regeneration area now has one of the biggest concentration of sporting venues in Europe, as well as acres of green space, shops and leisure facilities and a range of canalside residential developments. The sports facilities at Eastlands are Manchester’s enduring legacy from the 2002 Commonwealth Games.
The Ashton Canal runs eastwards from Manchester to Ashton under Lyne. It links the Huddersfield Narrow Canal and Peak Forest Canal with the Rochdale Canal and Bridgewater Canal and forms part of the "Cheshire Ring".
The original scheme was completed in 1796, running from a large basin behind what is now Piccadilly Station in Manchester, climbing gradually eastwards via 18 locks to Fairfield, Droylsden. From there one level section continued eastward to Whitelands Basin, Ashton under Lyne, while another arm headed north through what is now Daisy Nook, climbing another eight locks to Hollinwood, with a branch running east from Daisy Nook towards Park Bridge. A short arm from Portland Basin crossed the River Tame to Dukinfield. A year later an additional branch from Clayton to Stockport was opened.
The short link between Ashton Canal Basin at Piccadilly and the Rochdale Canal was not opened until 1800, when disputes about canal tolls and responsibility for paving the streets around the basins were resolved.
The Peak Forest Canal, opened in 1800, joined the Ashton Canal by way of the Dukinfield spur across the aqueduct over the Tame at Portland Basin.
The Hollinwood Branch Canal closed in sections between 1932 and 1961. The Stockport Branch Canal was closed in 1962.
History: Link