Grantham Canal

E219854

The Grantham Canal is a historic English waterway in the East Midlands that once linked the town of Grantham to the national canal network, primarily serving 18th- and 19th-century trade and now valued for leisure and wildlife.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Grantham Canal canonical 4

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf canal
waterway
closureToCommercialTraffic early 20th century
connectsWith River Trent
national canal network
constructionEra late 18th century
constructionStart 1793
country England
currentPrimaryUse angling
leisure boating
walking
wildlife conservation
declineCause competition from railways
endPoint River Trent
hasBiodiversityValue important wildlife corridor
hasCulturalSignificance industrial heritage
hasHeritageStatus historic waterway
hasRestorationActivity yes
hasStructure bridges
embankments
locks
hasTowpath yes
historicalCargo agricultural produce
building materials
coal
isSubjectOf restoration campaigns
isValuedFor ecology
landscape value
recreation
length about 33 miles
locatedIn East Midlands
Lincolnshire
Nottinghamshire
managingOrganisation Canal & River Trust
openingDate 1797
passesNear Bottesford
Cotgrave
Nottingham
West Bridgford
peakUsePeriod 19th century
primaryHistoricalUse freight transport
region Midlands canal network
restorationPartner Grantham Canal Society
startPoint Grantham
towpathUse public footpath
wasEngineeredFor horse-drawn boats
waterwayType narrow canal

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (4)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

River Trent hasCanalConnection Grantham Canal
William Jessop notableWork Grantham Canal
Vale of Belvoir contains Grantham Canal
Woolsthorpe-by-Belvoir hasFeature Grantham Canal