Grand Union Canal Carrying Company

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Harland and Wolff in May 1937 for the Grand Union Canal Carrying Company, but is seen here at Tatenhill Lock, Staffordshire, in British Waterways
colours following its most recent restoration.

The Grand Union Canal Carrying Company was a freight carrying transport service in England from 1934 to 1948.

Background

For more detail on this section see the History of the Grand Union Canal.

In 1929 the

Warwick and Birmingham Canal
.

In 1932 the Grand Union Canal Company bought the

Loughborough Navigation and the Erewash Canal for £75,423 (£5.57 million in 2021).[1]

For the first time the main line from

Napton. The Grand Union Canal Company attempted to buy the Oxford Canal
but the agreement failed.

The Grand Union Canal was now over 300 miles long. A main objective was to create a route capable of taking 14 ft barges or two narrow boats from London to Birmingham.

Formation of the company

Harland and Wolff
. Until the 1980s it was regularly used to carry cargo including wheat, lime juice and retail coal. The boat is now converted as a cruiser with a full-length cabin.

The new Grand Union Canal Company bought Associated Canal Carriers Ltd. and started the Grand Union Canal Carrying Company Ltd. in 1934.[2] The boats were marked with GUCCC as an abbreviation for the company name.

The company secured new traffic in the 1930s and ordered new boats from

Eventually the company acquired around 186 pairs of boats of a new improved design. The boats acquired the nicknames Woolwichs, Northwichs and Rickys.

Decline and closure

With the outbreak of World War II men again left the canal. In 1942 the Ministry of War Transport took control. For the duration of the war the company made a loss. The assets were taken over by the British Transport Commission on 1 January 1949.[4]

References

  1. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  2. ^ Gladwin, David Daniel Francis (1977). British Waterways: An Illustrated History. Spurbooks.
  3. .
  4. ^ The Dock and Harbour Authority, vol. 30, 1949