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Canals
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Trent and Mersey canal at Longport. A boy walking his dog, a barge, a group of people and pottery kilns can be seen

Trent and Mersey canal at Longport. Copyright: The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery 2002.


Canals were a vital method of transport in the late 18th century before the introduction of the railways. The history of the two canals in the Potteries area, the Trent and Mersey and Cauldon canals, is briefly discussed below.

Proposals for the Trent and Mersey canal were first made in 1759 by Lord Gower, the brother-in-law of the Duke of Bridgewater. In the latter part of the eighteenth century Josiah Wedgwood began to look into the possibility of the proposed canal running past his pottery works in Etruria. The advantages of a canal were clear: white ball clay from Devon and Dorset could be brought in more easily and goods could be shipped out with fewer breakages: at the time products were dispatched from all the local potters by packhorse and a large amount was broken in transit. A canal link would help to prevent these breakages and would reduce transport costs.

Click here for more information about canals.