Do you mean the Bridgewater Canal? http://www.bridgewatercanal.co.uk/ http://www.penninewaterways.co.uk/bridgewater/bri2.htm
the first canal in London
He invented the first canal in London.
The 3 rd Duke Francis Bridgewater
He helped James Brindley and Francis Egerton build the bridgewater canal.
sorry for not being accur8 but i think it was built in the 1700's for reason
It is commonly held that the first canal built in Britain was the Bridgewater Canal, commissioned by Francis Egerton, the third Duke of Bridgewater to carry coal from his mines at Worsley in Lancashire into the industrial areas of the city of Manchester. The engineer was James Brindley and it was seen as a miracle of the early industrial age. It opened in July 1761 and has its place in history as the first true canal to be built in Britain in that it did not follow an existing natural watercourse. There are counter claims that the Sankey Canal, which was also built primarily to transport coal to serve the growing Liverpool chemical industry, was actually the first but there is no doubt that it was the Bridgewater Canal, or the "Duke's Cut", was the one that inspired an era of canal building that continued until the 1830s.
He didn't. The Duke of Bridgewater had a canal built from his coal mines in Worsley to the centre of Manchester. This is not in London. The first part of his canal opened in 1763. He didn't invent canals, though. The Sankey Canal near Warrington had already opened a few years earlier. The Duke went to look at the Canal du Midi in France and the Newry Canal in Ireland, which were older. The Exeter Ship Canal had opened back in 1566 and a number of canals were built in England by the Romans, including the Foss Dyke,which is still in use, between Lincoln and the River Trent.
Canals were introduced during the Roman occupation of the south of Great Britain, and were used mainly for irrigation. However, the Romans did create several navigable canals, such as the Foss Dyke.The Bridgewater Canal, can claim to be the first modern artificial canal in Britain, opened in 1761 to carry coal.Designed by James Brindley, and built for Francis Egerton, 3rd Duke of Bridgewater.
The address of the Bridgewater Public Library is: 15 South St., Bridgewater, 02324 2593
Tony Bridgewater's birth name is Thornton Howard Bridgewater.
The address of the Bridgewater Historical Society Inc is: 18 Beckett Rd, Bridgewater, CT 06752