Buckingham Arm

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Buckingham_Arm an entity of type: Thing

The Buckingham Arm is an English canal that once ran from Cosgrove, Northamptonshire to Buckingham. It was built as an arm of the Grand Junction Canal in two separate phases, a broad canal to Old Stratford, which opened in 1800 and a narrow canal onwards to Buckingham, which opened in 1801. It was disused from 1932, and was dammed at the first bridge in 1944 to reduce leakage from the Grand Union Canal, as the Grand Junction had then become known, but was not finally abandoned until 1964. The remains were severed by the construction of new roads in the 1970s and again in the late 1980s. The section through Old Stratford and Deanshanger was sold off in the 1990s, and the route there has been lost to housing development. The Buckingham Canal Society was formed in 1992, and is actively pursui rdf:langString
rdf:langString Buckingham Arm
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Buckingham Canal (former Buckingham Arm)
rdf:langString Buckingham Canal
xsd:integer 4114770
xsd:integer 1101151194
rdf:langString Cosgrove
rdf:langString Cattleford aqueduct carried the canal over a small stream to the east of Foscote Reservoir
rdf:langString Restoration project
rdf:langString The Buckingham Arm is an English canal that once ran from Cosgrove, Northamptonshire to Buckingham. It was built as an arm of the Grand Junction Canal in two separate phases, a broad canal to Old Stratford, which opened in 1800 and a narrow canal onwards to Buckingham, which opened in 1801. It was disused from 1932, and was dammed at the first bridge in 1944 to reduce leakage from the Grand Union Canal, as the Grand Junction had then become known, but was not finally abandoned until 1964. The remains were severed by the construction of new roads in the 1970s and again in the late 1980s. The section through Old Stratford and Deanshanger was sold off in the 1990s, and the route there has been lost to housing development. The Buckingham Canal Society was formed in 1992, and is actively pursuing a restoration programme. Some 440 yards (400 m) of the canal near Buckingham are now holding water, but the main focus in 2020 was at the Cosgrove end, where a restored channel would be accessible by boat from the Grand Union.
xsd:integer 17931794
xsd:integer 1932
xsd:integer 1801
xsd:integer 1800
xsd:integer 2
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 21229

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