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The Port Dundas terminus was established at One Hundred Acre Hill between 1786 and 1790 and was named after Sir Lawrence Dundas, one of the major backers of the Forth and Clyde Canal Company. Port Dundas formed the terminus of a branch of the Forth and Clyde Canal in the centre of Glasgow, linking to the adjacent Monkland Canal . [ 1 ]
Stockingfield Junction is a canal junction which lies between Maryhill and Ruchill in Glasgow, Scotland. It opened in 1777, [1] and closed in 1963, followed by restoration and a re-opening in 2022. [2] At first a terminus it formed the junction for the Port Dundas branch off the Forth and Clyde Canal main line from 1777. [1] [3]
Map of places in Glasgow compiled from this list ... Partick, Partickhill, Port Dundas, Possilpark ... Pollok, Pollokshaws, Pollokshields, Polmadie, Port Eglinton ...
Port Dundas bascule bridge is a bridge on the Forth and Clyde canal in Glasgow, Scotland. The bridge is a Category B listed building and is part of the Port Dundas basin which has been a scheduled monument since 1999. [1] [2] The bridge was constructed in the early 19th century and is now the last operational Bascule bridge on the canal. It ...
At Stockingfield Junction near Maryhill is the 'Glasgow Branch' a spur which originally connected to the Monkland Canal (which connected with Port Dundas, close to the city centre of Glasgow). [4] A new footbridge was installed there in 2022. [5] [6] [7]
Note: Per consensus and convention, most route-map templates are used in a single article in order to separate their complex and fragile syntax from normal article wikitext. See these discussions , for more information. Suitable instructions belong here – please add to {{UK-waterway-routemap}}.
Cowcaddens Road appeared on maps since at least 1560, [11] as one continuous road that connected the small village of Cowcaddens to the burgeoning town of Glasgow. This was, until 1766, the Cow Lone, an unpaved road where herders would take their cattle up the hill to Cowcaddens where the animals would graze and be milked in the evening.
Long title: An Act for making and maintaining a Navigable Cut or Canal from the Firth or River of Forth, at or near the Mouth of the River of Carron, in the County of Stirling, to the Firth or River of Clyde, at or near a Place called Dalmuir Burn-foot, in the County of Dumbarton; and also a collateral Cut from the same to the City of Glasgow, and for making a Navigable Cut or Canal of ...
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