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A View of the Erewash Canal above Eastwood Lock (Lock 1) at a place known locally as The Gudgeon. The Erewash Canal / ˈ ɛr ə w ɒ ʃ / ⓘ is a broad canal in Derbyshire, England. It runs just under 12 miles (19 km) and has 14 locks. The first lock at Langley Bridge is part of the Cromford Canal. The Erewash Canal as surveyed by J.Smith in 1776
The Erewash rises on the south side of Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, close to a disused railway embankment to the south of Kirkby-in-Ashfield railway station.It flows to the south-west, and is joined by another stream which rises in Portland Park and flows to the north-west, passsing under the railway line for Kirkby-in-Ashfield to Pye Bridge junction, where it joins the Erewash Valley ...
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Trent Lock is the area of canal locks around the point where the River Soar (flowing northwards) meets the River Trent (at this point flowing east). Near this point two canals also meet the Trent - the Erewash Canal, coming south-east from Long Eaton, and the short Cranfleet Cut provides a route for boats heading downstream on the Trent, avoiding a weir.
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Langley Mill is at the junction of the Erewash Canal, the Cromford Canal, and the Nottingham Canal.. The village, part of the Aldercar and Langley Mill parish, is on the border of Nottinghamshire, and is conjoined to the village of Aldercar (to the north) and the town of Heanor (to the south-west).
The embankments were also demolished, though stubs remain at both ends and between the viaduct and the canal. [8] [13] [16] Aside from the demolition of its surrounding structures, the viaduct survives in a largely unaltered state. [8] The Erewash Valley is largely flat, making Bennerley Viaduct the dominant feature in the landscape.