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Report - - Barton locks, Manchester, Sept 2023 | Industrial Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Barton locks, Manchester, Sept 2023

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mingerocket

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Barton Locks

The history

I've struggled to find any history on the Barton Locks in particular, other than that the building that now houses an operational hydro electric generator once housed a Mirlees engine. This engine was removed in 1993 and there are a couple of YouTube videos that look like they were filmed on a potato, showing the removal of the huge Mirlees engine. This engine is very similar to the one that lives at Mode Wheel Locks.
The little shed that hides the reciprocating pump that once powered the locks hydraulic equipment was replaced sometime ago with whatever is hidden in the new pump house. I did try to peek inside this one but the windows were too high up. The new pump house has a concrete water tank on its roof and is covered simply with wooden planks..
I found an interesting discussion on a FB page about how the lock keeping crews used to take pride their work place and even had a competition for best kept lock, where they were judged on the gardens and flower beds they tended to keep the place nice

The accumulator tower is home to a large iron accumulator and 100s of feathered sky rats. There is a ladder inside for the brave and pigeon shit resistant types. The accumulator was very difficult to photograph even with a wide angle lens.


Anyway here's some history on the canal itself

port
The Manchester Ship Canal was one of the most important civil engineering projects of the late Victorian period. When it opened in 1894 it was the largest river navigation canal in the world.

Built to cut the time and cost of transporting goods between Manchester and Liverpool by road and rail, it turned a landlocked city into a port. Ocean-going cargo ships could now sail from the Mersey estuary into the centre of Manchester.

The canal was a response to Liverpool port authorities increasing charges for handling goods. Manchester businesses backed the scheme as they wanted to cut their costs.

Construction started in 1887 with the finished canal 36 miles (58km) long.

A key part of Manchester’s economy for over half a century, traffic declined in the 1970s and 1980s when many ships became too big to navigate the canal.

After trawling the internet and YouTube, the latest video of the locks in action I could find was in 2020.

The explore

It was a pretty easy in and is far enough off the beaten track to be comfortable. The old reciprocating pump was my favourite feature, that and the decaying conveniences.

Enjoy

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dansgas1000

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Great find and looks like a really interesting wander. That small blue building is great, so much to see in there and I could probably waste a couple of hours in there quite easily :rofl
 

mingerocket

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Great find and looks like a really interesting wander. That small blue building is great, so much to see in there and I could probably waste a couple of hours in there quite easily :rofl
Worth a look if your out that way. Shame the later hydraulic pump house is sealed up tight. And the hydro building
 

mingerocket

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Excellent, why didn't I know about that accumulator - not too many of these left. Of course you should have climbed up that ladder...
It was covered in pigeon shit, like everything else in there. I stepped inside and it was that thick the ground felt soft.
 

tigger

mog
Regular User
The Mirrlees, Bickerton & Day 4 cylinder air blast diesel engine was removed to the Anson Engine Museum* around 1993. It's now installed on a machine base and the slow process of restoring it to running condition is under way.
It was one of the first engines to be built at the Stockport factory, built in 1907 and transported to the MSC in June 1908 (Mode Wheel the same month and Latchford about ten months later). Installed to drive a Drysdale Bon Accord pump to allow the locks to be filled more quickly (in those days it was normal for the tugs to be lifted/lowered in the smaller lock concurrently with the larger ship in the main lock).

This was it 18 months ago...it's now almost complete but I've not taken any photos recently. (the engine to the right is a beast of a single cylinder and it is now running...also the building is more complete!)

Number 35 April 2022.jpg


*For anyone with an interest in industrial engines the Anson is well worth a visit but especially so on a ''steaming' day (28th-29th October will be the last ones of the year).
 
Last edited:

mingerocket

28DL Regular User
Regular User
The Mirrlees, Bickerton & Day 4 cylinder air blast diesel engine was removed to the Anson Engine Museum* around 1993. It's now installed on a machine base and the slow process of restoring it to running condition is under way.
It was one of the first engines to be built at the Stockport factory, built in 1907 and transported to the MSC in June 1908 (Mode Wheel the same month and Latchford about ten months later). Installed to drive a Drysdale Bon Accord pump to allow the locks to be filled more quickly (in those days it was normal for the tugs to be lifted in the smaller lock concurrently with the larger ship in the main lock).

This was it 18 months ago...it's now almost complete but I've not taken any photos recently. (the engine to the right is a beast of a single cylinder and it is now running...also the building is more complete!)

Number 35 April 2022.jpg


*For anyone with an interest in industrial engines the Anson is well worth a visit but especially so on a ''steaming' day (28th-29th will be the last one of the year).
The video of the removal on YT is well worth a watch, not much in the way of 'elf n safety back in 90s - happy days.
Must have been a cold day, they had a bin full of burning wood inside the building to keep warm 😬
 

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