Tuesday 27 December 2011

A walk along the Coventry Canal

The Coventry Canal links the northern end of the Oxford Canal to the city centre, and is a green corridor through the suburbs into the city.


Hawkesbury Engine House 
where from the early 1800s steam engines pumped water into the canal from deep wells.



Art on a Coventry Canal bridge near Hawkesbury Junction.



Electric Wharf, the site of the first power station in Coventry.



'The Coil' by Frank Triggs
Art on the Coventry Canal



'Daimler Heritage Marker' by Robert Crutchely
Art on the Coventry Canal

The sculpture marks the site of the Daimler Factory that produced the first British production motor car in 1897.




Joseph Cash's weavers cottages built in the 1850s.

The three storey houses had well lit workshops on the top floor.  The workshops housed a steam powered Jacquard Loom for weaving ribbons, and allow home-workers to compete with ribbon produced in factories.  




'The Journeyman' by Stephen Hitchin
Art on the Coventry Canal




Statue of James Brindley (1716-1772) at the Canal Basin in the centre of Coventry city.

James Brindley designed almost all of the early canals in England including the Coventry Canal.  The Canal Basin was once a bustling place, busy with boats at the wharves loading and unloading materials for storage in the surrounding warehouses.



The Cathedral steps, Coventry.

The new cathedral, consecrated in 1962, was built after destruction of the medieval cathedral during bombing raids in the Second World War.  The sculpture designed by Sir Jacob Epstein, depicts St. Michael overcoming the Devil.

Happy walking
Anne

No comments:

Post a Comment