History of the Manchester Ship Canal from its Inception to its Completion: With Personal Reminiscences
Leech, Bosdin
By the late nineteenth century, charges imposed on Manchester companies for the use of Liverpool's docks and the connecting railway had created an atmosphere of resentment within the business community. The Manchester Ship Canal was to play a major part in the city's regeneration following the depression of the 1870s, but it took a lengthy battle for the scheme to gain the backing of Parliament and for construction to begin in 1887. In this two-volume work of 1907, Sir Bosdin Leech (1836–1912) traces the canal's conception, planning and construction. Volume 1 discusses the historical and economic factors that led to the creation of the waterway, as well as the bitter political fight to make it a reality. The work includes a large amount of illustrative content, enhancing the light shed on the landscape and notable personalities of Manchester at that time. INDICE: Preface; Memorandum; 1. Navigable rivers of England; 2. English canals; 3. Canalised rivers and ship canals; 4. History of the Liverpool docks; 5. Early attempts to make a ship canal to Manchester; 6. 1882: Daniel Adamson heads the ship canal movement; 7. 1883: Chronicle of events; 8. 1883: Ship Canal Bill in the Commons; 9. 1883: Ship Canal Bill in the Lords; 10. 1884: Manchester thoroughly roused; 11. 1884: History of the Parliamentary Bill in the Lords; 12. 1884: Parliamentary proceedings in the House of Commons; 13. 1885: The Ship Canal Bill recast; 14. 1885: Ship Canal Bill in the House of Lords; 15. 1885: Bill before Mr Forster's committee in the Commons; 16. 1886: Attempts to raise the capital.
- ISBN: 978-1-108-07119-2
- Editorial: Cambridge University Press
- Encuadernacion: Rústica
- Páginas: 434
- Fecha Publicación: 24/04/2014
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés