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| Water over water: on the left of the photo is the Coventry Canal, while on the right-hand side is the River Tame, in the low-lying ground below. |
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| This photo was taken earlier in the year, when things looked very dark and bleak, but you can see the structure of the bridge at the lower level. |
I’m always amazed at the incredible engineering skills of the men who designed and built our canals, and this feature intrigues me. It’s known locally as the Fazeley Aqueduct, because it is at Fazeley, which is a very small and not terribly beautiful town in Staffordshire (there, now I’ve upset all the inhabitants, so I shall have to apologise: sorry). Anyway, the structure’s proper name is the Tame Aqueduct, and it’s quite small (there are aqueducts elsewhere in the country which are much longer and higher), and from the lower level it looks just like a brick bridge, with no sign at all of the water up above.
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| I found this old photo, taken sometime between 1930 and 1950, on the Staffordshire Past Track site. It shows the old toll house and footbridge which once stood on the aqueduct. |
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| The ‘pillbox’ built during WW2 as part of a last-line of defences against invasion. |
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| Over the edge: Looking down at the River Tame. |
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| Wooden steps leading down to the Tameside Local Nature Reserve. |
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There are steps down to the area down below, where the land on either side of the River Tame has been turned into a wetland nature reserve, providing a green oasis for the busy town of Tamworth, dotted with pools, drainage channels and a man-made lake with four islands where all kinds of birds nest – with the aid of decent binoculars you can see lapwings, cormorants and terns. The riverbanks at Tameside, which were once quite steep, have been cut back to improve the habitat and create a spawning area for fish, and the last time I walked through I was lucky enough to catch glimpses of tufted ducks, but they moved too rapidly for me to catch them on camera. And there are water voles, frogs, dragonflies, damselflies and all kinds of creatures.
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| Another view of the aqueduct taken earlier this year. |







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