The first segment of the canal was a saltwater navigation canal, constructed in 1806 from Madras to
Ennore for a distance of . It was initially called Cochrane's Canal, after its principal financier
Basil Cochrane. Subsequently, it was extended north to
Pulicat Lake, north of Chennai. The canal was taken over by the government of
Madras Presidency in 1837 and further extended, ultimately reaching north of Chennai to
Gudivada Kalava on the banks of the
Krishna River in
Andhra Pradesh, and south of
Chennai to
Marakkanam in Tamil Nadu. It was briefly renamed
Lord Clive's Canal. During 1877 and 1878, the people of Chennai suffered from the terrible
Great Famine and more than six million people perished. The stretch, linking the
Adyar and
Cooum rivers, was built in 1877–78 at a cost of as a
famine relief work. The canal was named the Buckingham Canal in 1878 because the link, was built on the orders of the then Governor, the
Duke of Buckingham and Chandos. One of the works undertaken in the
Second Five Year Plan was the development of the Buckingham Canal, including linking the canal with Madras harbour, with a contribution of Rs. 115 lakhs by the Central Government. This work was considered necessary to conserve an existing asset serving as an inter-state waterway supplementing the railway capacity and providing a useful means of transport for large quantities of goods between the States of Andhra and Madras. ==Course of the canal==