Creation and early years The idea of creating a navigable waterway from the
River Don to Barnsley along the course of the
River Dearne was first proposed in 1773 by
Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham. However the idea was not pursued, until a meeting of the shareholders of the Don Navigation Company in 1792, where a canal from the
River Don Navigation into Barnsley was proposed. At the same time the
Aire and Calder Navigation Company was considering a canal from
Wakefield to Barnsley. On 20 October 1792, the rival companies held a famous meeting at the White Bear Inn (now the Royal Hotel) in Barnsley and agreed to join their canals just south of Barnsley and go forward with complementary proposals. These were to become the Dearne and Dove Canal and the
Barnsley Canal, both of which sought to provide access to the coalfields of Barnby bridge and Haigh bridge. The canal obtained its
act of Parliament, the '
(33 Geo. 3. c. 115) on 3 June 1793, on the same day as the Barnsley Canal Act 1793 (33 Geo. 3. c. 110), which authorised the building of the Barnsley Canal. The act created the Dearne and Dove Canal Company, consisting of 211 people, and allowed them to raise £60,000 by issuing shares, and a further £30,000 by mortgage if required. Robert Mylne was named as chief engineer on the project, and appears to have made the initial survey and given evidence to Parliament in support of the bill. The cost overrun was managed when the company obtained a second act of Parliament, the ' (
39 & 40 Geo. 3. c. xxxvii) on 30 May 1800, which allowed the original option for a £30,000 mortgage to be raised by shares, a mortgage of £10,000 to be obtained, and the toll rates to be increased. The canal was shut briefly in the summers of 1805 and 1806 due to a shortage of water, but was initially successful and by 1830 it was carrying 181,000 tons of coal a year.
Railway competition The
North Midland Railway, running from Leeds to Derby, opened in 1840 and this represented a major threat to the domination of the coal trade by all the
South Yorkshire navigations. Parts of the railway ran alongside the canal. At
Adwick upon Dearne the railway constructed a long cutting, and in order to maintain their alignment, the canal tunnel was demolished and the canal was re-routed to share the new cutting. The canal company took the opportunity to build interchange facilities with the new railway. With the threat of the railways taking trade from the canals, the Don Navigation Company decided to purchase the Barnsley Canal, and to lease the Dearne and Dove for a year, after which they would buy it. The agreement with the Dearne and Dove went ahead, with the River Don Navigation taking over the canal from 1 January 1846, and paying £210,000 for it on 2 January 1847, but they failed to reach agreement with the Barnsley Canal. Tolls were reduced by 60 per cent in 1846, with free passage for empty boats from 1847, with the result that much of the coal traffic which had previously used the Barnsley Canal now used the Dearne and Dove. The
South Yorkshire, Doncaster and Goole Railway Company was authorised in 1847, and the
South Yorkshire, Doncaster and Goole Railway Act 1847 (
10 & 11 Vict. c. ccxci allowed them to amalgamate with the Don Navigation Company, and hence the Dearne and Dove, once they had raised half of their authorised capital. The amalgamation took place on 19 April 1850. The railway company opened their line from Doncaster to Swinton in November 1849, which was followed by a branch to Elsecar in February 1850, and another branch to Worsbrough in June 1850. At Elsecar, the canal basin was moved, and about of the canal were filled in to make way for the railway. While the takeover was beneficial to traffic on parts of the Don Navigation, tonnage carried on the Dearne and Dove fell. Subsequently, both the railway and the canals were leased to the
Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway, with a 999-year lease starting in June 1864, but in 1874 the lease became a takeover, and the canals were just a small part of a bigger undertaking. Users of the canals were unhappy with the high tolls and the lack of modernisation, and so in November 1888, the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Canal Company was formed, with the intent of obtaining the canals from the railway company. They obtained the
Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation Act 1889 (
52 & 53 Vict. c. cxc) on 26 August 1889, which created the
Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation Company, with an authorised capital of £1.5 million, and powers to buy the canals, by compulsory purchase if agreement could not be reached with the railway company. The transfer did not occur until 1895, when agreement was finally reached, and the Dearne and Dove Canal became part of the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation along with the
Sheffield Canal, the
River Don Navigation, and the
Stainforth and Keadby Canal.
Decline The Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation Company intended to upgrade the system to take 300 or 400 ton boats, and to allow
compartment boats to be used. Coal from the collieries on the canal would transferred from the compartment boats to larger vessels at a new coal handling plant to be located at Keadby. However, the company failed to raise the finance to purchase the canals from the railway company outright, and so struggled to make significant improvements. The Dearne and Dove was the least profitable part of the system, with high maintenance costs as a result of subsidence from the coal mining. In 1906 the branch to
Worsbrough closed due to the increasing cost of maintenance, although it was retained as a water feeder. The depth of water at the top end of the canal could only be maintained at , rather than , and in 1909, the company agreed to allow mining beneath the canal. and despite vigorous campaigning for the reinstatement of the canal by the Inland Waterways Association and the Inland Waterways Protection Society in the late 1950s, the canal was finally closed in 1961, under the terms of the
British Transport Commission Act 1961 (
9 & 10 Eliz. 2. c. xxxvi). Only the half mile (0.8 km) to the
glassworks in Swinton was retained. This included four locks which were supplied with water by pumps. at this meeting and started campaigning for the preservation and restoration of the Dearne and Dove and Barnsley canals. Since the late 1980s the group has been active in trying to protect the remaining canal bed from obstruction through the local planning process. In 1991 the canal group commenced restoring the top of the Elsecar branch of the canal in conjunction with work at what is now the
Elsecar Heritage Centre. A
feasibility study was also carried out on the branch. It determined that, although expensive, it is viable to restore that section of the canal. The Barnsley Canal Group was reformed as the Barnsley, Dearne & Dove Canals Trust in 2000. ==Preservation==