The Trent Navigation Company was established by '''''' (
23 Geo. 3. c. 41) 'An Act for improving the Navigation of the River Trent'. It was responsible for improving and maintaining the navigation on the river between Wilden Ferry (near
Cavendish Bridge) and
Gainsborough (with the exception of
Averham to
South Muskham), and junctions with the various other canals. The first business tackled by the company was the building of towpaths. Some of the canals opening in the 1790s offered routes for traffic by-passing large sections of the River Trent. By 1796 the
Derby Canal connected directly to the
Erewash Canal at Sandiacre and the
River Trent at
Swarkestone. The
Nottingham Canal ran from the
Erewash Canal junction at
Langley Mill, which itself linked to the
Cromford Canal, down to the River Trent near Trent Bridge in Nottingham. Coal from Derbyshire could be transported to
Nottingham and
Derby without using the river. The competition prompted the company to implement canals cuts of their own. The
Sawley cut, the
Cranfleet cut and the
Beeston canal provided easier navigation avoiding difficult and shallow sections of the river. In a minor hiccup in its history, the '
(50 & 51 Vict. c. cxv) caused the company to be taken over by the Trent (Burton-upon-Trent and Humber) Navigation Company. The ' (
55 & 56 Vict. c. cxxxv) restored the original company name. In 1906 the Trent Navigation Company obtained the '
(6 Edw. 7. c. lvii) authorising improvements upstream of Newark. However, only one lock at Cromwell was constructed before the outbreak of the First World War. By the ' (
5 & 6 Geo. 5. c. lxvi), the river from
Averham to
Nottingham was put under the control of Nottingham Corporation. They implemented improvements to a value of £450,000 (equivalent to £ in ),which included a new locks and a cut at Holme Lock. The works completed by 1927 enabled larger river boats to sail up to
Nottingham from
Hull and the continent. In 1937, the bulk of the Nottingham Canal was closed with the exception of the stretch through Nottingham, from Trent Bridge to the junction with the Beeston Canal at Lenton. This was taken over by the Trent Navigation Company. The Trent Navigation Company ceased to exist in 1940, when it was taken over by the
Trent River Catchment Board. The catchment board was replaced by the
Trent River Board in 1951 and by the
Trent River Authority in 1965. ==Statistics==