The Wednesbury Oak Loop was one of the loops in the original,
meandering Birmingham Canal, later called the BCN Main Line, which was built by
James Brindley after the company obtained an
Act of Parliament in 1768. A line from coal mines at Wednesbury to central Birmingham was opened in 1769, with both ends built on the contour, and a summit in the middle, which rose to to pass over high ground at Smethwick. This created a lucrative coal trade, and the rest of the main line, which passed around the Wednesbury Oak Loop, was started in 1770. This section was built to follow the contour, leaving the first section half-way up the flight of six locks at Spon Lane. It too faced high ground at Coseley, but in this case, a circuitous route was followed to avoid a change in level and any locks. The line ended with a flight of twenty locks at Wolverhampton, later increased by one, to drop the canal down to meet the
Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal at
Aldersley Junction, and this section of the main line opened on 21 September 1772. There was some suggestion at the time that Brindley had added extra meanders to increase the length of the canal, and therefore the tolls that could be charged, but this was strenuously denied in a newspaper advertisement placed by Brindley on 14 January 1771, where he argued that the winding route was necessary to ensure that the most customers could be served. In 1824,
Thomas Telford was asked to improve the main line, which he did by straightening and widening parts of it, and creating a new main line from Tipton to Smethwick. Telford was one of a later generation of canal engineers, who used cuttings and embankments to allow his canals to follow as direct a route as possible, and the long winding loop around Wednesbury Oak was an obvious target for removal. Some work was done on a cutting between Bloomfield and Deepfields, but work then stopped. With the opening of the
Birmingham and Liverpool Junction Canal imminent in 1834, and the prospect of much more trade on the western section of the canal, a new Act of Parliament was obtained in 1835 to authorise a tunnel through the hill at
Coseley. It would have a towpath on both sides of the canal, and opened on 6 November 1837. The route through Wednesbury Oak now became the Wednesbury Oak Loop, as it was considerably longer than the new tunnel and its cut. The loop met the new cut at Deepfields Junction to the north-west of the tunnel, which marks the northern limit of Telford's route change, The Ocker Hill Branch, for which provision was made in the same 1768
Act of Parliament which authorised the Birmingham Canal and Wednesbury Canal, was a branch from the Wednesbury Oak Loop. It was long, and opened in 1774. Following the successful installation of Boulton and Watt steam engines to pump water up the Spon Lane locks in 1778 and the Smethwick locks in 1779, There were five steam engines at the pumping station in 1851. The tunnel needed to be repaired on a number of occasions, as it was affected by mining subsidence, After it was closed in 1961, most of it was simply covered up, and became part of a linear park. The
Birmingham Canal Navigations Society have suggested it as a possible candidate for restoration, since most of the structures are still in situ, and the only significant obstacle would be Tup Street Bridge on the Wednesbury Oak Loop which crosses the canal immediately after the
Canal & River Trust. In 1954, along with many other branches and canals in the BCN, much of the Wednesbury Oak Loop was given 'abandoned' status and was subsequently filled in and partly built over, beginning with the section of the canal which was filled in around 1961 to make way for the Glebefields Estate. The southern section around Bloomfield Road was filled in about a decade later, with the aqueduct over Central Avenue (built in the 1930s) being demolished at this time. The northern stretch, also sometimes known today as the Bradley Arm (not to be confused with the Bradley Branch or Bradley Locks Branch), remains navigable to the Canal & River Trust (CRT) workshops built at
Bradley in 1960. Next to the CRT workshops is the modern Bradley pumping station which draws water from flooded coal mines into the Wolverhampton Level. ==Route==