Malcolm Bull's Calderdale Companion : Foldout

The Salterhebble Branch


Aka Halifax Arm, Halifax Branch.

From 1765, Salterhebble was the closest that the Calder & Hebble Navigation came to Halifax. The canal came closer in 1828 when the Salterhebble to Halifax branch opened under an Act of 1825.

The 19th century flight of locks replaced an earlier staircase of 3 locks which was built in 1767. There were 14 locks to raise the water level through 110 ft between Salterhebble and Bailey Hall. In 1828, a steam engine was installed to pump water to the head-level at Bailey Hall.

Locks include:

A typical barge took three hours to complete the stretch.

The local mill-owners were protective of their own water-supply, and the Calder & Hebble Navigation Company maintained the water in the branch by pumping water through brick lined culverts from Salterhebble to a small reservoir at Phoebe Lane, Siddal. The pumping station and its steam engine were in continuous use from 1828 to the early 1940s. It closed in 1944 and the machinery was removed. The engine house and engine-man's cottage are still there.

On Monday, 29th May 1911, Houdini staged an appearance when he escaped from Whitegate lock. This was considered the only suitable place with sufficient depth of water.

The expense of maintaining the branch meant that tolls were twice those on the main Calder and Hebble Navigation. The closure of the Halifax Flour Society in the 1930s badly affected the usage of the branch. The branch was used until 1942, after which it was abandoned, drained, and filled in.

In 1957, the former Bailey Hall wharf was purchased by John Mackintosh & Sons, and a new factory complex was built on the site.

One part of the branch canal remains – that section by the former Nahum's Union Mills at Salterhebble


See Farrar Mill Lane Aqueduct



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© Malcolm Bull 2017 / [email protected]
Revised 14:05 on 8th May 2017 / mms1229 / 6