Winter 2015 - Issue 40
The Winter 2015 issue includes the following features. You can purchase this magazine from our online Shop.
You can read the articles in this and all other NarrowBoat issues online by becoming a NarrowBoat subscriber.
Front Cover: The W.J. Yarwood & Sons'-built motor boat Wye heads north on the Leeds & Liverpool Canal towards Blackburn on a cold winter's day. The craft was one of three built by the company in 1947 for Canal Transport Ltd, set up in 1930 to take over carrying on the waterway, and the subject of this issue's Famous Fleets feature.
Famous Fleets
Canal Transport Ltd
Alan Faulkner looks at the company set up in 1930 to take over carrying on the Leeds & Liverpool Canal
View an excerpt.
Picturing the Past
Horse-boating in the 1920s
Chris M. Jones studies a series of photos showing horse-drawn craft at Stoke Bruerne and Blisworth Tunnel
View an excerpt.
Traditional Techniques
Push Towing
Richard Courteney Lord documents an unusual way of singlehanding a pair of boats on the BCN
View an excerpt.
Historical Canal Maps
Cruising Cartography
Richard Dean looks at the maps available to early leisure users of the waterways
View an excerpt.
Working the Waterways
Boating through Rickmansworth
Chris M. Jones studies photos of a British Waterways pair on the Grand Union in around 1960
View an excerpt.
Picturing the Past
Trip to Nottingham
Euan Corrie examines a rare collection of pictures showing horsedrawn carrying on the Midlands waterways in 1919
View an excerpt.
From the Archives
Newspapers Online
Joseph Boughey explores the digital resources available to waterway historians and uncovers some fascinating stories
View an excerpt.
Working the Waterways
Coal from Baddesley
Photos by Christopher Lunnon showing Samuel Barlow boats at Baddesley Colliery Wharf in 1960
View an excerpt.
Time and Place
Sailing on the Thames
Chris M. Jones examines narrowboats under sail in an 1840s painting
View an excerpt.
A Broader Outlook
The Sabrinas
Tom Foxon looks at the state-of-the-art dumb barges introduced to the River Severn in 1944
View an excerpt.