One of Britain’s leading professional institutions has honoured Manchester’s historic inland canals by the mounting of a commemorative plaque at a canal-side location in the heart of the city.

The Institution of Civil Engineers, which represents almost 90,000 civil engineers in the UK and worldwide, has mounted a plaque on a bridge belonging to us.

The plaque has been mounted on the side of a brick-built footbridge on the Rochdale Canal within a few minutes’ walk of Piccadilly (1). The Rochdale Canal, which opened in 1798-99, was built with 92 locks to allow it to cross the Pennines, and stretches 32 miles from Rochdale to Castlefield, where it joins the even older Bridgewater Canal.

The canals included The Bridgewater Canal, commonly considered Britain’s first true modern canal, built to bring coal from inside the mines at Worsley direct into the heart of Manchester.

The Manchester and Salford Junction Canal, dating from 1839 and just a kilometre long – but including a tunnel 456 metres in length, which was converted to provide air-raid shelters during World War Two.

Darrell Matthews, North West Regional Director of the Institution of Civil Engineers, said “This plaque celebrates what you might call the transport infrastructure of the first Northern Powerhouse. Manchester’s canals helped facilitate the birth of the world’s first industrial revolution in Lancashire, making Manchester the world’s first modern industrialised city.

“The canal network is a fantastic feat of civil engineering, and a vital part of British history of which we should be very proud.”

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