Portsmouth and Arundel Canal
The Portsmouth and Arundel Canal was a canal in the south of England that ran between Portsmouth and Ford in the Arundel district, it was built in 1823 but was never a financial success and was abandoned in 1855; the company was wound up in 1888. The canal was part of a larger scheme for the construction of a secure inland canal route from London to Portsmouth, which allowed craft to move between the two without having to venture into the English Channel and possibly encounter enemy ships or natural disaster. It was built by the Portsmouth & Arundel Navigation company.
The canal was made up of three sections: a pair of ship canals, one on Portsea Island and one to Chichester, and a barge canal that ran from Ford on the River Arun to Hunston where it joined the Chichester section of the canal
Towing path and canal bed of the Portsmouth and Arundel Canal near Woodgate, Sussex
The remains of the sea lock at the end of the Portsea section
Arundel is a market town and civil parish in the Arun District of the South Downs, West Sussex, England.
Town overlooked by castle
Arundel castle from the South
Arundel cathedral from the South
Arundel's old marketplace