Buckingham Arm
The Buckingham Arm is a canal that once ran from Cosgrove, Northamptonshire to Buckingham (in England). It was built as an arm of the Grand Junction Canal, in two separate phases, opening in 1800 and 1801. It was disused from 1932, but was not finally abandoned until 1964. It is now the subject of a restoration programme with the Buckingham end holding water for a length of nearly 400m.
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Buckingham Arm
The Buckingham Arm is a canal that once ran from Cosgrove, Northamptonshire to Buckingham (in England). It was built as an arm of the Grand Junction Canal, in two separate phases, opening in 1800 and 1801. It was disused from 1932, but was not finally abandoned until 1964. It is now the subject of a restoration programme with the Buckingham end holding water for a length of nearly 400m.
has abstract
The Buckingham Arm is a canal ...... r for a length of nearly 400m.
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Wikipage page ID
Wikipage revision ID
618,472,023
Caption
An aqueduct carried the canal over a small stream to the east of Foscote Reservoir
date act
17,931,794
date closed
date comp
date use
status
Restoration project
hypernym
comment
The Buckingham Arm is a canal ...... r for a length of nearly 400m.
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label
Buckingham Arm
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name
Buckingham Canal (former Buckingham Arm)
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