1
"R.D.A Trading" Turf Street, Burnley, Lancashire BB11 3BP
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.04 miles
2
"Turf Moor Garage" 37 Plumbe Street, Burnley, Lancashire, BB11 3AB
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.05 miles
3
"The Oxford" (Pub) 1 Temple Street Burnley, Lancashire BB11 3BD
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.05 miles
4
Ash Street, Burnley, Lancashire
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.05 miles
5
"Burnley Miners Social Club" 27a Plumbe Street Burnley Lancashire BB11 3AA
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.07 miles
6
"Union Cabs" 20 Plumbe Street, Burnley, Lancashire, BB11 3AA
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.07 miles
7
Plumbe Street, Burnley
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.07 miles
8
Burnley Embankment
Burnley Embankment, almost a mile long and up to sixty feet high, carries the Leeds and Liverpool Canal through Burnley. The bus station and town centre can be seen to the left.
Image: © Martin Clark
Taken: Unknown
0.08 miles
9
"Babyworld" 2 Plumbe Street, Burnley, Lancashire BB11 3AA
Image: © Robert Wade
Taken: 17 Jun 2010
0.08 miles
10
Leeds and Liverpool Canal, The Straight Mile
The Burnley Embankment, known locally as "The Straight Mile", carries The Leeds and Liverpool Canal 60ft above the town.
When the canal was being built here at the end of the eighteenth century, Robert Whitworth, the Leeds and Liverpool Canal Company Engineer decided that an embankment, almost a mile long and up to sixty feet high, straight to the opposite hillside should be built rather than having the canal take a long detour following the contours around the valley, Although it was costly to construct, it meant the valley could be traversed by the canal without the need for two systems of locks.
The embankment was constructed between 1796 and 1801, by an army of navvies using spoil brought by boat from the canal cutting to the north of Burnley and some of the excavations from the construction of the nearby Gannow Tunnel. Heavy clay was used to line the bed of the canal to stop the water leaking out. Nowadays, concrete would be used.
The embankment, an innovative solution to the problems of canal engineering in its time, remains an impressive construction today. It is widely regarded as one of the "seven wonders" of the British Waterway System http://www.luphen.org.uk/canals/7wonders.htm .
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 20 Mar 2015
0.08 miles