1
Towpath along the Coventry Canal
The semi detached houses are on the Chantries.
Image: © Mat Fascione
Taken: 11 Sep 2014
0.07 miles
2
A stroll along the Coventry Canal to Hawkesbury Junction [7]
A rear garden full of kitsch belonging to a house in The Chantries.
The narrow canal was built to connect the city of Coventry with the Trent & Mersey Canal, some 38 miles distant, to exploit the Warwickshire coalfields. Construction of the canal took 20 years before it was complete in 1769. The canal between the basin in Coventry and Hawkesbury junction was made a conservation area in 2012.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 23 Sep 2021
0.07 miles
3
Someone?s back garden
Image: © Alan Hughes
Taken: 23 Sep 2021
0.07 miles
4
Coventry : Coventry Canal
The Coventry Canal is a navigable narrow canal in the Midlands of England.
Image: © Lewis Clarke
Taken: 25 Sep 2021
0.07 miles
5
Coventry : Coventry Canal
The Coventry Canal is a navigable narrow canal in the Midlands of England.
Image: © Lewis Clarke
Taken: 25 Sep 2021
0.08 miles
6
Freehold Street in Coventry
Looking south from the towpath of the Coventry Canal.
Image: © Mat Fascione
Taken: 11 Sep 2014
0.08 miles
7
Fence along the towpath of the Coventry Canal
The fence separates the end of Freehold Street from the towpath.
Image: © Mat Fascione
Taken: 11 Sep 2014
0.09 miles
8
Freehold Street, Hillfields, Coventry
Image: © Ian S
Taken: 27 Aug 2019
0.09 miles
9
View along Freehold Street from the canal
Image: © Keith Williams
Taken: 13 May 2015
0.09 miles
10
Mosque in premises of former public house, corner of Harnall Lane East and Freehold Street, Hillfields, Coventry
The Jalalabad Mosque is described by the city council as a men-only Bangladeshi mosque in the Deobandi tradition. https://cid.coventry.gov.uk/kb5/coventry/directory/service.action?id=Mg13O9a4xh0&slaction=ADD&itemid=pSOec59Tx1xkl3gGq_AA2K4y5oJOyXoBzCQPhuwD
The building was originally the Freehold Tavern and was built, with the rest of Freehold Street, around 1848, by the Freehold Land Society, which aimed to build houses that working men could buy, which would in turn give the male householder the right to vote. In 1879, the pub was renamed the Freemasons' Tavern. https://www.historiccoventry.co.uk/cph/main/pub.php?pg=freehold It appears to have closed in the 1990s. https://www.historiccoventry.co.uk/cph/main/pub.php?pg=freemasons_tavern
The exterior of the ground floor was faced with distinctive dark green glazed tiles, which can be seen in older Geograph photos, here https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4474195 and here https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3563331 . These have since been removed and replaced with beige-coloured tiles.
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 20 Jul 2021
0.09 miles