Report of the Knaresbrough 
Rail-way
by Knaresbrough 
Rail-way Committee 
 
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Title: Report of the Knaresbrough Rail-way Committee 
Author: Knaresbrough Rail-way Committee 
 
Release Date: June 28, 2007 [eBook #21956] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REPORT OF 
THE KNARESBROUGH RAIL-WAY COMMITTEE***
Transcribed from the March 1820 edition by David Price, email 
[email protected] 
 
REPORT OF THE KNARESBROUGH RAIL-WAY COMMITTEE. 
TO THE NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMEN, 
Proprietors of Estates, 
ON THE ADOPTED LINE; 
TO THE SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE SURVEY, AND TO AN 
ENLIGHTENED AND LIBERAL PUBLIC, 
This Report OF THE KNARESBROUGH RAIL-WAY, 
(Originally intended for a Canal) 
IS WITH ALL DUE DEFERENCE AND REGARD PRESENTED BY 
THEIR FAITHFUL AND OBEDIENT SERVANTS, THE 
COMMITTEE. 
 
PREFACE. 
If the River Nidd and the brooks adjacent, in the vicinity of Knaresbro', 
up the valley to Ramsgill, near Pateley-Bridge, and near the adopted 
line, had not possessed the many water-falls, and given motion to the 
sixty-seven mills which they do;--or had the great landed proprietors, 
on the line now adopted been hostile to this all improving project, of 
this highly favoured and not less honoured, their native district;--or had 
the hand of Nature, when it varied the surface of our earth, no doubt for 
wise purposes, and formed those high hills, composed their bowels of 
any other substance than what it is;--or had the commercial necessities 
of Knaresbro' and its neighbourhood not existed, and the slow progress 
of their redemption, compared with others, at one time of far less note, 
not been too apparent; then, perhaps, this project, commendable as it is,
would have shared the same fate, during a season of sickness, which it 
did twenty years ago. 
But since these falls of water do exist, and are always ready to lend 
their willing aid to turn the ponderous wheels which impart motion to 
many mill-stones and many thousand spindles, beyond the possibility 
of denial;--and since the great landed proprietors have expressed 
nothing unfriendly to the project, but, if any thing, the reverse, at this 
moment of national difficulties and distress, highly to their credit and 
understanding;--and since the all-wise hand of Providence hath 
permitted an unceasing demand in one place, and a never-failing supply 
in another, at distances perhaps the most suitable and interesting for a 
work of this kind; {vi}--and, considering the necessity which the 
commerce of this district so evidently requires in an improved mode of 
transporting, from place to place, its heavy weights, with despatch and 
cheapness; then there can be no doubt of the propriety of prosecuting a 
scheme of this kind, so long, as we believe, on substantial data, that the 
completion of it will reward the shareholder, and give to this place 
what it once possessed, and be the means of rendering it again the first 
district in the kingdom for the manufacture of linens. 
 
REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE. 
At a meeting held the 16th day of March, 1818, in the Town's-Hall, at 
Knaresbro', your Committee were authorised to appoint a suitable 
person to take a survey of the country, in order to point out the most 
eligible line for a Canal to Knaresbro'. 
After various correspondence with different engineers, the choice of 
your Committee fell upon Thomas Telford, Esq. a gentleman of long 
experience, and of whose abilities, as a civil engineer, every reliance 
was placed. About the latter end of May following, this gentleman 
visited Knaresbro', viewed the localities of the place, took running and 
comparative levels over the shortest and most convenient ground, to the 
higher side of Linton-lock, and also towards Tadcaster. In the latter 
direction, as being a more direct communication with the port of Hull,
he fully recommended a close survey to be made, for which purpose he 
sent his assistant Mr. Palmer, who commenced the survey with such 
other assistance as he required, about the latter end of June, and 
continued surveying and levelling in various directions until the middle 
of September;--about this time your Committee became alarmed for the 
success of the intended Canal, both on account of the unfavourable 
ground between the town of Knaresbro' and Ribston, and the difficulty 
of obtaining a sufficient head of water in a natural manner. 
Besides at this time the elevated situation of Knaresbro' above the 
Wharfe was ascertained to be 198 feet, equal to 22 locks of 9 feet each; 
and hence, even if water could be obtained at a cheap rate, by artificial 
means, the number of locks