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Plaque

Islington Tunnel - east - new

Inscription

Through the heart of Angel
Rather than building a flight of locks to climb the hill at Angel the Regent's Canal Company held a competition to design a tunnel.

The entries were disappointing, so the chief engineer James Morgan ended up designing this tunnel himself. It took three years to build, from 1815 to 1818 and was dug by a band of navvies using explosives, wheelbarrows, horses and sheer physical strength.
The Regent's Canal - Canal & River Trust

We note that the plaque, twice refers to 'Angel', not 'the Angel', and realise that we are not sure which usage is correct.

Site: Islington Tunnel - east (2 memorials)

N1, Grand Union Canal near Colebrooke Row

2019: we found the new plaque had replaced the old. Oddly, there is a second, identical, plaque placed on the east side of the nearby Danbury Street bridge. We haven't been to check but suspect that the plaque at the west end of the Islington Tunnel has also been replaced. Possibly all those erected by British Waterways London have been replaced with Canal & River Trust plaques, as part of a re-branding exercise.

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This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Islington Tunnel - east - new

Subjects commemorated i

Islington Tunnel

960 yards (878 metres) long, designed by James Morgan, built over the three y...

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Regent's Canal Company

Created following the passing of the Regent's Canal Bill in July 1812, to cut...

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James Morgan

Probably born in Carmarthen, south Wales. Architect and engineer. Employed by...

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This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Islington Tunnel - east - new

Created by i

Canal & River Trust

From their website: "We're the charity who look after and bring to life 2,000...

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This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Islington Tunnel - east - new

Also at this site i

Islington Tunnel - east - lost

Islington Tunnel - east - lost

Two points about the wording on this plaque. 'Navies' were the men who built...

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Nearby Memorials

Andrew Johnston

Andrew Johnston

N17, Ferry Lane, Ferry Boat Inn

The plaque can be seen in our photo, below the street lamp.

3 subjects commemorated, 2 creators
Spiritualist Temple - Ellis

Spiritualist Temple - Ellis

NW1, Rochester Square, Rochester Square Spiritualist Temple

The wooden cross atop the building supports a neon cross, wired to an electrical box so rusty that we doubt it still lights the way for N...

1 subject commemorated
Ewer Street burial ground

Ewer Street burial ground

SE1, Ewer Street

Current maps show Ewer Street shaped like a T on its side - very unusual. An 1862 map shows an L-shaped Ewer Street (without the northern...

2 subjects commemorated
Old Limehouse

Old Limehouse

E14, Three Colt Street, Lime Kiln Wharf

The lettering in the frieze at the top of the metal gates read "Lime Kiln Wharf". The building to the right of our photo has an entrance ...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
7 - Wine Office Court – Dickens

7 - Wine Office Court – Dickens

EC4, Fleet Street

There are 8 Courts running off the north side of this section of Fleet Street and on the ground at the entrance to each Court is a plaque...

3 subjects commemorated