The canal that wouldnt go away! The houses in Thriftwood kept subsiding and eventually the cause was attributed to poor drainage caused by the filling in of the old canal route

The house, seen above, is in Thriffwood, just off Silverdale. Behind the house is a fence forming the Dacres Wood boundary. The height of this fence indicates the removal of a low embankment for the properties at Thriffwood. Several of these houses actually sit at the level of what was once the bottom of the canal bed, and suffered subsidence problems when first built in the early 1950's. People had to move out temporarily for about a year and a half, until the subsidence (attributed to the former canal) were resolved. Many thanks to Robert Pope for this information. After Thriffwood, traces of the canal are scarce. By train however, a sharp eyed traveller can spot trees marking the boundary of the canal as it comes behind Silverdale to enchroach partially onto the railway route approaching Sydenham Station. At Sydenham (above right) the canal was at a higher level, thus the road crossing here would have had a pronounced hump. The nearby Greyhound Inn is a descendant of older property connected with the canal. Just after Sydenham station the line to Crystal Palace leaves the main railway. This was built on the route of the canal south of Sydenham Bridge alongside what is now known as Canal Walk. From here the canal headed straight from here towards Venner Road, whose route it crossed twice in a short distance

Around Little Venice & Paddington: History and transport systems / Canute's 'Canal': The mythological waterway that wasnt / Croydon Canal: London's shortest-lived waterway, closing completely by 1837 / Cumberland Arm: A branch off the Regents Canal to Euston / Fleet River & Canal: The former Thames - Kings Cross waterway / Grand Surrey: The canal with an ambition to reach Portsmouth! / Grosvenor Canal: The Grosvenor linked Victoria to the Thames / Kensington Canal: The canal that became a railway and an underground route / London's Canal Tunnels: There are three canal tunnels in London / Paddington Arm: The Grand Junction/Grand Union from Bulls Bridge to London / Pudding Mill River: Requiem for London's lost waterway / Regents Canal: This runs between Little Venice, Camden Town & Limehouse / Romford Canal: The penultimate, yet unfinished, canal to be built in London / Ruislip Feeder: The former waterway that fed the canal / Westbourne River: The old waterway from Kilburn to the Thames / Woolwich's secret waterway: The Royal Arsenal Canal
Attractions near the London canals: Abbey Road / Bayswater / Edgware Road / Crockers Folly / Marylebone Goods / Nash Villas / Spitfire Works / St Pancras