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The IWA National Festival & Boat Show run by the Inland Waterways Association is one of the key annual events on the United Kingdom's inland waterways. Generally referred to[by whom?] as the "National" it serves several functions:

The four functions of the event are to some extent conflicting and in recent years the campaigning aspect has been somewhat separated by the creation of an annual "Campaign Cruise".

Arguably it is as a gathering of like minded people that the National has been most influential. The festival brings together people from all over the country who do not meet in numbers except on the festival site. The original decisions to form both the Waterway Recovery Group and the National Association of Boat Owners both arose out of informal discussions held at the National.


Development


The first festival was held in 1950, inspired by car rallies which Tom Rolt, one of the founders of the Inland Waterways Association, had attended prior to the Second World War. It was held at Market Harborough, as the location was not restricted to narrowboats. The rally was called the Market Harborough Festival of Boats and Arts. The arts element of the festival was an addition made by Robert Aickman and was one of the elements that led to the eventual split between Rolt and Aickman. However, the festival was a success, and one of Rolt's innovations was the awarding of trophies for impressive service or performance, a practice that continued. The A. P. Herbert Trophy was awarded to the person who had traveled the furthest to get to the rally, and was won by Stan Offley, who had covered 220 miles (350 km) and had passed through 156 locks. His route from Ellesmere Port had used the Manchester Ship Canal, the Bridgewater Canal, the Leeds and Liverpool Canal, the Aire and Calder Navigation, the River Trent and the Grand Union Canal. The much shorter route using the Trent and Mersey Canal was unavailable to him, as his boat was 7.5 feet (2.3 m) wide, and the Trent and Mersey locks were only 7 feet (2.1 m) wide.[1]

Like many of the early rallies, that of 1962 was essentially a campaign to highlight the poor state of a particular waterway, in this case, the Stourbridge Canal and its connecting waterways. The decision to hold it at Stourbridge Basin was taken in late 1961, and David Hutchings, by then chairman of the rally committee, approached British Transport Waterways, the operating arm of the British Transport Commission (BTC) to ensure that the Stourbridge Branch would be dredged, to allow the boats to reach the festival site. Faced with a refusal, Hutchings hired a dragline excavator to carry out the work himself. The British Transport Commission threatened legal action against Hutchings, the Inland Waterways Association and the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal Society if he proceeded, but that did not stop him. His actions gained widespread media coverage, which was extremely critical of the BTC. The BTC was abolished later that year, and the rally went ahead,[2] with British Waterways staff assisting boats through the decrepit locks. Just two years later, British Waterways and the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal Society agreed to work on restoring the Stourbridge Canal and the Dudley Canal, and this early example of co-operation resulted in the canals and locks reopening in 1967.[3]

Marple Locks on the Peak Forest Canal was chosen as the site for the 1966 rally, again to highlight their condition. Access had to be along the Macclesfield Canal, as the locks themselves were derelict and could not be used. Cosmetic restoration began the following year,[4] and the canal was reopened in 1974.[5]

1970 was the first occasion on which the national festival was not also a campaign to save a threatened part of the waterways network. It was held at Guildford on the River Wey. Part of the reasoning for this was that the festival was proving to be very popular, and there were a limited number of places that had sufficient display space and water supply for the number of boats wanting to attend. The choice of site was not universally popular, but the rally saw the formal launching of the Waterway Recovery Group,[6] a group of volunteers who traveled the country to carry out restoration tasks on derelict waterways.

Management of the festivals is now handled by a division of Inland Waterways Enterprises Ltd called IWA Festivals. The limited company was set up in 2001 to manage the various trading activities of the Inland Waterways Association.[7][8]


IWA National Festival sites


The statistics below are mainly taken from the IWA website[9] but are incomplete. Some of these were called rallies rather than festivals and not all were national events.

The final column shows the overall membership of the IWA in the year in question.

YearNational Rally LocationWaterway# Boats# VisitorsMembership
1950Market HarboroughGrand Union Canal (Leicester Branch)12050,000+[10]800
1951(no festival)[11]1,300+[12]
1952Brecon[13]Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal
1953MacclesfieldMacclesfield Canal
1954
1955SkiptonLeeds and Liverpool Canal
1956LincolnFossdyke Navigation100+2,000
1957CoventryCoventry Canal
1958
1959ChesterShropshire Union Canal
1960Stoke on TrentTrent and Mersey Canal
1961AylesburyGrand Union Canal
1962StourbridgeStourbridge Canal
1963Little VeniceGrand Union Canal, Paddington Branch
1964Stratford-upon-AvonUpper Avon
1965BlackburnLeeds and Liverpool Canal
1966MarplePeak Forest Canal250
1967LeicesterGrand Union Canal, Leicester Section3505,000
1968LiverpoolLeeds and Liverpool Canal170
1969BirminghamBirmingham Canal Navigations
1970GuildfordRiver Wey38050,000
1971NorthamptonRiver Nene7,000
1972LymmBridgewater Canal5009,500
1973ElyGreat Ouse, Old West River25530,000
1974NottinghamRiver Trent60012,000
1975YorkRiver Ouse
1976PeterboroughRiver Nene14233,000
1977ReadingRiver Thames370
1978Titford PoolsTitford Canal15,000
1979NorthwichRiver Weaver62230,00017,728
1980Lea ValleyRiver Lee50025,00019,274
1981LeedsAire and Calder Navigation41018,838
1982Titford PoolsTitford Canal50040,000
1983WiganLeeds and Liverpool Canal42850,000
1984HawkesburyCoventry Canal661
1985Milton KeynesGrand Union Canal51430,000
1986BrentfordGrand Union Canal, Main Line450
1987HawkesburyCoventry Canal53050,000
1988CastlefieldBridgewater Canal
1989Waltham AbbeyRiver Lee52550,00022,000
1990GloucesterGloucester and Sharpness Canal22,268[14]
1991Windmill EndDudley Canal Line No. 2768385,000[15]
1992WakefieldAire and Calder Navigation, Wakefield section
1993PeterboroughRiver Nene48778,00019,167
1994Waltham AbbeyRiver Lee17,730
1995ChesterShropshire Union Canal Main Line
1996Windmill EndDudley Canal Line No. 217,501
1997HenleyRiver Thames55827,500
1998Salford QuaysManchester Ship Canal
1999WorcesterRiver Severn16,869
2000Waltham AbbeyRiver Lee16,739
2001Milton KeynesGrand Union Canal34725,000
2002HuddersfieldHuddersfield Broad Canal19117,544
2003Beale ParkRiver Thames56732,000
2004Burton on TrentTrent and Mersey Canal24,000
2005Preston BrookBridgewater Canal17,242
2006Beale ParkRiver Thames60028,000
2007St IvesGreat Ouse
2008Autherley JunctionShropshire Union Canal300
2009Red HillRiver Soar
2010Beale ParkRiver Thames
2011Burton on TrentTrent and Mersey Canal36025,000
2013WatfordGrand Union Canal

Bibliography



Notes


  1. Blagrove 2006, p. 17
  2. Blagrove 2006, p. 37
  3. Cumberlidge 2009, p. 280
  4. Blagrove 2006, p. 41
  5. Nicholson 2006, p. 151
  6. Blagrove 2006, p. 46
  7. "The Waterways Festival". Inland Waterways Association. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  8. "Company Details". Companies House. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  9. "Timeline". IWA. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  10. Bolton 1990, p. 81
  11. due to financial constraints
  12. Squires 2008, p. 30
  13. Rallies from 1952 to 1956 were not called "National" rallies
  14. Computerisation of the membership list showed this was an overstatement by about 2000–3000
  15. this year was an 'open' site with no admission charges, plus being right in the heart of the conurbation there were a LOT of people.

See also







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