Description: The Robbinetts Arm was a short branch off the Nottingham Canal between Trowell and Cossall and was connected via tramways to a number of small collieries. While these closed quite early on, the arm remained important as it functioned as a means of water supply to the main line of the canal, being fed from ponds in Oldmoor Wood, near Strelley.
This view is looking west and shows the junction of the Robbinetts Arm (foreground) with the main line of the canal (leftwards to Trowell and Nottingham; rightwards towards Cossall and Langley Mill).
The Nottingham Canal extended from the River Trent at Nottingham in a generally north-westerly direction for 14.7 miles (23.6 kilometres) via Lenton, Radford, Wollaton, Trowell, Cossall, and Awsworth to Langley Mill where it connected with the Cromford and Erewash Canals. Its main purpose was the movement of coal from mines in the Erewash Valley to Nottingham. Opened in 1796, it was later acquired by the Great Northern Railway but, apart from the Nottingham-Lenton section (which was transferred to the Trent Navigation Company and, via its link with the Beeston Canal, remains in use today), it was abandoned in 1936.