Readers may recall sitting in geography lessons in the 1950/’60s, when any one of the following could have been the subject of the day: the Lancashire cotton industry, the West Yorkshire woollen industry, centres of shipbuilding, the West Midlands motor car industry, the Potteries and last, but not least, the importance of the Manchester Ship Canal (MSC).
Thirty-six miles long, this civil engineering masterpiece of the late ninenteenth century, connected Liverpool with Manchester, conferring on the latter, the status of inland port, capable of receiving ocean-going vessels. The conventional wisdom is that the Canal was necessary in order to avoid the heavy tolls and dues levied on imports passing through Liverpool. The London & North Western Railway Company also charged excessive rates for the conveyance of raw cotton to Manchester…