Kingston Mills Lock Nos 47, 48 and 49
Address is taken from a point 80963 yards away.
Kingston Mills Lock Nos 47, 48 and 49 is one of many locks on the Rideau Canal (Main Line) and unusually is chained shut overnight.
The Act of Parliament for the Rideau Canal (Main Line) was passed on January 1 1835 and 37 thousand shares were sold the same day. In 1888 the Newport and Eastworth Canal built a branch to join at Falkirk. Expectations for manure traffic to Fife were soon realised, and this became one of the most profitable waterways. The canal between Halton and Castlestone was lost by the building of the M9 Motorway in 1990. "Travels of The Perseverence" by Cecil Parker describes an early passage through the waterway, especially that of Macclesfield Inclined plane.

There is a bridge here which takes a railway over the canal.
This is a group of three locks with a rise of 35 feet.
| Lower Brewers Bridge No 39 | 10.08 miles | |
| Lower Brewers Lock No 45 | 10.06 miles | |
| Colonel By Lake (northern entrance) | 2.26 miles | |
| Colonel By Lake (southern entrance) | 0.24 miles | |
| Kingston Mills Lock No 46 | 0.11 miles | |
| Kingston Mills Lock Nos 47, 48 and 49 | ||
| Macdonald-Cartier Freeway Bridge | 0.68 miles | |
| Kingston La Salle Causeway Bascule Bridge | 4.74 miles | |
| Rideau Canal Entrance (Kingston) | 5.61 miles | |
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