Historic Boat Trips 2025

Experience a ride on a 1930s narrowboat through London

What's On

We offer a limited number of historic boat cruises on alternate Wednesdays in partnership with Camden Canals and Narrowboat Association on board their 1937 working boat Tarporley.

Guided Cruises

For other boat trips from London Canal Museum please go to: our main boat trips page.

Lasting roughly 3 hours or so you will travel on the historic boat Tarporley, on selected Wednesdays. Like our other cruises there will be a guide on board from the museum who will also serve you with tea/coffee and biscuits during the trip. The guide will tell you about the history of the boat you are travelling on and of the route. Bookings are made online on this page.

Dates in 2025 are

Wednesdays 9th and 23rd April
Wednesdays 7th and 21st May
Wednesdays 4th and 18th June
Wednesdays 2nd 16th and 30th July
Wednesdays 13th and 27th August
Wednesdays 10th and 24th September
Wednesday 8th October

Prices

Adult £35
Concession £32
Child £32

All passengers however young or old need to have a ticket

Your ticket includes admission to the museum and refreshments on board the boat. We suggest you arrive at 1000 to visit the museum before the trip. The boat will depart at 1115 from the museum.

About the boat

Tarporley in a rural lock. Sides painted red.

Tarporley is a narrow boat with a steel hull built in 1937 by W J Yarwood, at Northwich in Cheshire. It was one of 37 "Large Northwich" boats of the "town" class, all of which were named after English towns.

The 37 large boats were built for commercial carrying and were usually paired with an unpowered boat or "butty" to increase capacity for its owner, the Grand Union Canal Carrying Company. It has a strong connection with London having been ased at Bull's Bridge, near Southall, during the Second World War and used to carry cargo around the London area and as far afield as Birmingham. It became part of the nationalised British Transport Waterways fleet in 1949 along with the canals.

In 1957 the boat was leased to Willow Wren Transport Services who continued carrying cargo in her. As commercial traffic declined there was less and less need for working boats but it escaped the scrapyard and in 1972 was bought by the London Borough of Camden as a community boat to provide residential and day trips for children and elderly people. The original "National" diesel engine was replaced in 1972 with a 1958 Lister diesel HR2A engine. There was extensive conversion work carried out at that time to make the boat suitable for carrying passengers, but many original features were retained. The local authority operated the boat for some 20 years but in 1998 it was transferred to a charity the Camden Canals and Narrowboat Assocation, who still operate and maintain Tarporley.

Your skipper will be a member of the CCNA team, with your guide being a member of the London Canal Museum team.

About the Route

Your trip goes east from the museum, through the long Islington Tunnel before passing through City Road Lock, and then Sturt's Lock, before reaching Kingsland Basin. This is one of the locations where it is possible to "wind" or turn around, and then head back to the museum.

Refreshments

Tea coffee and biscuits are served on board. Please feel free to bring a sandwich with you,

Book Tickets

You can book historic boat trips below

Only Historic Boat Trips are shown below, all boat trips go to our regular boat trips page.

Gift vouchers for this and other online bookings