Latest News

  1. Prestigious recognition for Craigavon Community Safety Partnership
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  2. Green and Blue Bin Collection Calendars available
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  3. Local teenagers to get creative on board the Mega Mobile!
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  4. Celebrate your world at Lough Neagh Discovery Centre
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  5. Local young people splash into summer at Craigavon Leisure Centre
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  6. Summer Fun – Here We Come
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  7. ‘You, Your Child and Alcohol’ campaign launched in Craigavon
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  8. Sign up for summer activities at Ardowen Community Centre
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  9. Bring your memories to life!
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  10. Community and Voluntary groups secure vital Good Relations funding
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  11. Who’s watching your home during the holidays?
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  12. Multi-Use Games Area launched in Portadown
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  13. Brownlow’s young people celebrate learning in style!
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  14. Craigavon Community Safety Partnership secures £30,000 for graffiti removal
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  15. Roses, lace and lingerie – Shared history project
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  16. Be a bright spark…recycle your electricals!
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  17. Protect your home - Close It, Lock It, Check It
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  18. Vote for Lurgan Park
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  19. Progress continues in £7 million bid for Portadown
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  20. Leave a lasting legacy in Lurgan and Portadown
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  21. Future Leisure Provision in Craigavon
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The Newry Canal was the first summit level canal in the British Isles. It opened for traffic in March 1742. Eighteen miles in length, it extended through a series of locks from Newry to Whitecote Point, 2km south of Portadown. The last lock before the canal joins the River Bann is known as Moneypenny’s Lock.

The Moneypennys were lock keepers for 85 years and operated the lock gates. They also took note of the barges, which passed through the lock carrying a great variety of cargoes including linen cloth, farm produce, coal, grain and flax seed. However, with the growth of the railway network, the use of the Newry Canal began to decline and the last known commercial journey through lock was in 1936.

Moneypenny’s is 4km from Portadown town centre via the Ulster Way footpath.

Exhibition area opens:
April–September - Saturday, Sunday and Bank Holiday Monday afternoons 2.00-5.00pm.
Tours and groups by prior booking through Museum Services tel: 028 38 341635.

Please note that part of the Lockhouse is not accessible as it is a private residence.