1.
The Canal Tavern
21.
Soresby's warehouse and dockyard
2.
Shardlow Lock and Lockhouse
22.
The Maltings - built 1799 as a brewery
3.
'B' warehouse
23.
Coal Wharf - owned by Charles Cope
4.
'A' Warehouse
24.
New Inn - owned by Mary Cope - provided accommodation for boatmen
5.
The Limes - offices of the T & M Canal Co (demolished)
25.
Cowlishaw's Row, since renamed Long Row
6.
The fishponds of Shardlow Hall
26.
Soresby and Flack's wharf, showing the grain warehouse next to which a steam corn mill was later sited
7.
Salt warehouse, Cottages & houses built by Thomas Sutton
27.
Corn warehouse on the site occupied by the Trent Brewery from 1860 to 1970's
8.
Idle Bridge - named after boatmen 'waiting for work'
28.
Coal wharf and the Lawn(s)
9.
Cottages and shop (demolished when London Road was 
widened)
29.
Soresby's wharf including warehouses, stabling and offices
10.
Iron Warehouse, blacksmith's shop etc. belonging to Thomas Soar and James Sutton (demolished in 1890's)
30.
the Soresby family home (built 1770's), now the Lady in Grey restaurant
11.
Two docks, nailshop, paint and tar shed etc. belonging to James Sutton (all gone)
31.
the Ropery, owned by James Sutton, later run by the Henshall family
12.
'C' warehouse - c. 1820
32.
the Ropewalk
13.
Derwent House - one time offices of the Trent Navigation Company - 1794
33.
the Navigation Inn built by Thomas Sutton 1778/1779
14.
Row of canal workers cottages
34.
Broughton House built by Thomas Sutton in the 1790's and occupied by James Sutton the elder until his death in 1830 and then by James Clifford, his friend and agent - and later partner of James Sutton junior
15.
'D' warehouse - 1816
35.
Wharf occupied in the early years of the port by the Soresby's and later (by the 1850's) by the Sutton's consisting of a 1780's long warehouse and an 1820's rectangular warehouse with sunburst windows
16.
'E' warehouse - 1792
 
17.
The Iron Warehouse
 
18.
2 cottages; one the home of the Gilbert family, whose son George wrote memoirs in 1882
 
19.
Soresby's Wharf
 
20.
The Firs (built in the 1790's) - owned by the Soresby family