Corbridge Bridge
Corbridge Bridge | |
|---|---|
Corbridge Bridge | |
| Coordinates | 54°58′20″N 2°01′08″W / 54.9722°N 2.0188°W |
| OS grid reference | NY988641 |
| Carries | B6321 [citation needed] |
| Crosses | River Tyne |
| Locale | Northumberland |
| Heritage status | Grade I listed[1] |
| Preceded by | Hexham Bridge |
| Followed by | Styford Bridge |
| Characteristics | |
| Material | Stone |
| Total length | 480 ft (146 m)[2] |
| No. of spans | 7 |
| Load limit | 7.5 tonne[citation needed] |
| No. of lanes | Single-track road controlled by traffic lights |
| History | |
| Construction end | 1674 or 1690 |
| Opened | 1674 or 1690 |
| Location | |
![]() Interactive map of Corbridge Bridge | |
Corbridge Bridge is a 17th-century stone bridge across the River Tyne at Corbridge, Northumberland, England, at the point where another structure, eventually a toll bridge, was constructed in the 13th-century. The later, characteristic 7-span structure would be the only bridge on the Tyne to withstand the Great Flood of 1771. As of 2015, it was listed as a Grade I listed building by Historic England.[needs update]
Earlier, the bridge carried the A68 road over the River Tyne,[not verified in body] but since the opening of the Hexham bypass (A69),[when?] the A68 has crossed via the Styford Bridge, 3 miles (5 km) downstream of Corbridge.[not verified in body]
Structure
This section needs expansion with: a more fully, independently sourced and thorough, techical description of the existing structure. You can help by adding missing information. (April 2026) |
The 21st-century bridge, remaining in place from its late 17th-century construction (see below),[3][4] is of stone,[clarification needed] and has a total length of 480 ft (146 m),[2][5] with its being able, as of this date,[when?] to bear a load of 7.5 tonnes.[citation needed]
History
A bridge at Corbridge was built in 1235.[3] In 1298 royal officers went to Corbridge to purchase horseshoes and nails, and a tariff was imposed to raise money for upkeep of the medieval bridge; included in it were tolls on nails of different kinds, horseshoes, cartwheel-sheaths, griddles, iron cauldrons and vats, and the bridge became a great asset to the town.[citation needed] Described in 1306 as the only bridge between Newcastle and Carlisle, it was maintained also as a link between England and Scotland.[4] In either 1674[3] or 1690[4] it was replaced by the seven-arched bridge that exists to the present.[when?][citation needed] The reconstructed bridge would be the only one on the Tyne to withstand the Great Flood of 1771.[4][6] In 1881 it was widened to 3 ft (1 m) without significant alteration to its appearance.[3]
As of 2015, the Corbridge Bridge was listed as a Grade I listed building by Historic England.[needs update][1]
Current use
The bridge had earlier carried the A68 road over the River Tyne,[citation needed] but since the opening of the Hexham bypass (A69),[when?] the A68 has crossed via the Styford Bridge, 3 miles (5 km) downstream of Corbridge.[citation needed]
References
- ^ a b Historic England. "Corbridge Bridge (Grade I) (1044808)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
- ^ a b Makepeace, Michael (2006). "Corbridge Bridge". Bridges on the Tyne (BridgesOnTheTyne.co.uk). Retrieved 14 April 2026.
- ^ a b c d Frank Graham (1992), Hexham and Corbridge: A Short History and Guide, Thropton: Butler Publishing, OL 8065820W, Wikidata Q105036820
- ^ a b c d Fraser, Constance; Emsley, Kenneth (1989). Northumbria. Chichester: Phillimore & Co. pp. 78–79. ISBN 0-85033-723-2.
- ^ Note, the association of the foregoing "Bridges on the Tyne" work with its stated author is a result of a chain of evidence connecting the cited and another website to Makepeace, via identified copyright holder and author email contact information, here and here, and comparable content for the "Bridges..." website here and here, connecting with a formal 2018 academic Newcastle PhD dissertation record, pages 78, 334, and passim, here. (Search Makepeace, Michael, and "mm" at these locations.)
- ^ Ridley, Nancy (1966). Portrait of Northumberland. London: Robert Hale. p. 183. ISBN 0709117191.
External links
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