Runcorn, The Railway Viaduct 1900
Photo ref:
45433

More about this scene
The Widnes-Runcorn railway bridge is seen from the West Bank Docks, Widnes. The town of Runcorn is behind the bridge; the retaining wall of the Manchester Ship Canal can be seen along the edge of the River Mersey. The bridge was constructed from 1863-67; it opened on 21 May 1868, and was named the Ethelfleda Bridge, after a Celtic princess who ordered the very first ferry here. The three iron spans of this bridge (which is still in use today) weigh around 700 tons each, and the piers are sunk to a depth of 45ft into the solid rock of the river bed. The church spire is All Saints, Runcorn's parish church.
An extract from Liverpool and Merseyside Photographic Memories.
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Bridges
Classic photographs of all sorts of bridges from The Francis Frith Collection, spanning modest streams, rivers and broad estuaries. They include footbridges, clapper bridges, pack-horse bridges, medieval arched bridges, toll bridges, decorative Palladian bridges, suspension bridges, bascule bridges, canal bridges, and railway bridges. Evocative and atmospheric, these stunning images show British engineering at its most innovative and graceful.

Liverpool and Merseyside Photographic Memories
The photo 'Runcorn, the Railway Viaduct 1900' appears in this book.
View BookA Selection of Memories from Runcorn
For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Runcorn
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