Sunderland, The Bridges 1900
Photo ref:
S263003

More about this scene
A tram rattles across the old road bridge bound for Grangetown. The 236ft single span cast-iron bridge was designed by Thomas Paine, author of 'The Rights of Man'. Built in 1793-96, it was considered one of the engineering masterpieces of the day. It was replaced by a new Wearmouth Bridge, officially opened by HRH the Duke of York in 1929. Just beyond is the North Eastern Railway's bridge over the Wear.
An extract from Northumberland Tyne and Wear Photographic Memories.
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Milestones of Engineering
Stunning archive photos that celebrate our engineering achievements.
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.

Northumberland Tyne and Wear Photographic Memories
The photo 'Sunderland, the Bridges 1900' appears in this book.
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