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| For many years mystery has surrounded the construction of the Iron Bridge in Shropshire. Recent discoveries, as David de Haan explains, may shed light on the origins of an engineering wonder. | ![]() The Iron Bridge as it looks today
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Despite its pioneering technology in 1779, as the first structural use of cast iron, no eye witness accounts are known which describe the Iron Bridge being erected. However, recent discoveries, research and experiments have shed new light on the mystery of exactly how it was built, challenging the assumptions of recent decades. In 1997 a small watercolour sketch by Elias Martin came to light in Stockholm. Although there are a wealth of early views of the Bridge by numerous artists, this is the only one which actually shows it under construction.

The results of these discoveries and experiments tell us a lot more about how the Bridge was built. We now know that all the large castings were made individually as they are all slightly different. The joints would all be familiar to a carpenter - mortise and tenons, dovetails and wedges - but this was the traditional way in which iron structures were joined at the time.

As a result of the reconstruction, it is now believed that the Bridge was built in the following stages:
Stone footings were built using local sandstone, and topped by iron base plates. The rest of the massive abutments were not built at this stage. A pair of 21m (70ft) wooden derrick poles were stood in the river bed, which acted as cranes. They were angled slightly towards the middle of the river and were stiffened near the top by a horizontal timber brace which provided further lifting points. The whole arrangement could be lent over in either direction, upstream or downstream, to reach different positions. Castings were brought to the site by boat, probably having been cast at Bedlam Furnaces located on the north bank of the Severn just 500m downstream.

The two arcs were joined at the Crown by a sophisticated scarf joint, which was secured by three large nuts and bolts. Balancing on a slender timber brace, this was a job for men with steady nerves and no fear of heights. Ropes stopped the castings tipping over at this delicate stage. According to a newspaper report, the first arch spanned the River Severn on 2nd July 1779.
Stage 3


Stage 4
The derrick poles were next lent in the downstream direction allowing the remaining two ribs to be erected, starting with the one furthest away. All five frames were then braced by diagonal and horizontal castings, which straddled the uprights. The arches and the uprights were also tied together near the base plates by short horizontal braces. With all five Lower Rib arches in place, the ironwork was free-standing and strong enough to be used as a scaffold for lifting lighter castings. There were still no abutments at this point.
Stage 5
The rest of the middle frame was built next, starting with the Middle Ribs, followed by the Outer Verticals, then the Outer Ribs, all held the correct distance apart by a series of decorative radial castings. Finally the decorative Circles and Ogees were added at the upper levels. The abutments were built up to their final height behind the Outer Vertical during this process. The scaffold was dismantled and the derricks re-sited so the same sequence could be repeated for the remaining frames.
The Deck Bearers were brought in at high level from the now completed abutment on the north bank, probably having been cast in a temporary furnace in The Square next to the Bridge. Each one was different and made to measure. Each pair of straight Deck Bearers was linked at the centre by a 5m long curved casting, the Crown Bearer, which gripped and tightened the Crown Joint. All the joints on the Bridge were then packed with iron blocks and wedges, which were sealed in with lead.


Movement in the south abutment was severe and it had to be demolished in 1802 and replaced by two timber side arches, which in turn were replaced in cast iron in 1821 and remain to this day. In 1934 the Bridge was closed to vehicles and scheduled as an ancient monument, but pedestrian tolls continued until 1950.
Universally recognised as the symbol of the Industrial Revolution, the Iron Bridge stands at the heart of the Ironbridge Gorge World Heritage Site.
Books
The Iron Bridge by Sir Neil Cossons and Barrie Trinder (Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust and Moonraker Press, 1979) A revised edition is due out in March 2002.
The Iron Bridge and the Town a site guide (Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, 1995)
Published on BBC History: 2002-01-01
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