Old Haydon Bridge

Old Haydon Bridge is a footbridge across the River South Tyne providing access between the Northern and Southern sides of the village of Haydon Bridge, Northumberland, England.

Old Haydon Bridge
Old Haydon Bridge
Coordinates54.9730°N 2.2463°W / 54.9730; -2.2463
OS grid referenceNY843643
CarriesCycles and Pedestrians
CrossesRiver South Tyne
LocaleNorthumberland
Heritage statusGrade II listed[1]
Preceded byHaydon Bridge Viaduct
Followed byNew Haydon Bridge
Characteristics
DesignArch bridge
MaterialStone
No. of spans6
History
Opened1776 (1776)
Closed1970 to motor vehicles
Replaced byNew Haydon Bridge
Old Haydon Bridge
Location in Northumberland

History

Old Haydon Bridge in January 1837, by James Wilson Carmichael.

The first bridge at Haydon Bridge was built in around 1309, but following the flood of 1771, it had to be rebuilt in 1776. Following structural surveys it ceased to be used by cars and converted to footbridge use only in 1970.[2]

It is listed as a Grade II building by Historic England.[1]

gollark: GEORGE is the largest sporadic simple group.
gollark: GEORGE is a good notion of “fibrant-cofibrant functor” between which weak transformations can be replaced by strict ones.
gollark: GEORGE is commutative, associative, alternative, and invariant under tetration.
gollark: In all situations, GEORGE will take the normatively correct action.
gollark: GEORGE is an infinite regular polyhedron.

References

Next bridge upstream River South Tyne Next bridge downstream
Haydon Bridge Viaduct
A69 road 
Old Haydon Bridge
Grid reference: NY843643
New Haydon Bridge
A686 road 
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