Culham Bridge

Culham Bridge
Culham Bridge

Old Culham Bridge
Carries Thames Path
Crosses Swift Ditch
Locale Abingdon, Oxfordshire
Maintained by Oxfordshire County Council
Design Arch bridge
Material stone
Number of spans Five
Construction end 1422
Closed 1927
Coordinates 51°39′30″N 1°16′38″W / 51.6584°N 1.2772°W / 51.6584; -1.2772Coordinates: 51°39′30″N 1°16′38″W / 51.6584°N 1.2772°W / 51.6584; -1.2772

Culham Bridge is a mediaeval bridge crossing a present backwater of the River Thames in England at Culham, Oxfordshire, near the town of Abingdon. The bridge crosses Swift Ditch which was at one time the main navigation channel of the River Thames until Abingdon Lock was built in 1790. The bridge formerly carried the A415 road from Abingdon to Dorchester, Oxfordshire, but was superseded in 1928 by a modern road bridge.

Contents

History

Culham Bridge was built of stone between 1416 and 1422 to replace an ancient ford called Culham Hythe by a religious body known as The Brotherhood of Christ (later Christ's Hospital) who subsequently looked after its upkeep.[1] It was built as part of an improvement scheme, together with the two bridges at Abingdon and a causeway across Andersey Island. It is recorded that the completion of Abingdon Bridge severely damaged trade at Wallingford.[2]

In the early seventeenth century the Oxford-Burcot Commission constructed a lock at the top of Swift Ditch to direct navigation under Culham Bridge and this remained the main route of the Thames until Abingdon Lock was built in 1790.[2]

Sir Henry Gage, who was killed at the bridge

During the English Civil War the bridge had considerable strategic importance. After the Royalists left Abingdon in May 1644 the Parliamentarians seized Culham Bridge, and harried the royalist food convoys on the way to Oxford. The Royalists tried to recapture the bridge and demolish it in January 1645. This resulted in a skirmish on 11 January known as the battle of Culham Bridge.[1] Sir Henry Gage "while boldly leading his men in a third assault on the enemy... was hit by a bullet and killed".[3]

In the eighteenth century the road was in a very bad state, leading to an Act of Parliament for its improvement.[4] The bridge carried the main traffic until 1928, when the modern road bridge was built upstream of it and Culham Bridge became a pedestrian bridge.[1]

During World War II two concrete pill boxes were built on the bridge, each weighing 250 tons and carrying anti-tank guns,[5] and part of the parapet was removed to make way for a concrete platform. The bridge was subsequently restored and is classified as an ancient monument.[1]

See also

  • Crossings of the River Thames

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Culham Lock — Culham Lock[1] Culham lock from upstream Waterway River Thames …   Wikipedia

  • Culham — Coordinates: 51°39′07″N 1°15′58″W / 51.652°N 1.266°W / 51.652; 1.266 …   Wikipedia

  • Culham Manor — is a historic manor house in Culham, near Abingdon in southern Oxfordshire, England. In 2003, the house, set in 11 acres (4.5 ha) of grounds, was for sale for GBP 2.5 million.[1] History Circa 1420 a religious guild financed the building of… …   Wikipedia

  • Abingdon Bridge — Infobox Bridge bridge name = Abingdon Bridge caption = Abingdon Bridge, looking downstream from the top of Nag s Head Island official name = carries = A415 road crosses = River Thames locale = Abingdon, Oxfordshire maint = Oxfordshire County… …   Wikipedia

  • European School, Culham — Infobox Secondary school name = European School, Culham established = 1852 (as Culham College), 1978 (as a European School) type = International founder = European Union headmaster = Mr. Uffe Gravers Pedersen free label 1 = Ages free 1 = 4 18… …   Wikipedia

  • Sutton Bridge, Oxfordshire — Infobox Bridge bridge name=Sutton Bridge caption=Sutton Bridge official name= carries= Minor road crosses=River Thames locale= Sutton Courtenay, Oxfordshire maint= id= designer = design=Arch material = Stone spans = 5 1 pierswater = 2 mainspan=… …   Wikipedia

  • Appleford Railway Bridge — Infobox Bridge bridge name=Appleford Railway Bridge caption=Appleford Railway Bridge official name= carries= Cherwell Valley Line crosses=River Thames locale= Oxfordshire maint= id= designer = design= Bow and string material = Iron spans =… …   Wikipedia

  • Cherwell Valley Line — Appleford railway station, on the Cherwell Valley Line. Overview Type Heavy rail …   Wikipedia

  • Swift Ditch — The Swift Ditch is a backwater of the River Thames in England, which was formerly the primary navigation channel. With the main river, it creates the large island of Andersey Island near Abingdon, Oxfordshire.As early as 955 to 963 AD, the monks… …   Wikipedia

  • List of crossings of the River Thames — London Bridge, in central London Newbridge, i …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”