Reedham Swing Bridge

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Reedham Swing Bridge
Rail-reedhamswingbridge-amoswolfe.jpg
Coordinates52°33′32″N 1°34′21″E / 52.55887°N 1.57237°E / 52.55887; 1.57237Coordinates: 52°33′32″N 1°34′21″E / 52.55887°N 1.57237°E / 52.55887; 1.57237
CrossesRiver Yare
LocaleReedham, Norfolk, England
History
Inaugurated1840s
Location
Map

Reedham Swing Bridge, on the site of a Victorian swing bridge, is still in use at Reedham, Norfolk, England.[1]

It carries the Wherry railway line, between Norwich and Lowestoft, across the River Yare near Reedham railway station.[1]

The original single track bridge was commissioned by Sir Samuel Morton Peto in the 1840s to allow the passage of wherry boats, which were too tall to pass under conventional bridges.[1] The current bridge dates from 1902–3 prior to the doubling of the track.[2][3]

The bridge is operated from the 1904 Reedham Swing Bridge signal box.[1] In a typical year, it is opened 1,300 times.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Great Yarmouth to Beccles". Great British Railway Journeys. Series 3. Episode 1. 2 January 2012. BBC. BBC Two. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  2. ^ White, Malcolm R. (2002). The Lowestoft Train: The Railway at Lowestoft and Scenes on the Lines to Norwich, Ipswich and Great Yarmouth. Lowestoft: Coastal Publications. ISBN 9780953248568.
  3. ^ The Lowestoft Train by Malcolm R White