Britannia Bridge Opens: Engineering Marvel Unites Wales
Robert Stephenson's Britannia Bridge opened across the Menai Strait on March 5, 1850, connecting the island of Anglesey to the Welsh mainland using a revolutionary tubular iron design that no engineer had attempted before. The bridge consisted of two rectangular wrought-iron tubes through which trains passed, each tube spanning 460 feet between stone towers. Stephenson had tested the concept by building scale models and subjecting them to stress tests in collaboration with engineer William Fairbairn and mathematician Eaton Hodgkinson. The tubes were floated into position on pontoons at high tide and then jacked up to their final height of 100 feet above the water. The design eliminated the need for the suspension chains that supported the adjacent Menai Suspension Bridge, creating a rigid structure that could carry heavy rail traffic. The Britannia Bridge proved that wrought iron could be used to span previously impossible distances and directly influenced the development of box-girder construction methods used in modern bridge engineering.
March 5, 1850
176 years ago
Key Figures & Places
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