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This is a list of bridges 1 through 100 (of 2461 total) in the suspension bridge inventory. Please email (aspan@bridgemeister.com) with corrections, suggestions, submissions, and criticism. I frequently make updates and add images. Please allow time for the page and images to load. The inventory lists more than 2,300 suspension bridges (more than 1,000 of which are pictured). Click the small images to see a larger image. Wherever you see a blue dot blue dot you can click it to isolate the bridge on its own page. Check the inventory introduction page for more information about this list.

Isolate1734 (chain bridge)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
  • Notes
    • BPL says first Western use of metal in suspension structure.
Isolate1741 Winch (Wynch)
Use:Footbridge
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:70f
  • Notes
    • Varying histories of this catwalk-style bridge exist. One I read recently says it was built 1704, a cable snapped in 1802 killing three people, and it was then rebuilt in 1830 (the present bridge). Others attribute the bridge to 1741 and have the 1802 incident killing "one or two people".
    • Replaced by 1830 Wynch - Middleton-in-Teesdale, England, United Kingdom.
Isolate1784 Chain
Use:Pipeline
Status:Replaced, 1888
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main span:35m
  • Notes
    • Carried a water pipeline with eight iron chains.
Isolate1801 (chain bridge)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:3
Main span:70f
Deck width:12.5f
  • Notes
    • In an email dated 1/16/2000, Don Sayenga provided information about the location of this bridge. Generally attributed to Uniontown (the seat of Fayette County, PA), Mr. Sayenga offers some clues about the bridge's true location. "[James Finley] stated that he built it near the home of his friend Meason which implies a connection for the iron as Meason was making iron. Meason's home has survived by the way, a beautiful place. Finley stated it was a combination contract with the cost split between two counties, and he stated it was built over Jacob's Creek which is the county boundary. He also makes it clear it was on the road to Greensburg. The only place the old road crossed Jacob's Creek is just south of Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania. On the geodetic survey maps this spot is marked "Iron Bridge" but there is no town there. The last time I was there I saw a sign that said "Iron Bridge" on an automobile scrap yard. I found absolutely no trace of the bridge, but it was not very big, so there was no need for a huge abutment."
    • First suspension bridge with a rigid level deck.
Isolate1807 Chain
Location:N 38.92959 W 77.11627
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular
Status:Destroyed, 1812
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:128.5f
  • Notes
    • BCW gives completion date of 1810 and says bridge was destroyed by flood two years later.
    • Coordinates given are for the current crossing (VA SR123, still known locally as "Chain Bridge Road") which is on (or very close) to the alignment of Chain Bridge. Chain Bridge was the third bridge at this site. The current structure is the eighth and was completed in 1940.
Isolate1807 Wills Creek
Status:Destroyed, 1810
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main span:139f
Isolate1809 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1809 (chain bridge)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
  • Notes
    • From Dunlap's Creek Bridge: "The first recorded bridge across Dunlap's Creek was a wooden structure constructed prior to 1774. It was repaired in 1801, but was destroyed during a spring storm in 1808. A chain-link suspension bridge was built on the site in 1809; it collapsed under the weight of snow and a heavily laden wagon in 1820. A third bridge, another wooden structure, built in 1821 also failed. The present bridge is thus the fourth bridge at the site."
Isolate1809 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:145f
Deck width:30f
Isolate1809 Schuylkill Falls
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 153f
Deck width:18f
  • Notes
    • Failed 1811, 1816. HBE notes the 1811 was due to weight of cattle. The 1816 failure was due to weight of ice and snow.
Isolate1810 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 167f
Isolate1810 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1810 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1810 (chain bridge)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main spans:2 x 100f
Isolate1810 Chain (Essex-Merrimack)
Location:N 42.833167 W 70.90645
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (two-lane light)
Status:Replaced
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:243f
Deck width:30f (2 roadways of 15f)
  • Notes
    • John Templeman built several bridges (like this one) using James Finley's design.
    • Repaired in 1827 after 5 of 10 chains snapped under weight of a team of oxen.
    • The complete description from Thomas Pope's 1811 Treatise (POPE):

      "The chain Bridge lately thrown over the Merrimack, three miles above Newburyport, in the state of Massachusetts, is now in constant use. This Bridge consists of a single arc, two hundred and forty-four feet span. The abutments are of stone, forty-seven feet long, and thirty-seven high; the uprights, or framed work, which stand on the abutments, are thirty-five feet high, over which are suspended ten distinct chains, the ends of which on both sides of the river are buried deep in pits and secured by large stones: each chain is five hundred and sixteen feet long; and, where they pass over the uprights, they are treble, and made in short links, which is said to be more secure than saddles made of plates of iron. The four middle joists rest on the chains; all the rest are suspended to the main chains to equalize the floor. This Bridge has two passage-ways of fifteen feet in width each, and the floor is so solid as to admit of horses, carriages, etc. to travel at any speed, with very little perceptible motion of the floors. The railing is stout and strong, which adds much firmness to the floor. There are three chains in each range on each side, and four in the middle range: they are calculated to support nearly five hundred tons. From the surface of the water to the middle of the floor is forty feet; and from the top of the abutments to the top of the uprights is thirty-five feet high, making seventy-two feet. The magnitude and power of the abutments, the width and length of the floors, the elevation of the work, the evident powers of the chains, etc. all conspire to make it a wonderful work. Every expense attending it did not amount to twenty-five thousand dollars. The abutment being of stone, the uprights covered, and the chains painted to prevent rust, leaves nothing but the flooring to decay. This Bridge was constructed by John Templeman, Esq. of the district of Columbia, whose talents for the productions of such work, and the various improvements suggested and used by him, have been highly beneficial, and do him great credit."
    • Gregory W. Buff sent a transcription of an article describing the 1827 failure. The article was in the Saturday, February 24, 1827 issue (Volume IV, Number 31) of the Canadian Spectator (Montreal, Quebec) newspaper:

      "Newburyport, Feb 9. Disastrious [sic] Accident. - On Tuesday morning last, the Essex Merrimack Bridge gave way in the centre, from the parting of the chains that support it. On the Bridge, at the moment, was a loaded team, drawn by six oxen and two horses, driven by two men, Messrs. Garlton [sic] and Jackman, all of whom were precipitated, forty feet, into the river beneath. The teamsters preserved themselves by means of swimming, and the support of fragments of the bridge; the team were all of them except one of the horses, swept beneath the ice a few rods below, and drowned. Five of the ten chains which supported the Bridge, were snapped in different places, and now remain upholding the broken and shattered timber altogether as sad a wreck as we ever witnessed. At the moment of the crash, the light evolved from the friction of the chains resembled the the vivid streaming of a meteor. Various excuses are assigned for the accident, and none, with more probability, than the united effect of the incumbent pressure of the immense body of snow lying upon the bridge, and the frost which had contracted the particles of iron. These produced a tenseness in the chains, which was incapable of resisting the additional pressure of the loaded team, and the whole gave way. The estimated expense of repairing the breach is about 4000 dollars; and the Directors, as we understand, plan to set about it immediately. It will be built up as before. To those who have been losers by this accident the corporation intend to make generous inumeration. The traveling will be uninterrupted, as the solidity of the ice above the bridge forms a safe passage way - and for the conveyance of carriages and heavy baggage the proprietors have promptly provided suitable boats. If any aversion to chain bridges has been produced by this accident, we should be sorry, for ourselves we feel yet unshaken faith in their superior security. The misfortune in this case was no doubt owing to the causes above stated, and not to any defect in the construction of the bridge. Probably hundreds of individuals, including each sex and all ages, have visited the ruins of the bridge. They present a sad and melancholy appearance - crushed and broken timbers suspended by the massy chains, which hang lazily from the pyramidical abutments, while the beholder instinctly shrinks back in terror at the reflection of the situation of the two human beings who were precipitated into the abyss beneath. The preservation of these two men is almost miraculous. Although hurled down 40 feet amid crashing and falling timber, entangled with their cattle, they fell without recieving the least injury, and attained the shore, after being for nearly half an hour, immerse in water chilled to the freezing point. Mr. Jackman is far advanced in years - and suffered somewhat from the exposure to the cold. Mr. Carlton [sic], escaped unhurt. The Chain Bridge has been built for about fifteen years, the span is 220 feet. We believe this was the second or third Chain Bridge built in the United States; and this is probably the first that has met with a similar accident. We understand the proprieters of the Rooks Bridge intend to rebuild theirs as a Chain Bridge."
    • Replaced by 1909 Chain - Newburyport, Massachusetts, USA. The 1909 structure was almost entirely new (except for portions of the piers and abutments).
Isolate1811 (chain bridge)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1811 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1811 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1811 Third Street
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1814 Hamilton Street
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:4
Main spans:2
Side spans:2
Isolate1816 (footbridge)
Use:Footbridge
Status:Removed
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Main span:393.75f
  • Notes
    • Narrow footbridge. First wire bridge in North America. HBE notes "first wire suspension bridge in any country."
    • Often described as having collapsed under the weight of ice and snow, Don Sayenga notes that no contemporary sources confirm this demise. Since the nearby chain bridge did fail under weight of ice and snow, he believes this fate has been misattributed to the White and Hazard footbridge. Don believes the bridge was just dismantled at some point after June, 1816.
    • Al Zagofsky also wrote to explain there was no evidence of this bridge collapsing under weigh of ice and snow. Al writes: "According to an original source Captain Joshua Rowley Watson, who inspected the bridge on June 15, 1816: '...There was a bridge, but which by the weight of ice and snow, has been carried away.' This refers to the previous bridge that the cable bridge was temporarily replacing. I did not see any cause for failure of the wire rope bridge. My guess is that it was removed when the regular bridge was repaired. The same article shows a sketch that he made, showing the main span to be 407 feet. I am looking at the Canal History and Technology Proceedings Vol 5, March 22, 1986."
Isolate1816 Galashiels
Use:Footbridge
Status:Destroyed, 1839
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:111f
Deck width:3f
  • Notes
    • BSI: Originally erected in the form of a traditional suspension bridge, but soon reinforced with wire stays from much larger towers to reduce unwanted motion. Destroyed by flood, 1839.
Isolate1818 Dryburgh Abbey
Use:Footbridge
Status:Collapsed, 1838
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:260f
Deck width:4.5f
  • Notes
    • This 1818 bridge was a replacement for the 1817 Dryburgh Abbey suspension bridge which appears to have been primarily a cable-stayed structure and is not included in the inventory. The 1817 bridge failed due to wind in early 1818.
    • Later at same location 1872 Dryburgh Abbey - Dryburgh and St. Boswells, Scotland, United Kingdom. Structurae shows both the 1818 and 1872 bridges.
Isolate1820 Union
Location:N 55.75256 W 2.10677
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:In use (last checked, 2009)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:449f
Deck width:18f
Isolate1820 Wills Creek
Status:Destroyed, 1838
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main span:151.5f
Isolate1821 Trinity Pier (Newhaven Pier)
Use:Footbridge
Status:Destroyed, 1898
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main spans:3 x 209f
Deck width:4f
  • Notes
    • SBR: Chain pier extending into 700 feet into the Forth, with three main spans each of 209 feet. Wrecked by storm, 1898.
Isolate1822 (footbridge)
Use:Footbridge
Status:Removed
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:18m
  • Notes
    • Test structure, but recognized as first wire bridge in France.
Isolate1823 (suspension bridge)
Use:Vehicular (two-lane)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 131.75f
Isolate1823 (suspension bridge)
Use:Vehicular (two-lane)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:131.75f
  • Notes
    • Réunion was known as "Isle of Bourbon" at this time.
    • MOS: "These bridges were designed by Mr. Brunel, and executed in England, near Sheffield, where they were put together in January, 1823, before being sent out to the Isle de Bourbon."
    • Built as part of same project as 1823 (suspension bridge) - Réunion.
Isolate1823 Brighton Pier
Use:Footbridge
Status:Destroyed, 1896
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:4
Main spans:4 x 255f
  • Notes
    • SBR: Severely damaged 1833, 1836. Destroyed by storm 1896.
Isolate1823 Saint Antoine
Status:Removed, c.1864
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 40m
Deck width:7.5f
Isolate1824 Biery's
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1824 Galaure
Status:Collapsed, 1844
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:30m
Isolate1824 Kettensteg (Chain)
Location:N 49.45468 E 11.07076
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Footbridge
Status:In use (last checked, 2006)
Main cables:Eyebar (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:27.9m, 29.6m
  • Notes
    • Now aided by intermediate piers. Eckhard Bernstorff notes: "Oldest suspension bridge in Germany, but since 1930 supported by two intermediate piers at each span."
Isolate1824 Lehigh Gap (Palmerton)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1933
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:3
  • Notes
    • Finley patent bridge.
Isolate1824 Pochtamptsky (Pochamsky, Post Office, Pochtamtskiy)
  • St. Petersburg, Russia
    Wilhelm von Traitteur

    References
Use:Footbridge
Status:In use (last checked, 2008)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Isolate1824 Wissekerke
  • Bazel, Belgium (Wissekerke Castle)
    J.B. Vifquain

    Photo by Robert M. Vogel

    References
    • Structurae
Location:N 51.145383 E 4.302667
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Status:Closed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Isolate1825 Pâquis
Status:Demolished, early 1850's
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 41m
Isolate1825 Tain-Tournon
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed, 1965
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 278.88f
Deck width:13.75f
Isolate1826 Bankovsky (Bank)
Use:Footbridge
Status:In use
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Deck width:1.85m
  • Notes
    • Cable ends"swallowed" by four cast-iron decorative griffins.
Isolate1826 Broughton
Use:Vehicular
Status:Collapsed, 1831
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main span:145.5f
Deck width:18.25f
  • Notes
    • BOB, SBR: Collapsed under weight of marching troops April 12, 1831.
Isolate1826 Conwy (Conway)
Use:Vehicular
Status:In use, but restricted to foot traffic (last checked, 2008)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:327f
Isolate1826 Egyptian
Status:Collapsed, 1905
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1826 Gattonside (Melrose)
Use:Footbridge
Status:In use (last checked, 2009)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:3
Main span:300f
Side spans:2
Deck width:4f 4in.
  • Notes
    • Steel cables added, 1992.
Isolate1826 Invalides
Use:Vehicular
Status:Demolished, 1826
Main span:557.5f
  • Notes
    • Failed when almost complete in 1826. MOS: "On the 6th of September, a water-pipe, which was laid in the ground on the side of the Champs Elysées, and came near the abutments on that side of the river, burst, and, softening the ground about the abutment, it gave way under the strain produced by the weight of the bridge."
    • Replaced by 1829 Invalides (l'Allee-d'Antin) - Paris, France.
Isolate1826 Jarnac
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:70m
Deck width:7.75m
Isolate1826 Lviny (Lions)
Use:Footbridge
Status:In use (last checked, 2008)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:22.4m
Deck width:2.26m
  • Notes
    • Cable ends "swallowed" by four cast-iron decorative lions at each end.
Isolate1826 Menai Strait
Location:N 53.221367 W 4.1646
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (two-lane, with walkway)
Status:In use (last checked, 2006)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:579f
Isolate1826 Warden (Hexham, West Boat)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1903
Main cables:Chain (iron)
  • Notes
    • SBR: Replaced, 1903.
Isolate1826 Welney
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, c. 1926
Main cables:Chain (iron)
  • Notes
    • Likely replaced 1926. SBR: Replaced "1926 or 1927". Design by Brown.
Isolate1827 (chain bridge)
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:5
Main spans:3
Side spans:2
  • Notes
    • Multi-span structure distinct from Templeman's 1810 Chain Bridge. Sometimes misidentified as an 1827 replacement to the 1810 Templeman Chain Bridge because of the significant damage to the Templeman bridge in 1827.
Isolate1827 (footbridge)
Use:Footbridge
Status:Only towers remain, 1875 (last checked, 2009)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Isolate1827 Andance
Location:N 45.242194 E 4.801638
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:In use (last checked, 2005)
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2
  • Notes
    • Destroyed August 30, 1944. Rebuilt 1946.
Isolate1827 Hammersmith
Use:Vehicular (with walkway)
Status:Replaced
Main cables:Chain
Suspended spans:3
Main span:400f
Side spans:2 x 147f
Isolate1827 L'île Barbe
Location:N 45.796883 E 4.83055
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:In use (last checked, 2005)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 334.66f
Isolate1827 Malapane (Malapana)
Use:Vehicular
Status:In use (last checked, 2002)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
  • Notes
    • The country containing this bridge has changed several times. It is currently located in Poland where the river is known as "Mala Panew". AAJ records this bridge as serving the "Malapana mill" across the "Malapane River". "Malapane" is the German name for the Mala Panew River.
Isolate1828 Arcole (de la Grève)
Status:Replaced, 1854
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 133.86f
Deck width:11.48f
Isolate1828 Auvers
Status:Failed, 1887
  • Notes
    • Destroyed 1870. Rebuilt 1873.
Isolate1828 Doux
Status:Removed, 1857
Isolate1828 Sablons
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1933
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Main spans:2 x 331.38f
Deck width:13.12f
Isolate1828 Sassenage
Status:Replaced, 1938
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Isolate1829 (suspension bridge)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Collapsed
  • Notes
    • Said to have collapsed under weight of cattle. Appears to have still been standing in 1868. After the collapse it was replaced with an arch bridge.
Isolate1829 Argentat
Use:Vehicular (with walkway)
Status:Replaced, 1903
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:328f
Isolate1829 Bamberg
Status:Replaced, c. 1880-1890's
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main span:64.26m
Isolate1829 Beaucaire
Status:Removed
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:4
Main spans:2 x 393.72f
Side spans:2 x 307.1f
  • Notes
    • Flooring failed, 1887.
Isolate1829 Invalides (l'Allee-d'Antin)
Use:Vehicular (with walkway)
Status:Replaced, 1855
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main span:236.5f
Deck width:25.6f
Isolate1829 Montrose
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1931
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
  • Notes
    • SBR: March 19, 1830, with a "crowd of people, estimated at 700, ... watching a boat race," a chain broke "plunging most of the people into the river." Repaired. Wrecked by storm 1838. Repaired.
Isolate1829 Palais de Justice
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1972
Main cables:Wire (iron)
  • Notes
    • Damaged by flood, 1840. Rebuilt. Bombed, 1944. Repaired, 1945. Location now occupied by a cable-stayed suspension footbridge, completed 1986.
Isolate1829 Vienne
Location:N 45.524867 E 4.87035
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:In use, but restricted to foot traffic (last checked, 2005)
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2
  • Notes
    • Damaged by flood in 1840. Rebuilt.
Isolate1830 (suspension bridge)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1926
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:3
Main span:245.56f
Side spans:2 x 38.88f
Isolate1830 Bath
Use:Footbridge
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Main span:118f
Isolate1830 Bourg-Saint-Andéol
Use:Vehicular
Status:Destroyed, 1944
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Isolate1830 Feurs
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1926
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Isolate1830 Fourques
Location:N 43.688722 E 4.613472
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:In use (last checked, 2005)
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2
Isolate1830 Parentignat (Orbeil)
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:Closed (last checked, 2006)
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:98.4m
  • Notes
    • Bypassed, 1973.
Isolate1830 Remoulins
Location:N 43.936944 E 4.557333
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular
Status:Only towers remain, 1938 (last checked, 2002)
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:120m
  • Notes
    • Demolished, 1938. Only towers remain.
Isolate1830 Stockton Railway
Use:Rail
Status:Replaced, 1842
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:281f
  • Notes
    • First railway suspension bridge.
Isolate1830 Valence aux Granges
Use:Vehicular
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 110m
Deck width:7m
  • Notes
    • Two side spans meeting at a single midstream tower.
Isolate1830 Wynch
Use:Footbridge
Status:In use (last checked, 2008)
Main cables:Eyebar (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Isolate1831 Andrézieux
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1910
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Isolate1831 Beauregard
Location:N 46.002033 E 4.749783
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:In use (last checked, 2005)
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2
Isolate1831 Belleville (Belleville-sur-Saône)
Use:Vehicular
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2
Isolate1831 Bry-sur-Marne
Use:Vehicular
Status:Destroyed, c.1870
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:249.43f
Isolate1831 Condrieu
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2
Isolate1831 Decize
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1904
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2
Isolate1831 Findhorn
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
  • Notes
    • Was still standing in 1938 when it was bypassed.
Isolate1831 La Feuillée
Use:Vehicular (with walkway)
Status:Demolished, 1910
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:~67m
Deck width:7m
Isolate1831 Langon
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Isolate1831 Masaryk (Masarik, Mazarik, de la Gare)
Location:N 45.778267 E 4.809017
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane, with walkway)
Status:In use (last checked, 2005)
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2 x 85.2m
Deck width:6.5m
Isolate1831 Mirabeau
Location:N 43.68945 E 5.668267
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular
Status:Only towers remain (last checked, 2005)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:150m
Deck width:5.5m
  • Notes
    • The towers from the older of the two Mirabeau suspension bridges are visible alongside the current crossing.
    • Damaged by flood, 1843. Rebuilt.
    • Replaced by 1935 Mirabeau - Mirabeau, France. Unsure if this was an immediate replacement.
Isolate1831 Scotswood (Chine)
Use:Vehicular (two-lane, with walkway)
Status:Demolished, 1967
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:3
Main span:368f
Side spans:2 x 131f
Deck width:16f 10in roadway, 3ft 3in footway
  • Notes
    • "Chine" is the Geordie spelling/pronounciation of "Chain", according to The New Geordie Dictionary detailing "the dialect spoken on Tyneside".
    • Widened (19ft 6in roadway, two 6ft walkways), iron chains replaced with steel cables 1931. Bypassed, 1967. Since demolished.
Isolate1831 Wellington (Craiglug)
Location:N 57.13559 W 2.09560
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:In use, but restricted to foot traffic (last checked, 2009)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
  • Notes
    • Reconstructed, 1930. Closed to vehicular traffic, 1984. Closed to all traffic 2002. Underwent extensive refurbishment, 2008.
Isolate1831 Whorlton
Use:Vehicular
Status:In use (last checked, 2008)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:~53m
  • Notes
    • Refurbished late 2003, early 2004.
Isolate1832 Bercy
Use:Vehicular (with walkway)
Status:Replaced, 1860's
Main cables:Eyebar (iron)
Suspended spans:3
Main span:144.36f
Side spans:2 x 147.64f
Deck width:26.25f
Isolate1832 Ferdinandeo
Use:Vehicular
Status:In use (last checked, 2005)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Main span:80.4m
  • Notes
    • Destroyed, 1943. Reconstructed, 1998.
Isolate1832 L'Ile-Bouchard
Use:Vehicular (one-lane, with walkway)
Status:Destroyed, 1944
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:262.48f, 278.89f
Deck width:13.12f
  • Notes
    • AAJ describes this as two bridges separated by the island: one between Saint-Gilles and the island and one between the island and Saint-Maurice.
Isolate1832 La Roche-Posay (La Roche-Posay-les-Bains)
Use:Vehicular
Status:Replaced, 1937
Main cables:Wire (iron)
Suspended spans:1
Isolate1832 Les Vans
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Suspended spans:1
Isolate1832 Marlow
Location:N 51.56735 W 0.773567
Maps:MapQuest, Acme
Use:Vehicular (with walkway)
Status:In use (last checked, 2007)
Main cables:Chain (iron)
Suspended spans:3
Main span:1
Side spans:2
Deck width:30f
Isolate1832 Neuville-sur-Saône
Use:Vehicular
Status:Removed
Suspended spans:2
Main spans:2

Do you have any information or photos for these bridges that you would like to share? Please email aspan@bridgemeister.com.