Royal Albert Bridge

Royal Albert Bridge An IK Brunel designed railway bridge that spans the River Tamar between Plymouth, on the Devon bank,

15/12/2025

The Devon span of the Royal Albert Bridge was floated out at 2.00pm on 10th July 1858. By 5.00pm the ends of the tubes were bearing on the stubs of its piers, as seen here.

Lifting commenced on 9th August 1858, three feet at a time, with the masonry being built up between lifts. It had reached its full height by 28th December 1858.

20/03/2025

An aerial of Saltash with the Tamar Road still under construction thanks to Chris Harvey

29/09/2024
29/09/2024
See also Michael Roseveare's excellent (Tamar Bridge) 'under construction' photo in the comments of the original post.
29/09/2024

See also Michael Roseveare's excellent (Tamar Bridge) 'under construction' photo in the comments of the original post.

The Tamar suspension bridge at Saltash is nearing completion is this Marcus Eavis shot, taken in 1961. Until that time, the only fixed link at this point was Brunel’s bridge of 1859, which thankfully remains today.

The option for car users at this location was the Saltash Ferry, or “Floating Bridge”. The vessel used latterly had been built in 1933, was 22m long, 13m wide and could accommodate 24 cars. It ran for the last time on 23 October 1961, with the bridge being opened to traffic early the following morning.

Loading up in Devon and heading for Cornwall are typical cars of the period, including an Austin Devon, a Morris Oxford and several members of the Ford Popular/Anglia family.
Credit Jonathan Trevains

29/09/2024

David Morgan said a lovely painting of
7017 G J Churchward Castle Class
4-6-0 built Sept 1948 withdrawn Feb
1963 based at Old Oak Common and Cardiff Canton.

14/05/2024
02/05/2024

On this day in history – 2 May 1859, the official opening of the Royal Albert Bridge, Saltash took place. The ceremony was performed by Prince Albert with an audience of thousands. There was a celebration ball in Plymouth in the evening. The Prince in his special train left Windsor at 6am and didn’t return until 12.50am the next day. Brunel himself wasn’t well enough to be there that day but, lying on a couch, was taken over the bridge by train later that month: he died less than four months later. This photograph shows the bridge, seen from the Saltash side of the river in the 19th century.

The 730 yard long bridge 180 feet above the River Tamar cost £225,000 to build. 1,150 suspension chain links used in the construction were made at Hayle in Cornwall: these had originally been intended for the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol which temporarily ran out of funds in 1853. These links were bought by Brunel for the Cornwall Railway and he had more made at a foundry in Rotherhithe, London.

Divers had first inspected the bed of the River Tamar in 1847 before Brunel did a series of 175 trial borings into the river bed. A double-track bridge had been planned but it was reduced to single line on economy grounds. Work on the pontoons started in 1854 and the two main spans were floated into position during 1857 and 1858.

Brunel tested the structure with a 1,190 ton load spread over 455 feet of broad gauge track and found that the two main 455 feet spans bent downwards by about seven inches each. The test load was almost three times heavier than any train running at the time. The tubes for the upper sections of the bridge’s main spans measured 16 feet 9 inches wide by 12 feet 6 inches high and each span contained 1,260 tons of wrought iron and 1,290 tons of cast iron.

The 17 approach spans were re-girdered in 1928, and in 1938 an army of men took almost a year to repaint the bridge using ten tons of paint and 200 gallons of coal tar on an estimated 39,000 square yards of structure.

On 1 May 1959 to commemorate the centenary of the bridge’s opening, the structure was illuminated every night until 13 September with equipment provided by the General Electric Company. With the prospect of heavier freight loads, tests were conducted in 1966 to determine if trains of over 1,000 tons gross could be run. This resulted in work during 1969 to fit 24 new diagonal ties to each span. The timber decking was also renewed and new ’flexing’ paint was applied.

19/04/2024

Thanks to Steve Mortimer for this fine photograph of the Royal Albert Bridge “sort of halfway finished” with another span all set to go up.

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