The more modern a landmark the more likely it is to be disliked, it
seems, by those who know it. With the
passage of time, and as feelings of familiarity grow, often such prejudices
disappear as an ageing creation becomes assimilated into the local psyche. It may even become a loved and protected
treasure. And so it is with the Transporter
Bridge, Middlesbrough, as it moves beyond its centenary and begins to enjoy a new-found
place in the hearts of Teessiders.
Built in 1911 to meet the growing demand for improved communications
across the Tees, the famous old erection epitomises the town’s famed rapid
Victorian growth – population of 131 in 1831 to in excess of 91,000 in
1901. A ferry had previously laboured
under the increasing strain and, though the idea of constructing a bridge was
mooted as long ago as 1858, progress was slow.
Alderman McLauchlan advocated the idea strongly in 1901, and eventually
the notion permeated Council circles until being properly adopted in 1906. An Act of Parliament was thus obtained in
1907 and years of preparation followed culminating, in 1909, in the appointment
of the Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company of Darlington as
designers/engineers, with Sir William Arrol & Co. of Glasgow named as
contractors.
It was Alderman McLauchlan himself and the then mayor, Colonel
Poole, who laid the two foundation stones on the south bank on 3rd August 1910. Little more than a year
later the bridge was complete, and HRH Prince Arthur of Connaught performed the opening ceremony on 17th October 1911 with a host of other dignitaries in attendance.
The ‘Tranny’, as it came to be known, is a curious affair. One of only sixteen such bridges built
worldwide (and most likely to be the last survivor), it works by the simple
principle of rolling a suspended ‘car’ hung from overhead cables from one bank
to the other. The journey takes some 2½
minutes, and around 600 persons (or the equivalent weight in vehicles) may be
carried at once. The original toll of 1d
per passenger and 6d per car remained in force until as recently as 1967 when,
in fact, such items as carts, oxen, sheep, cows and goats were still listed
among the tariff rates!
Not long after the threat of demolition was averted, Martin Phillips
wrote in 1992 that the Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge “is a focal point of
local pride and a symbol of achievement and hope. As I write during a recession it is difficult
to see how anybody would wish to destroy such a symbol” – surely the height of
praise for any landmark, anywhere in the world.
Facts & figures:
Total cost: £84,000;
Total length:
850ft;
Span between
towers: 570ft;
Highest part of
bridge from high water mark: 225ft;
Concrete in
foundations: 10,000 cubic ft;
Steel in bridge: 2,600
tons.
[this article was taken from Aspects of North-East History, Volume 1,
by Michael Southwick –available from here in both hard copy
format and as an e-book]