Clayton & Brooke, Norbury
Castle
Watching the road ahead
Freight at Chaganhada
Grin limekilns
Devon
Danger
Phoenix
Dahuichang Limeworks
Xizhan yard
Fir Mill
Smethurst, Oldham
Blackhill Plastic
Baiyin for industry
George Lambert, Pott Shrigley
Briar Mill
Tiazhelyi mine aerial ropeway
Broadhead Colliery Coke Ovens
Bell Mill, Hathershaw
Municipal Buildings
Abraham Greenhalgh, Chadderton Iron Works, Oldham
Kellingley Colliery
Tulyar
Snape Farm POW camp
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Hailar loco change
Mill engine
Free
Plaza Cinema
A view from the church
It nearly went wrong today
The Britannia
Anson Museum
Vreoci steam farewell
Parliamentary train?
Clayton's chimney
Park Limekilns - Closeburn
Kellingley - upcast shaft No.2
A Duchess at Goostrey
Jitong memories
Norbury Colliery
Sunset over Fiddler's Ferry
Saltersley Moss
Big breakfast
Black Darter
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Horkstow Bridge


Under an Act of 1825 the New River Ancholme was straightened, widened and deepened, with existing bridges replaced with single span structures. At Horkstow a bridge served a brickworks on the western side and this was replaced by this, the only suspension bridge designed by Sir John Rennie. It was completed in 1836 under the supervision of site engineer Adam Smith, with the ironwork supplied by Messrs John and Edward Walker of Gospel Oak Ironworks, Tipton, Staffordshire.
In 1979 the bridge was severely damaged when the tractor unit of a 23 ton articulated lorry fell through the deck into the river destroying a quarter of the wooden bridge deck and damaging the attached suspension rods. During the 1990s the deck was rebuilt in tropical hardwood and the underground sections of the suspension chains replaced with high tensile steel. It is now listed Grade 2*.
In 1979 the bridge was severely damaged when the tractor unit of a 23 ton articulated lorry fell through the deck into the river destroying a quarter of the wooden bridge deck and damaging the attached suspension rods. During the 1990s the deck was rebuilt in tropical hardwood and the underground sections of the suspension chains replaced with high tensile steel. It is now listed Grade 2*.
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