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Field Visit
Date June 1970
Event ID 1131868
Category Recording
Type Field Visit
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1131868
NM 785 196. This bridge, which joins the island of Seil to the mainland, spans Clachan Sound at a point about 4.5 km SW of Kilninver. The bridge (Pl. 119B) crosses the narrow tidal channel by a single bold segmental arch having a span of 22 m and a height above high-water level of about 8.5 m. The overall length of the bridge with approaches is about 95 m, and the roadway measures 4.7 m in width between parapets 0.4 m in thickness. The masonry is of roughly-coursed boulder-rubble with copious pinnings, and the form of the arch is emphasised by long thin voussoir-slabs. Within the haunches of the arch there are circular recesses, 2.1 m in diameter; the central portion of the parapet is defined by small pyramidal blocks set above these recesses.
This site had been selected for a bridge as early as 1787, when it was identified as 'Intended Bridge' on an estate-plan by George Langlands (SRO, RHP 975/1). In 1790 John Campbell of Lochend, Chamberlain of the Breadalbane estate in Argyll, rejected a suggestion that the channel should be filled in, and obtained a plan from John Stevenson, an Oban contractor, for a bridge having a main arch of 21 .3 m span, high enough to allow the passage of small vessels, together with a smaller arch of 6.1 m span. The greater part of the estimated cost of £450 was to be divided between Lord Breadalbane, the Easdale Slate Company, and MacDougall of Ardencaple. Lord Breadalbane suggested that a professional architect should be consulted, and it is probable that the design was amended by Robert Mylne*. The bridge was constructed in 1791 by John Stevenson, who made a considerable financial loss for which he received partial compensation from Lord Breadalbane in 1795 (S.R.O., Breadalbane Collection, GD 112/48, Bridges Correspondence, 18 February, 18 April 1790; ibid., GD 112/9/3, Nether Lorn Rental, 1794-5).
RCAHMS 1975, visited June 1970
*During the period when the design of Clachan Bridge was being discussed, Mylne was preparing plans for extensive works at Taymouth. In his diary for 13 April 1790 there appears the entry 'Gave Earl of Bread Albane ... a small drawing for the side of a Road Bridge' (Richardson, A E, Robert Mylne, Architect and Engineer, 1733 to 1811 (1955), 137). The Earl's intention of consulting an architect is acknowledged by John Campbell in a letter of 18 April 1790, before news of the meeting with Mylne could have reached him from London. It seems probable that Mylne suggested the omission of the smaller arch in Stevenson's original design, and included the decorative recesses which may be compared with those used at Hexham (ibid., pl. 42). There is no evidence to support the attribution of the bridge to Thomas Telford (made by, e.g., Gillies, Netherlorn, 35).