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Following the launch of trove.scot in February 2025 we are now planning the retiral of some of our webservices. Canmore will be switched off on 24th June 2025. Information about the closure can be found on the HES website: Retiral of HES web services | Historic Environment Scotland

Archaeology Notes

Event ID 766435

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Archaeology Notes

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/766435

NO32NE 17 39162 27844

Location formerly entered as NO 390 292 to NO 395 263.

For (successor and present) Dundee, Tay Railway Bridge (adjacent to W), see NO32NE 11.

For lists of related buildings and shipwreck, see under NO32NE 11.

REFERENCE: Scottish Record Office:

Picture Postcards by Valentine, Dundee.

Fallen Girders from river level.

Broken piers from bridge.

1879 GD1/558/3 AND 4.

Engineer: Sir Thomas Bouch (Old Bridge)

Opened 1878.

(Undated) information in NMRS.

Trusses from this bridge were re-used in Victoria Bridge, Caputh (NO 0889 3956), for which see NO03NE 26.

J R Hume 1977.

This bridge was designed by Thomas Bouch and built for the North British Rly; construction was started by Charles de Bergue and completed by Hopkins, Gilkes & Co of Middlesborough. It measured 10638 ft (3243.3m) in length, comprised 86 spans and carried the single track 77 ft (23.5m) above high water. The bridge opened for traffic on 1 June 1878 and failed under pressure of wind in a gale on the night of 28 December 1879; faults and defects in design, construction and maintenance were revealed by the subsequent enquiry.

M Smith 1994.

Underwater remote sensing (using side-scan sonar and echo-sounding) has revealed a series of columnar bodies, broken into segments, lying on the riverbed at the S end of the bridge. With the aid of archive material, these have been interpreted as the remains of the eleven twin brick uprights (numbered 4 to 14 from the S) that survived the disaster but were demolished after the construction of the new bridge. These piers (together with nos. 1-3 to the S) supported the southernmost 1550 ft (472m) of the structure, the only part that was built to Bouch's original plan.

R W Duck and W M Dow 1994.

This bridge formerly carried the Edinburgh-Aberdeen main line of the North British Rly. across the estuary of the River Tay between the parish of Forgan (North-East Fife District, Fife Region) and the City Parish of Dundee (City of Dundee District, Tayside Region and former county of Angus), to the S and N respectively.

Information from RCAHMS (RJCM), 5 January 1996.

Site recorded by Maritime Fife during the Coastal Assessment Survey for Historic Scotland, Fife Ness to Newburgh 1996.

The location assigned to this record defines the midpoint of its length. The available map evidence indicates that it extended from NO c. 39056 29226 to NO c. 39570 26345.

The piers of this bridge extend down the E side of the successor (present) bridge between NO 38993 29160 and NO 39566 26364.

Information from RCAHMS (RJCM), 21 April 2006.

People and Organisations

References