Grattan Bridge
{{Short description|Bridge over the River Liffey in Ireland}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox bridge
|bridge_name = Grattan Bridge
|native_name = Droichead Grattan
|native_name_lang = Irish
|image = Grattan Bridge in Dublin (15900289537).jpg
|image_size = 240
|alt = Grattan Bridge
|caption = Grattan Bridge
|other_name =
|crosses = River Liffey
|locale = Dublin, Ireland
|preceded = O'Donovan Rossa Bridge
|followed = Millennium Bridge
|designer = William Robinson (1677-78)
George Semple (1750s build)
Bindon Blood Stoney & Parke Neville (1870s widening)
|design =
|material = Stone, iron
|length =
|width =
|spans = 5 (2 semicircular & 3 elliptical arches)
|open = Built 1676 - Essex Bridge
Rebuilt 1753 - Essex Bridge
Rebuilt 1872 - Grattan Bridge
|coordinates = {{coord|53.3457|-6.2678|display=inline,title}}
}}
File:Dublin - Grattan Bridge - 110508 184024.jpg: half horse, half fish.]]
Grattan Bridge ({{irish place name|Droichead Grattan|no_translate=yes}}){{cite web|url = http://www.logainm.ie/en/1167144 | publisher = Irish Placenames Commission | work = Logainm.ie | title = Droichead Grattan / Grattan Bridge | accessdate = 8 December 2016 }} is a road bridge spanning the River Liffey in Dublin, Ireland, and joining Capel Street to Parliament Street and the south quays.
History
=1st Essex bridge of 1676=
The first bridge on this site was developed by Sir Humphrey Jervis in 1676 with William Robinson acting as adviser and contractor.{{cite web |title=Robinson, Sir William {{!}} Dictionary of Irish Biography |url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/robinson-sir-william-a7736 |website=www.dib.ie |access-date=31 August 2023 |language=en}}{{cite web|url = http://archiseek.com/2010/1874-grattan-bridge-dublin/ | publisher = Archiseek | title = Grattan Bridge, Dublin| date = 2010 | accessdate = 8 December 2016 }}{{Cite web|title=Overview {{!}} Grattan Bridge {{!}} Bridges of Dublin|url=http://www.bridgesofdublin.ie/bridges/grattan-bridge#:~:text=The%20first%20bridge%20here,%20Essex,of%20the%20city%27s%20south%20side.|access-date=2020-11-09|website=www.bridgesofdublin.ie}} It was named as Essex Bridge to honour Arthur Capell, 1st Earl of Essex, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland who had also provided the finance for the construction of the bridge. It joined several of Jervis' developments (including Capel Street and Jervis Street) to the opposite side of the river and to Dublin Castle.
Essex Bridge was an arched stone structure with seven piers, and apparently partly constructed from the ruined masonry of nearby St. Mary's Abbey, Dublin on the northside.{{cite report| url= http://www.berthamilton.com/13329.pdf| title= Project history of Dublin's River Liffey bridges| work= Bridge Engineering 156 Issue BE4| publisher= Phillips & Hamilton| page= 162| date= | access-date= 2005-06-14| archive-date= 2017-08-12| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170812060126/http://www.berthamilton.com/13329.pdf| url-status= dead}} In 1687 the bridge was damaged by a flood resulting in the loss of a hackney and two horses. The damage to the bridge was only partially repaired.{{cite book|author1=Lennon, Colm |author2=Montague, John | title = John Roque's Dublin: A guide to the Georgian City | place= Dublin | publisher = Royal Irish Academy| date= 2010}}
=2nd Essex bridge of 1753=
File:Essex Bridge, Dublin (built 1753-55) - replacing an earlier Essex Bridge.png
File:Essex Bridge (now Grattan Bridge).jpg
In 1751 the second most northerly pier collapsed and damaged the adjacent arches.
Between 1753 and 1755 the bridge was rebuilt by George Semple, to correct flood and other structural damage and as one of the first initiatives of the Wide Streets Commission. The new bridge included stone alcoves or niches on either side of the bridge in a similar manner to London Bridge.
In 1764, John Bush, an English traveller, visited Dublin and had the following to say about the bridge:
: "Over this river there are five bridges, one only of which deserves any notice, Essex-bridge, the lowest of all, which is really a well built, spacious and elegant bridge, with raised foot-paths, alcoves, and ballustrading, on the plan of Westminster-bridge, and about the same width, but not above one-fifth part so long" {{citation |url = https://archive.org/details/hiberniacuriosa00bush/page/12/mode/2up?view=theater |last=Bush |first=John |title=Hibernia Curiosa: A Letter from a Gentleman in Dublin to his Friend at Dover in Kent, Giving a general View of the Manners, Customs, Dispositions, &c. of the Inhabitants of Ireland. | year=1769 |publisher=London (W. Flexney); Dublin (J. Potts and J. Williams) |location=London | page = 12 }}
For much of the 18th century, Essex Bridge was the most easterly bridge on the Liffey and marked the furthest point upriver to which ships with masts could travel.{{cite web|url = http://www.templebardoc.com/index.cfm/action/article/sec_id/18084B72-4904-4AAE-A7CA661E59FF3A67/page_id/45950715-1471-4E54-B9A0AA2D7C65B8FA/userid/0F32FB9A-BAEE-4CC7-8B86E616888D42B1.htm | title = Local History - Temple Bar | publisher = Templebardoc.com | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20061230031233/http://www.templebardoc.com/index.cfm/action/article/sec_id/18084B72-4904-4AAE-A7CA661E59FF3A67/page_id/45950715-1471-4E54-B9A0AA2D7C65B8FA/userid/0F32FB9A-BAEE-4CC7-8B86E616888D42B1.htm |archivedate = 30 December 2006 }} Many ships needed to travel this far upriver in order to berth in front of the old Custom House, the centre of merchant activity in the city from 1707 until 1791.
During this construction, some original features were removed, including the equestrian statue of George I, by John van Nost the Elder,{{cite book| author = De Courcy, John | title = Anna Liffey. The river of Dublin| place = Dublin | publisher = O'Brien Press| date= 1988}} which was moved in 1798 to the gardens of the Mansion House. In 1937 it was bought by the Barber Institute of Fine Arts in Birmingham, in front of which it still stands as of 2023.
=Grattan Bridge of 1874=
From 1872, the bridge was further remodelled (on Westminster Bridge in London) by Parke Neville with further modifications by Bindon Blood Stoney, being widened and flattened with cast iron supports extended out from the stonework so as to carry pavements on either side of the roadway. The bridge was (and is still) lit by ornate lamp standards also in cast iron.{{cite web |title=CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, ESSEX BRIDGE Dictionary of Irish Architects - |url=https://www.dia.ie/works/view/35007/building/CO.+DUBLIN%2C+DUBLIN%2C+ESSEX+BRIDGE |website=www.dia.ie |access-date=21 June 2023}}
The bridge was reopened as Grattan Bridge in 1874, being named after Henry Grattan MP (1746-1820).
Later development
From 2002, Dublin City Council undertook a reconstruction of the bridge deck,{{cite web|url = http://www.bridgesofdublin.ie/bridges/grattan-bridge/timeline#skip-to-content | publisher = Dublin City Council | website = bridgesofdublin.ie |title = Grattan Bridge - Timeline | accessdate = 13 July 2020 }} with granite paving for the footpaths and a set of benches with wooden seats and toughened glass backs.{{cite web|url = https://www.irishtimes.com/news/council-to-move-kiosks-as-book-market-idea-fails-1.954634 | publisher = Irish Times | website = irishtimes.com | title = Council to move kiosks as book market idea fails | date = 13 August 2007 | accessdate = 13 July 2020 }}
As part of what was intended to be a "European-style book market", in 2004 several temporary kiosks (prefabricated in Spain) were also controversially built on the bridge. Originally intended to create "a contemporary version of an inhabited bridge, such as the Ponte Vecchio in Florence",{{cite web|url = https://www.irishtimes.com/news/liffey-kiosks-are-visual-vandalism-council-told-1.1304891 | publisher = Irish Times | website = irishtimes.com | title = Liffey kiosks are 'visual vandalism', council told | date = 13 February 2004}} these kiosks were later removed.{{cite web|url = http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/property/2008/0403/1207113948044.html | title = Grattan Bridge kiosks gone | website = irishtimes.com | publisher = Irish Times | date = 3 April 2008}}
Nomenclature
As is a tradition among Dubliners, the name used locally for the bridge will vary from Capel Street Bridge, to Grattan Bridge and the original Essex Bridge.
Gallery
{{Commons category}}
File:Grattan Bridge (Essex Bridge), Dublin. Dusk. 28 March 2022.jpg|The bridge at dusk
File:Grattan Bridge Dublin 01.jpg|Looking east from the bridge along Wellington Quay
File:Grattan Bridge - Dublin - panoramio.jpg|The eastern side of the bridge, looking north towards Capel Street
File:Grattan Bridge Hippocampus.jpg|Detail of the Hippocampus figures along the bridge
File:Grattan Bridge Plaque.jpg|Plaque on the western side of the bridge. Commemorating the renaming of the bridge from Essex Bridge to Grattan Bridge.
File:Statue of George I on Essex Bridge, Dublin.jpg|Illustration of Essex Bridge and the statue of George I, taken from Brooking's 1720s map of Dublin, prior to Semple's rebuild of the 1750s
References
{{reflist}}
{{Dublin Liffey Bridges}}
Category:Bridges in Dublin (city)