Swin Bridge

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2017}}

{{Use British English|date=November 2017}}

File:Skew Bridge - geograph.org.uk - 60485.jpg

Swin Bridge (also 'Cockfield Bridge' or 'Haggerleases Bridge') is the local name for a skew arch bridge in County Durham.{{Cite web

|title=History - Part I : "Then"

|url=http://www.haggerleases.co.uk/history_1.html#sdl

|publisher=The Haggerleases Light Railway

}} It was built in 1830 for the Haggerleases branch of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, crossing the River Gaunless at Cockfield.{{Cite web

|title=Haggerleases Skew Bridge

|url=http://sine.ncl.ac.uk/view_structure_information.asp?struct_id=2798

|publisher=Structural Images of the North East

}}{{Cite book

|title=Stephensons' Britain

|last=Beckett |first=Derrick

|year=1984

|publisher=David & Charles

|isbn=0-7153-8269-1

|pages=48–49

}} It is important as an early example of the masonry arch skew bridge, and the first used to carry a railway.

Skew bridges

{{details|Skew bridge}}

Most arch bridges are constructed at right-angles to the obstruction which they cross, this being the easiest and strongest mode of building. If the obstacle runs at an angle to the new roadway though, the bridge must either have its span made wider to cross the obstacle diagonally, or else the arch must itself be skewed, so that a narrower arch can cross the obstacle more closely. A skew bridge raises the difficulty that the sideways forces in the arch are no longer acting at right-angles to their abutments. If the skew is excessive, the force across the face of the abutment may be enough to make the bridge unstable and to slip or collapse sideways.

Skew bridges had been built previously, although the maths behind their theoretical design was still in its infancy. Wooden models were generally constructed to show to the stonemasons how their masonry was intended to be laid out. The first popular theoretical technique for their design was Chapman's 'spiral method', as described in Rees's Cyclopædia. This was based on work he had done for the Kildare Canal in Ireland in 1787,.{{cite book

|title = The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge

|editor = Long, G.

|volume = XXII (Sigonio – Steam-vessel)

|publisher = Charles Knight & Co

|location = London

|edition = 1st

|year = 1842

|page = 87

|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ZgeY7jRx4GcC&pg=PA87

}} In this, the arch is considered as a series of arch slices, parallel to the arch faces and at an angle to the abutments. The arch soffit (the curved underside) is drawn out into a flat plane, a parallelogram grid drawn on this, and then these diagonal lines (each one representing an arch slice) transferred to the centring of the constructed arch. This method had been applied to the design of Finlay Bridge at Naas,{{cite book

|title = The Industrial Archaeology of Northern Ireland

|first = William Alan |last = McCutcheon

|year = 1984

|page = 16

|publisher = Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press |isbn = 0-8386-3125-8

|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3-96ic2OHB8C&pg=PA16

}} employing an arch barrel based on a circular segment that is smaller than a semicircle – also a feature of the low-arched Swin Bridge. This method was later described in standard texts on railway masonry, such as Nicholson.{{cite book

|title = The Guide to Railway Masonry, containing a Complete Treatise on the Oblique Arch

|first = Peter |last = Nicholson

|editor-first = R |editor-last = Cowen

|publisher = E. & F. N. Spon |location = London

|edition = 3rd

|year = 1860

|orig-year = First published 1839

|page = Preface p. 10

|no-pp = y

|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=0WwPAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA10

}}

Only one skew-arch had been used on a railway before: the Rainhill Skew Bridge on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. This was designed by George Stephenson, although it was an overbridge carrying the turnpike road across the railway. The Rainhill bridge has achieved a fame perhaps out of proportion to its innovation. It was neither the first skew bridge, nor an innovative new design technique by Stephenson, being based on Chapman's spiral technique.

Construction

The designer of the bridge has been given as either the railway's civil engineer Thomas Storey{{Cite web

|title=Railway Bridge over Gaunless, Hagger Leazes; Listed building (Cockfield)

|url=http://www.keystothepast.info/durhamcc/K2P.nsf/K2PDetail?readform&PRN=D13227

|publisher=Durham County Council

|series=Keys to the Past

}}{{cite book

|title = The Origins of Railway Enterprise: The Stockton and Darlington Railway 1821–1863

|first = Maurice W. |last = Kirby

|publisher = Cambridge University Press |location = Cambridge

|edition = 1st

|year = 1993

|page = 185

|isbn = 0-521-38445-1

|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=xVY1VL-rA1gC&pg=PA185

}} or as George Stephenson, the railway's overall engineer.{{#tag:ref|As the same source also claims that the bridge has since been demolished, it is perhaps not entirely accurate about this bridge.|group=note}}

The first contractors engaged to build the bridge were Thomas Worth and John Batie, the agreed price being £327. After 3½ months, having laid the foundations, they abandoned the work, over concerns about the stability of the skew arch. James Wilson of Pontefract was next engaged, for a payment to be £420. Wilson is commemorated by a dated inscribed panel on the north side of the bridge.

The bridge has an unusually great skew angle of 63°,A conventional bridge would be 0° requiring a large skew span of {{convert|42|ft|m}} for a bridge with a relatively small clear span of only {{convert|18|ft|m}}.{{cite book

|title = Civil Engineering Heritage: Northern England

|first = Robert William |last = Rennison

|publisher = Thomas Telford

|location = London

|edition = 2nd

|year = 1996

|orig-year = First published 1981

|page = 84

|isbn = 0-7277-2518-1

|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Bv2BrOMo8cIC&pg=PA84

}} As the bridge is in open countryside and the line is curved near this point, it is unclear why such a difficult and expensive bridge was chosen, rather than merely moving the bridge to a less-skewed position a few yards to the North. The arch is also quite shallow, with a rise of only {{convert|7|ft|m}}. The railbed width is {{convert|12|ft|m}} and the bridge is {{convert|85|ft|m}} long overall.

Construction is in local gritstone throughout, coursed and squared with ashlar dressings.{{Cite book

|title=History of The North Eastern Railway, 1914;

|first=W.W. |last=Tomlinson

|edition=2nd ed. K. Hoole

|location=Newton Abbott

|year=1967

|pages=185–

}} It has a segmental arch with chamfered voussoirs and a roll-moulded dripstring above this, merging with a similar dripstring at rail-bed level.{{Cite web

|title=Haggerleases Skew Bridge, arch face

|url=http://sine.ncl.ac.uk/view_image.asp?digital_doc_id=4649

|publisher=Structural Images of the North East

}} In typical S&DR style, the ends of the parapets sweep out to round scroll-like piers, capped with a low ogee-domed coping.

It was widely predicted by both engineers and laymen that such a structure would collapse when the wooden centring was removed, but on removal the bridge settled less than half an inch. It has outlived the railway and remains in excellent condition today. It is now grade II listed.

References

{{Commons category|Swin Bridge}}

{{Reflist|group=note|liststyle=lower-roman}}

{{Reflist|refs=

{{Cite book

|title=British Railway Bridges & Viaducts

|section=1830: Haggerleases Bridge, Butterknowle, County Durham

|first=Martin |last=Smith

|year=1994

|publisher=Ian Allan

|isbn=0-7110-2273-9

|pages=19–20

}}

}}

{{coord|54.625536|-1.819242|type:landmark_region:GB-DUR|display=title}}

{{authority control}}

Category:Railway bridges in County Durham

Category:Skew arch bridges

Category:Stockton and Darlington Railway

Category:River Gaunless

Category:Grade II listed bridges

Category:Cockfield, County Durham