History in Structure

Blue Bridge

A Grade II Listed Building in Stantonbury, Milton Keynes

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.0558 / 52°3'20"N

Longitude: -0.8011 / 0°48'4"W

OS Eastings: 482297

OS Northings: 240389

OS Grid: SP822403

Mapcode National: GBR D01.297

Mapcode Global: VHDT0.2LBD

Plus Code: 9C4X354X+8G

Entry Name: Blue Bridge

Listing Date: 23 May 2001

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1246101

English Heritage Legacy ID: 487607

ID on this website: 101246101

Location: Bancroft Park, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, MK13

County: Milton Keynes

Civil Parish: Stantonbury

Traditional County: Buckinghamshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Buckinghamshire

Church of England Parish: Stantonbury and Willen

Church of England Diocese: Oxford

Tagged with: Bridge Accommodation bridge

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Description



SP 84 SW
891/7/10001
23-MAY-01

MILLERS WAY
Wolverton
Blue Bridge

II

Railway over bridge. 1834-5 for the London and Birmingham Railway, chief engineer Robert Stephenson; extended 1878-82 by the London and North Western Railway. The original bridge is built of coursed, squared, rock-faced limestone and blue engineering brick. Three elliptical arches with stone imposts and blue brick arch rings. Stone facing to the bridge up to a continuous brick band supporting brick parapet walls and part original stone and part concrete coping. The extension bridge is built to a larger scale with twin segmental arches with a band over, flanked by pilasters, and with a continuous stone roll mould which is stepped down with the parapet a the far end of the bridge.
History: The London and Birmingham Railway was opened in this section in September 1838. It became a part of the London and North Western Railway in 1846. The original line was engineered by Robert Stephenson but this bridge, built as an accommodation bridge for Stacey Hill farm, is not built of brick as many of the major structures were, but of stone probably taken from the cutting it spans. The bridge was extended in the period 1878-82 when Wolverton works were by-passed by a new main line and it is this later bridge which continues to cross the running lines of the West Coast Main Line. The whole bridge is now out of use having been by-passed by the adjacent Millers Way bridge in the late C20. Blue Bridge is an interesting example of a first phase L & B bridge developed in a second phase and because all the first phase bridges over the running lines were rebuilt when the line was electrified in 1958. It is thus possibly a unique survivor of a minor London and Birmingham Railway accommodation bridge from the 1830s.
References: M A Bird, The Development of Wolverton, Buckinghamshire from Railway Town to New City (1838-1974), Goldsmiths College dissertation, 1974 (Wolverton Library).
Bill West, The Trainmakers, The Story of Wolverton Works, 1838-1981.
Bill West, Wolverton Works in Camera, 1838-1993.
Information from Milton Keynes Borough Council.

Listing NGR: SP8229740389

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