Author: Gray, R
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Gray, R
The Structural Engineer, Volume 15, Issue 5, 1937
T0 describe German bridge construction before British engineers, in whose country it was that the art of bridging first reached high development, is no light undertaking. It was in England that the first iron bridge in the world was built; the famous cast-iron structure over the Severn which was erected in 1776- 1779 and established its gifted designer, Darby, as founder and first teacher of bridge engineering in steel. It was in Great Britain again, that the magnificent great Britannia Bridge was thrown across the Menai Straits in 1846-1850 and has now served its purpose for close on a hundred years without ever being excelled in the severe beauty of its lines, standing as a classic monument to the skill, in design and construction, of British engineers. This country saw also, in 1882-1890, the building of the mighty bridge across the Firth of Forth which still staggers engineers throughout the world by the boldness of its conception and the mass of its structure. Dr. Ing. G. Schaper