Category Archives: Transport

Forgotten Images of Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been

Tower Bridge was designed to reconcile the conflicting interests of road and river traffic at a time when London was the world’s most populous city and also its greatest port.

But before the globally famous design we know today was chosen, a host of eminent Victorian architects and engineers proposed some very different solutions to the problem of allowing increased road traffic without impeding large vessels on the river.

In 1876 designs for a new Thames crossing were invited by the Corporation of London. F.J. Palmer submitted this plan in 1877.

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been - Design by F.J Palmer 1877

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been – Design by F.J Palmer 1877

Palmer’s bridge, inspired by earlier designs, had two moveable platforms at either end of the bridge and it was intended that at each one a roadway would always be in place, even when vessels were passing through.

Sir Joseph Bazalgette, chief commissioner to the Metropolitan Board of Works, proposed a series of designs for a very high-level bridge that would have allowed shipping to pass beneath.

As the architect of London’s great sewer, the Victoria & Albert Embankments, Putney, Hammersmith and Battersea bridges and much else, Bazalgette’s proposals were perhaps the most credible of the 50 different designs submitted.

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been - Design for a lattice girder bridge by Sir Joseph Bazalgette 1878

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been – Design for a lattice girder bridge by Sir Joseph Bazalgette 1878

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been - Design for a cantilever bridge by Sir Joseph Bazalgette 1878

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been – Design for a cantilever bridge by Sir Joseph Bazalgette 1878

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been - Design for a single span bridge by Sir Joseph Bazalgette 1878

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been – Design for a single span bridge by Sir Joseph Bazalgette 1878

But all three of Bazalgette’s designs would have required an enormous spiral ramp on the southern bank of the Thames to enable traffic to descend at a reasonable gradient.

Sir Joseph Bazalgette's proposed spiral southern approach gradient for Tower Bridge

Sir Joseph Bazalgette’s proposed spiral southern approach gradient for Tower Bridge

Other proposals included:

  • Various other low-level bridges with openings in the roadways
  • A low level bridge with an uninterrupted roadway ( not acceptable to shipping and wharf owners).
  • A high-level bridge with hydraulic lifts to raise and lower traffic.
  • A tunnel with hydraulic lifts and a tunnel with inclined approaches.
  • A ferry (seen as impractical on account of delays caused by fog and frost).

In 1878 Horace Jones, Chief Architect and Surveyor to the Corporation of London and one of the judges on the panel assigned to choose the final design, must have been pleasantly surprised to discover that his own design for a low level bridge with twin drawbridges (bascules) was considered to be the front runner.

Jones wasn’t the first person to propose a lifting bridge, philosopher Jeremy Bentham‘s brother General Samuel Bentham had proposed a bascule bridge as far back as 1801.

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been - Design by Horace Jones 1878

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been – Design by Horace Jones 1878

Glasgow based engineers Bell & Miller were not happy with the officially sanctioned Jones design and introduced their own Bill into Parliament in an attempt to build their design for a “duplex” bridge.

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been - Design by Bell & Miller 1884

Tower Bridge as it Might Have Been – Design by Bell & Miller 1884

Bell & Miller’s Bill failed and so this gigantic pair of “locks” closed by swing bridges and set into a hexagonal roadway were never built.

Instead, in 1886 work began on the Jones plan, after substantial revisions made in collaboration with James Wolfe-Barry. Jones died one month into the construction and so it fell to Wolfe-Barry to complete the bridge in its current form (Jones had wanted to clad the steel structure in brick rather than stone).

The final design by Horace Jones and James Wolfe Barry 1885

The final design by Horace Jones and James Wolfe Barry 1885

Eight years, and the loss of ten lives, later, Tower Bridge opened in all its steel and stone magnificence on the 30th June 1894.

The Tower Bridge from a drawing by C.W.Wyllie 1894

The Tower Bridge from a drawing by C.W.Wyllie 1894

All the above images come from an original copy of The Tower Bridge – Its history and construction from the date of the earliest project to the present time by J.E. Tuit published by The Engineer, London, in 1894.The book contains many other potential designs as well as building plans for the bridge and images of its construction.

This is a rare book and a copy will set you back around £100-£150 but it has been scanned and uploaded by Unz.org so you can read it for free here.

The author of this blog is a fully qualified and insured City of Westminster Tour Guide who runs unique walking tours and private tours in London.

All Public Walking Tours are bookable here via Eventbrite.

I also offer Private Tours, Private Events and provide Consultancy Services for media and education professionals in London. You can read Reviews of  Walks and see some recent projects here. Please feel free to contact me about any of these services.

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Advertising Advertising on London Underground

The long and splendid history of advertising on London Underground is about to be celebrated in a new exhibition at London Transport Museum.

Poster Art 150 – London Underground’s Greatest Designs opens on 15th Feb and will run until October. The exhibition will feature 150 of the greatest Underground posters ever produced.

This poster has made the cut, it is one of my all-time favourites but I have never managed to identify all the characters depicted.

Underground to Wood Lane

Underground to Wood Lane, F.C. Herrick, for Underground Electric Railways Co. of London Ltd, 1920

Produced in 1920 for the International Advertising Exhibition at the White City, London, the poster features a host of brand characters. Some, such as the Michelin Man and Johnny Walker are still with us today, others are harder to identify. For example, is the small dog in the foreground Nipper of HMV fame, or is it the dog owned by Rowntree’s Cocoa-Nibs? I assume the young woman with the camera is the Kodak Girl, but who is that pixelated female figure in the distance?

Click on the image for a full-size zoomable version.

The V&A catalogue entry for this poster offers a few clues to help identify some of the characters. This entry also includes a reference to a fascinating event that I hadn’t heard of before. Apparently the International Advertising Exhibition featured a: “‘Pageant of Publicity’, a procession through London of such brand characters as Bubbles, the Kodak Girl, the Michelin Man, the Rowntree’s Cocoa-Nibs children and many others, some of whom are depicted here.”

I haven’t managed to track down a single image of this pageant or discover its route, can anyone help?

The artist of this poster, Frederick Charles Herrick (1887-1970), also produced a host of other classic posters for the Underground Group and London Transport. You can buy a reproduction of this poster and many others from the London Transport Museum Shop.

The author of this blog is a fully qualified and insured City of Westminster Tour Guide who runs unique walking tours and private tours in London.

All Public Walking Tours are bookable here via Eventbrite.

I also offer Private Tours, Private Events and provide Consultancy Services for media and education professionals in London. You can read Reviews of  Walks and see some recent projects here. Please feel free to contact me about any of these services.

If you liked this post, or found it useful, please share it.

Get TfL Oyster Refunds Automatically

A brilliant new refund service has just been launched for Oyster card users.

TFL Refund offers anyone with an online Oyster account a hassle free opportunity of claiming every single refund they are due totally automatically.

Every time your tube journey is delayed by more than 15 minutes you get a refund without needing to do anything at all.

TfL Refund

TfL Refund

Devin Smith - The software developer behind TfL Refund

Devin Smith – The software developer behind TfL Refund

The TfL Oyster refunds service, www.tflrefund.co.uk,  is the brainchild of software developer Devin Smith. Devin explains how it all works:

“I’ve spent many a time delayed on the tube only to find making a claim time consuming a complicated, so I created some software to get all the details from my Oyster online account and fill in the blanks, I discovered that I could use the journey history to tell me when I was late and fill in all the other sections of the claim form. I then created a robot that ran automatically so I never had to lift a finger to get my refunds, I just got the email form TfL when my system had submitted the claim.

Rob, a friend of mine said I should ‘stick it on the internet’ as it was rather a good idea.”

You can check out whether you are due a refund for free or sign up for the fully automated service for just £2.00 a year. No other similar service is fully automated.

You need to give TfL Refund your Oyster password and username which may concern some people. But their privacy policy is robust,  the company is legitimately registered, has a proper address and has traded for a number of years.  Devin himself has previously worked for major clients such as Linklaters, Tesco.com and The Houses of Parliament. Check out his “About” page,  it all looks totally legit and on the level to me.

I signed up myself  yesterday, hoping to cash in on delayed journeys during the London Olympics, unfortunately that won’t work. TFL say that any Olympic related delays do not qualify for refunds under their Customer Charter. All the same I’ll be very glad to claim all the refunds that are owed to me during the rest of the year, something I would never have been bothered to do before!

Many thanks to all those who commented on my Face Book page yesterday in a discussion about the service, including Devin himself and some of his satisfied customers.

I have no affiliation or connection to Devlin Smith or TfL Refund at all and this is certainly not a sponsored post, I just really like the service and believe it deserves support.

The author of this blog is a fully qualified and insured City of Westminster Tour Guide who runs unique walking tours and private tours in London.

All Public Walking Tours are bookable here via Eventbrite.

I also offer Private Tours, Private Events and provide Consultancy Services for media and education professionals in London. You can read Reviews of  Walks and see some recent projects here. Please feel free to contact me about any of these services.

If you liked this post, or found it useful, please share it.