Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Sonning Bridge

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Carries
  
Minor road

Locale
  
Sonning

Material
  
Brick

Height
  
4.32 m

Bridge type
  
Deck arch bridge

Heritage status
  
Listed building

Crosses
  
River Thames

Design
  
Arch

Opened
  
1775

Location
  
Sonning

Body of water
  
River Thames

Sonning Bridge i3getreadingcoukincomingarticle5874502eceAL

Similar
  
River Thames, Sonning Lock, Reading Bridge, Caversham Bridge, Caversham Lock

Sonning bridge jumping


Sonning Bridge is a road bridge across the River Thames at Sonning, Berkshire. It links Sonning with Sonning Eye (Oxfordshire) and crosses the Thames on the reach above Shiplake Lock, just short of Sonning Lock. It is a brick arch bridge completed in 1775, to replace an earlier wooden bridge. The bridge has been the subject of many paintings and prints by artists and is a Grade II listed building.

Contents

Sonning Bridge Mysterious door appears on Sonning Bridge Get Reading

The road extends to the two Sonning Backwater Bridges. One is over the backwater downstream of the weir and the other is over the millrace which is between the two main branches.

Sonning Bridge Sonning Bridge scourge of Reading commuters Get Reading

The Thames Path crosses the river at this point.

First time through sonning bridge


History

Sonning Bridge Sonning Bridge Wikipedia

The earliest definite reference to a "timber" bridge is around 1530, although there are claims that there was a wooden old Saxon bridge here before 1125. It was spoken of as being rebuilt in 1604, although throughout the 17th century there are reports of decay and the need for repair.

Sonning Bridge The Thames Path HenleyonThames to Tilehurst

A stone marker at the centre of the bridge is marked "B | O" (for the counties of Berkshire and Oxfordshire on each side of the river) with the vertical line indicating the exact boundary down the middle of the river. This is an ancient border which used to be between Wessex and Mercia.

Sonning Bridge Sonning Bridge WHERE THAMES SMOOTH WATERS GLIDE

The wooden backwater bridges were not replaced until the 20th century. At the beginning of the 20th century, there were complaints about the traction engines causing structural problems with the old wooden backwater bridges and disturbing the peace. In 2013 the frontage of a letterbox was placed on the downstream side of one of the supporting buttresses of the bridge by the artist Impro. The position of the box meant that if it had been functional it would only have been accessible to users on the river itself.

Sonning Bridge Sonning Bridge more images from the book 39The River Thames

It is rumoured that Dick Turpin used the bridge as an escape route from Berkshire to Oxfordshire to evade the authorities.

Traffic

Sonning Bridge has traffic lights because it is too narrow for traffic in both directions simultaneously. It is the only road bridge across the Thames between Henley-on-Thames and Reading. Thus there are large queues during the morning and evening rush hours. An additional bridge to relieve the traffic problems has been a subject of debate for many years, but nothing has been done to alleviate the problem and there are no current plans in this direction.

Adjacent buildings

Close to the bridge are the Great House, a hotel on the southern bank, the Mill at Sonning, now a theatre, on an island between two branches of the river, and the French Horn, another hotel on the northern bank.

References

Sonning Bridge Wikipedia