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The Coalbrookdale Bridge was the first bridge made of the new material iron. It was erected in 1779 over the river Severn by the local industrialist Abraham Darby III. His ancestor the quaker Abraham Darby I invented the coke iron production technique, which triggered of the Great Iron Revolution in the 18th Century. The region around Coalbrookdale and the Darby family are therefore very important for the Industrial Revolution in the 18th as well as the 19th Century.  
The Coalbrookdale Bridge was the first bridge made of the new material iron. It was erected in 1779 over the river Severn by the local industrialist Abraham Darby III. His ancestor the quaker Abraham Darby I invented the coke iron production technique, which triggered of the Great Iron Revolution in the 18th Century. The region around Coalbrookdale and the Darby family are therefore very important for the Industrial Revolution in the 18th as well as the 19th Century.  
Today the Coalbrookdale Bridge remains a symbol for the British Industrial history and it is also on the list of world heritage sites in Britain.
Today the Coalbrookdale Bridge remains a symbol for the British Industrial history and it is also on the list of world heritage sites in Britain.


 
[[CoalbrookdaleBridge_1789_2.jpg]]


Sources:
Sources:

Revision as of 19:54, 1 December 2010

The Coalbrookdale Bridge was the first bridge made of the new material iron. It was erected in 1779 over the river Severn by the local industrialist Abraham Darby III. His ancestor the quaker Abraham Darby I invented the coke iron production technique, which triggered of the Great Iron Revolution in the 18th Century. The region around Coalbrookdale and the Darby family are therefore very important for the Industrial Revolution in the 18th as well as the 19th Century. Today the Coalbrookdale Bridge remains a symbol for the British Industrial history and it is also on the list of world heritage sites in Britain.

CoalbrookdaleBridge_1789_2.jpg

Sources:

http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/371

http://www.ironbridge.org.uk/our_attractions/coalbrookdale_museum_of_iron/history/

Müller, Werner.dtv-Atlas Baukunst. Band 2 Baugeschichte von der Romantik bis zur Gegenwart, München: dtv, 2005,p.513.