Eaton Footbridge Explained

Bridge Name:Eaton Footbridge
Carries:Footpath
Crosses:River Thames
Locale:Oxfordshire
Material:Wood
Height:9feet
Open:1936
Coordinates:51.6855°N -1.6443°W

Eaton Footbridge is a wooden footbridge across the River Thames in Oxfordshire, England. It is situated on the reach above Grafton Lock.

The bridge was built in 1936 on the site of the last flash lock on the river which was in a weir known as Hart's Weir. The weir and lock, the last remaining on the Thames, were removed that year leaving the mooring cuts which are still in use. There was a lock keeper at the weir and a walkway across which is the precedent for the current bridge. The flash lock was notoriously difficult and Thacker quoted Henry Taunt: "I recollect one winter in passing this very weir, when lying on my back in the boat to get through, scraping a fair amount of skin off my nose and face though contact with the bridge whilst going under it."[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Thacker, Fred. S. . 1968 . 1920 . The Thames Highway . II: Locks and Weirs . Newton Abbott . . SBN 7153-4233-9 . 48.