See It on A Postcard's Thursday Postcard Hunt looking for long and curvy bridges
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PHQ Card - 2015: Bridges
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The Peace Bridge curves and snakes over the River Foyle joining the two communities of Derry/Londonderry in Northern Ireland and opened in 2011. The Protestant Unionists on the east bank will refer to the city as Londonderry and the Catholic nationalists on the west side as Derry. The BBC gets around this problem in their news broadcasts by always referring to it as Derry/Londonderry. The bridge however has been a great success, becoming a beloved part of the city and it features in New Year and numerous other celebrations. Even the Dalai Lama has visited and walked across it.
Now travelling by postcard over the water to the city that is sometimes jokingly called 'the second capital of Ireland', Liverpool. Many of those emigrants from Ireland may have worked on the building of its Overhead Railway and definitely worked in the docks.
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Liverpool Overhead Railway Poster
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As well as carrying millions of passengers Liverpool's overhead railway was a tourist attraction, this poster from the the 1930s invites a visit for "unrivaled views of Dockland Shipping"
Originally opened in 1893 it was the first
overhead railway in the world to be operated by electricity. Rather ironically one of the factors of its eventually decline was due to the corrosion of the corrugated iron decking caused by the steam operated Docks Railway plying its trade underneath some of the sections. The cost of repair was too much and it closed in 1956. Once known as the 'Dockers Umbrella' its 7 miles (11km) was demolished in 1957/8. I have two photo cards of the railway but only this one has a postbox. Spot it near the link bridge.
4 comments:
The Northern Ireland bridge is very "handsome".
You really found a curvy one!
Thanks for pointing at the postbox :)
The Derry/Londonderry bridge is fantastic. One could really increase their step count walking along its curves. I can imagine the uproar over the demolition of the Overhead Railway.
That first is has a unique look to it. I love the old cards!
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