For those stumbling across this title for the first time, it is a collection of stories, musings and memories from both myself and people who live in and around Teesside. This is more than just a straightforward history book; it is a volume that examines the cultural significance of the bridge and its impact on the local community.It features over 50 original photographs of the bridge and the Middlesbrough area and, perhaps most importantly, it conveys the bridge’s unique narrative which spans from modernism to the modern-day.
Click here to order your copy of the book today!
The book is 92 pages, printed in full colour and priced at 9.95. Only 100 copies of the second edition will be printed.
THIS BOOK WILL BE SHIPPED WEDNESDAY 29TH OCTOBER 2014
THIS BOOK IS ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE UK. A KINDLE VERSION IS AVAILABLE FOR OVERSEAS CUSTOMERS.
To celebrate my upcoming book on The Tees Transporter Bridge I’ve put together a free sample for your reading pleasure. In this extract: History, Heritage and Home, Bridge Education, Learning and Events Officer Tosh Warwick offers his thoughts on the iconic nature of the structure. This extract also explains why the bridge was important to the war effort during World War One.
Click here to view your free book sample.
Click here to pre-order your copy today. Only 100 copies of the first edition will be printed.
THIS BOOK IS ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE UK
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My new book about the Tees Transporter Bridge is due for release on Monday 23rd June 2014. It is a collection of stories, musings and memories from both myself and people who live in and around Teesside. This is more than just a straightforward history book; it is a volume that examines the cultural significance of the bridge and its impact on the local community. Furthermore, it conveys the bridge’s unique narrative which spans from modernism to the modern-day.
The book is 96 pages, printed in full colour and priced at £9.95. Only 100 copies of the first edition will be printed.
Click here to pre-order your copy.
THIS BOOK IS ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE UK
]]>It’s not a very big secret that I’m a bit of a fan of bridges, especially of those perched on the river Tees. Usually I can be found writing odes to, and books about, the blue one – the Tees Transporter Bridge – but today marks the 80th anniversary of another of Teesside’s most iconic bridges: The Tees Newport Bridge. Furthermore, an announcement has been made that the Transporter Bridge Visitor Experience Project, supported by a £2.6m Heritage Lottery Fund, has uncovered historic photographs that will shed new light on the Tees Newport Bridge.
Over 100 photographs of the Tees Newport Bridge dating from the early 1930s showcase the landmark’s development from the construction of approach roads that saw the demolition of nearby housing towers to the structure’s anchor span being lowered. Other images show numerous iron and steel works and workers along the banks of the River Tees, the historic boundary between Durham and Yorkshire.
The unique images, many from historic Middlesbrough-based photography firm W. Haig Parry, were uncovered in Teesside Archives’ yet to be catalogued Cleveland Bridge Collection by Tosh Warwick from the Tees Transporter Bridge Visitor Experience Project, and Teesside University Graduate and Tees Valley Community Foundation Intern Jonathon Hooton. The pair are currently carrying out research for the upcoming ‘Bridging the World’ exhibition at the Transporter Bridge Visitor Centre, which celebrates the area’s bridge building heritage and features superstructures including Sydney Harbour and Victoria Falls Bridges.
The photographs, which will appear in the upcoming exhibition at the Transporter Bridge Visitor Centre in Middlesbrough, will also feature in ‘The History of the Tees Newport Bridge: The First 80 Years, 1934-2014’, a new book due for release in the coming months by Middlesbrough Council marking the Newport Bridge’s 80th anniversary.
‘The Green One and the Blue One’ art exhibition celebrating the Newport and Transporter Bridges will also take place at The Heritage Gallery, Cargo Fleet from this Friday (17:30-19:30) to mark the 80th birthday of Dorman Long’s Newport Bridge.
Often overshadowed by its illustrious neighbour the Transporter Bridge, the Newport crossing was the first vertical lift bridge of its type in Britain and largest in the World when opened by the Duke and Duchess of York on 28 February 1934. Owing to a decline in river traffic on the Tees the need to lift the Bridge declined and the structure is now pinned down with the last elevation having taken place in 1990.
Tosh Warwick is appealing for members of the public to contribute their memories of the Newport Bridge for inclusion in the forthcoming history of the Bridge. Contributions can be emailed to [email protected] or in writing to Tosh Warwick, Tees Newport Bridge Memories, 3rd Floor, PO Box 502, Vancouver House, Gurney Street, Middlesbrough, TS1 9FW.
All images in this post are reproduced with the permission of Teesside Archives and Middlesbrough Council.
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Although my next book is about London ghost signs I seem to be developing some kind of spider sense when I go anywhere else, as I stumbled across a range of ghost signs today in Middlesbrough. This one was by far my favourite and definitely deserves a post of its own. It’s in remarkably good condition.
]]>In case you haven’t noticed, I have a somewhat curious obsession with bridges, particularly bridges on the Tees. After writing an article about a trip up one of the best-known bridges of the North East: The Transporter, I was approached by their events officer to host a seminar about the cultural importance of the bridge. During the preliminery meeting I was lucky enough to get my hands on a copy of a book that had been produced for the bridge’s centenary – Everything Flows: A Celebration of the Transporter Bridge in Poetry.
Expertly edited, this book delivers individually poignant poems and also works collectively as a weaving narrative – pulling together the threads of a complicated local history. Featuring both bold imagery and endearing colloquialisms, these compositions are a heady cocktail of memory, nostalgia and regional pride – but there’s no sugar coating here. Although there is ample reference to the Saturday afternoon football cheers reverberating from Riverside Stadium (situated a stone’s throw from the structure) the bridge’s unfortunate reputation as an iconic suicide spot is also sensitively explored.
For those unfamiliar with the bridge itself, it is one of the few remaining transporter bridges in the world and is one of the most prominent emblems of the Teesside skyline. By day it is an angular marvel, piercing the grey sky with its steely geometry and at night it is a blue beacon in a swamp of yellow street lights. Its opening ceremony was conducted on the 17th October 1911 and since then it has taxied workers across the river Tees at Port Clarence.
The book offers a truly layered understanding of why this bridge is so deeply embedded in the identity of the North East and why the residents of the much-maligned towns of Middlesbrough and Stockton hold it in such high regard. The carefully-chosen words, written by members of the local community, are peppered with dreamy artistic interpretations of the bridge that are certain to delight. Plus, rhyming the word “daughter” and “Transporter” is bordering on Lilly Allen-esque lyrical genius – I’m sure you’ll agree.
Time to go and write my own lyrical ode to my favourite bridge methinks. Now, what rhymes with gondola…?
]]>Today I walked along the Tees river and photographed all of the bridges from Yarm northward. I ended up walking around sixteen miles in total, so my ankles are sore but I feel like I know the river and the bridges a lot better now. Very important for any self-respecting bridge-geek. To see a catalogue of my Tweets from the journey click here. I’ve published some select photos from the day below. All of the bridges are beautiful and interesting in their own way but The Tees Transporter is still, hands down, my fave. The leaflet I used to inform my bridge quest can be found here.
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