Built to last: Ali Bacon feels intimations of mortality in recent events
But the Firth of Forth (how that name puzzled me before I could spell it!) was not just geography and history but also our holidays, on beaches with views of Arthur’s Seat, or on picnics to a tiny beach near Cramond made memorable by a trip on the ferry boats where burly sea-men in navy jumpers tossed ropes and took our tickets as we stepped onto the oily smelling deck.
(Thanks to Dennis Penny of http://www.queensferrypassage.co.uk for the ferry boat graphic and the ticket just like the one I clutched in my hot little hand on summer outings!)
By the time
I was at school they were already building the Road Bridge and Sunday walks
(simple pleasures back then!) took us along the approach roads blasted through
the rock face to see the towers and arches taking shape, the weaving of the
steel cables that would carry the weight of the road.
Its opening was a huge
celebration of which everyone has a story to tell: a friend’s brother was in a
group of schoolchildren chosen to meet the Queen; the brother–in-law of a more recent acquaintance, I’ve just discovered, was first to cross the new bridge in
a police car ahead of Her Majesty.
The corollary – the closing of the the Queensferry Passage was the only shock. No more ferries would run even as pleasure boats, but in the end we barely noticed. For a few months it was a novelty to walk across the new bridge and back again, but this was the age of the car. Soon we whizzed across regularly, with much sighing from the grown-ups at the cost of the toll.
The corollary – the closing of the the Queensferry Passage was the only shock. No more ferries would run even as pleasure boats, but in the end we barely noticed. For a few months it was a novelty to walk across the new bridge and back again, but this was the age of the car. Soon we whizzed across regularly, with much sighing from the grown-ups at the cost of the toll.
Then there were two. The Forth Estuary as it was from 1964 * |
But while
the Forth Road
Bridge became familiarised as The Road
Bridge, then just The Bridge, there was only ever one Forth Bridge ,
the original red giant. When my Grandpa
reached for the double six in his hand of dominoes and slid it into the middle of
the sheet of newspaper (protecting the table from scratches!) that’s what he
called it, The Forth Bridge, the biggest and the best, the daddy of them all,
built– unlike its ill-fated predecessor the Tay Bridge
- to last forever.
Young pretender** |
Still safe, still standing*** |
So we can
only think the Victorians are laughing in their graves as our new light-weight
pretender is closed - indefinitely – after a mere fifty years of service. A
replacement is on its way but in the meantime there’s road chaos over several counties and - no coincidence - a lot more traffic to the excellent QueensferryPassage website as people like me ride the wave of nostalgia.
I don’t
know what lessons are to be learned from this.
Did the engineers of the fifties get it wrong, or does everything in our world now come with a shelf life?
Did the engineers of the fifties get it wrong, or does everything in our world now come with a shelf life?
For me it
brings a shiver of mortality to think in
my lifetime this dizzying structure came to fruition then lost its usefulness.
They knew about
building something that would last.
Photo credits (from Flickr)
*Estuary view by Joe
** Road bridge tower detail by Alex Liivet
*** Rail bridge detail by Rev Stan
Other images from Queensferry Passage with thanks
*Estuary view by Joe
** Road bridge tower detail by Alex Liivet
*** Rail bridge detail by Rev Stan
Other images from Queensferry Passage with thanks
A Kettle of Fish by Ali Bacon is a coming-of-age-novel set in Fife and Edinburgh.
It's available as e-book or paperback from the usual places!
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