Royal Tweed Bridge in foreground, Old Bridge in back.
Berwick Bridge, also known as the Old Bridge, spans the
River Tweed in Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland, England.
The current structure is a Grade I listed stone bridge built
between 1611 and 1624. Four previous bridges stood on the
site, with two destroyed by flooding (in 1199, the original,
and in 1294, the third), one by an English attack in 1216
and the last, built 1376, served until James I of England
ordered the construction of the present bridge. It was then
on the main road from Edinburgh to London, and the king (who
was also James VI of Scotland) had had to cross over the
then dilapidated wooden bridge in 1603 while travelling to
London for his coronation.
Photo 867, May 2011