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===Cast-iron bridges=== {{see also|The Iron Bridge}} {{Unreferenced section|date=February 2021}} The use of cast iron for structural purposes began in the late 1770s, when [[Abraham Darby III]] built [[The Iron Bridge]], although short beams had already been used, such as in the blast furnaces at Coalbrookdale. Other inventions followed, including one patented by [[Thomas Paine]]. Cast-iron bridges became commonplace as the [[Industrial Revolution]] gathered pace. [[Thomas Telford]] adopted the material for his bridge upstream at [[Buildwas]], and then for [[Longdon-on-Tern Aqueduct]], a canal trough [[Navigable aqueduct|aqueduct]] at [[Longdon-on-Tern]] on the [[Shrewsbury Canal]]. It was followed by the [[Chirk Aqueduct]] and the [[Pontcysyllte Aqueduct]], both of which remain in use following the recent restorations. The best way of using cast iron for bridge construction was by using [[Arch bridge|arches]], so that all the material is in compression. Cast iron, again like masonry, is very strong in compression. Wrought iron, like most other kinds of iron and indeed like most metals in general, is strong in tension, and also tough β resistant to fracturing. The relationship between wrought iron and cast iron, for structural purposes, may be thought of as analogous to the relationship between wood and stone. Cast-iron beam bridges were used widely by the early railways, such as the Water Street Bridge in 1830 at the [[Manchester]] terminus of the [[Liverpool and Manchester Railway]], but problems with its use became all too apparent when a new bridge carrying the [[Chester and Holyhead Railway]] across the [[River Dee (United Kingdom)|River Dee]] in [[Chester]] collapsed killing five people in May 1847, less than a year after it was opened. The [[Dee bridge disaster]] was caused by excessive loading at the centre of the beam by a passing train, and many similar bridges had to be demolished and rebuilt, often in [[wrought iron]]. The bridge had been badly designed, being trussed with wrought iron straps, which were wrongly thought to reinforce the structure. The centres of the beams were put into bending, with the lower edge in tension, where cast iron, like [[masonry]], is very weak. Nevertheless, cast iron continued to be used in inappropriate structural ways, until the [[Tay Rail Bridge]] disaster of 1879 cast serious doubt on the use of the material. Crucial lugs for holding tie bars and struts in the Tay Bridge had been cast integral with the columns, and they failed in the early stages of the accident. In addition, the bolt holes were also cast and not drilled. Thus, because of casting's draft angle, the tension from the tie bars was placed on the hole's edge rather than being spread over the length of the hole. The replacement bridge was built in wrought iron and steel. Further bridge collapses occurred, however, culminating in the [[Norwood Junction rail accident]] of 1891. Thousands of cast-iron rail [[Glossary of rail terminology#U|underbridges]] were eventually replaced by steel equivalents by 1900 owing to the widespread concern about cast iron under bridges on the rail network in Britain. <gallery mode="packed"> File:Ironbridge 6.jpg|[[The Iron Bridge]] over the [[River Severn]] at Coalbrookdale, England (finished 1779) File:Eglinton Castle & Tournament Bridge 1884.jpg|The [[Eglinton Tournament Bridge]] (completed c1845), [[North Ayrshire]], [[Scotland]], built from cast iron File:Image-Taybridge01.jpg|Original Tay Bridge from the north (finished 1878) File:Tay bridge down.JPG|Fallen Tay Bridge from the north </gallery>
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