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The Great Britain Guide

Historic bridges · West Midlands

Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park

Free admission

Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park — Grade II listed building-listed bridge in england-west-midlands, United Kingdom.

Control room and turbine at Watford Lodge Windfarm - geograph.org.uk - 7216026

Philip Jeffrey — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
15 min–30 min
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly

About

Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park is a Grade II listed building-listed bridge in england-west-midlands, United Kingdom, registered on the National Heritage List for England (NHLE entry 1404795). Listed status protects buildings and structures of special architectural or historic interest. See the linked Wikipedia article for further details.

Photo gallery

Heritage listing

The Pulpit Bridge (officially Bridge No. 69, also the Armchair Bridge or Lord Henley's Bridge) is a railway bridge near Watford in Northamptonshire. It carries the Northampton loop line over a former entrance drive to the Watford Park estate. Built in 1877, it is now a Grade II listed building for its unusual design.

From the Historic England List Entry under OGL v3.

From the Wikipedia article

The Pulpit Bridge (officially Bridge No. 69, also the Armchair Bridge or Lord Henley's Bridge) is a railway bridge near Watford in Northamptonshire. It carries the Northampton loop line over a former entrance drive to the Watford Park estate. Built in 1877, it is now a Grade II listed building for its unusual design.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

The bridge was built in 1877 by the London and North Western Railway for its Northampton loop line which was built to provide a second pair of tracks between Roade and and to serve Northampton, which the original line bypassed in the 1830s. Watford Park belonged to Anthony Henley, 3rd Baron Henley, who apparently contributed the design for the bridge. The bridge was used as a halt from which Henley—the MP for Northampton—could travel to parliament in London. Henley was a lay vicar and is believed to have used the bridge to preach to the estate's workers, hence its nickname "Pulpit Bridge". The bridge originally had other decorative cast-iron elements but these were removed in the 1930s,…

Architecture

The bridge is in metal with stone abutments and brick wing walls. Its parapet has a shape which has been variously described as resembling an armchair or a pulpit. It is a single span and sits on a stone plinth. It has a pair of four-centred arches which face north and south have foliate designs. The spandrels contain the coat of arms of the Henley barons, the owners of Watford Park. The parapets take the form of balustrades with interleaving arches. They end with projections which cap the abutments and which resemble a church pulpit or the arms of a chair. The projections have decorative banding, finials and openwork in the shape of gothic arches. The abutments are in moulded ashlar with…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
52.3238, -1.1155
Parish
Watford
Postcode
NN6 7UT
Parliamentary constituency
Daventry
Established
1877

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park?
Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park is in the West Midlands, United Kingdom (postcode NN6 7UT), in the parish of Watford.
Is Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park a listed building?
Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park is officially recognised as Grade II listed building listed.
Is Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park free to visit?
Yes, Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park is free to enter.
How do I get to Pulpit Bridge, Watford Park?
Drivers can navigate to postcode NN6 7UT. It sits within the Daventry parliamentary constituency.