The Wye Bridge is a Grade I listed stone bridge in Hereford, the county town of Herefordshire in England. Spanning the River Wye, it was constructed in 1490 to replace an earlier timber bridge dating back to the twelfth century. During the 1645 Siege of Hereford in the English Civil War it was the scene of heavy fighting between the English Royalist defenders and the Scottish Covenanter besiegers. A gatehouse that stood on the site was severely damaged and was later demolished in the eighteenth century.
References
- Historic England. "Wye Bridge (1196768)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
- Hurley p.17
Bibliography
- Foxton, Derek & Shoesmith, Ron. Hereford in 50 Buildings. Amberley Publishing Limited, 2019.
- Hurley, Heather. The Old Roads of South Herefordshire. Fineleaf Editions, 2007.
52°03′09″N 2°43′07″W / 52.05249°N 2.71873°W / 52.05249; -2.71873
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- Bridges in Herefordshire
- Bridges across the River Wye
- Rebuilt buildings and structures in the United Kingdom
- 1490 establishments in England
- Bridges completed in the 15th century
- Buildings and structures completed in 1490
- Transport infrastructure completed in the 1490s
- Grade I listed bridges
- Herefordshire building and structure stubs
- United Kingdom bridge (structure) stubs