List of Crossings of The River Thames - Reading To Oxford

Reading To Oxford

Crossing Type Co-ordinates Date opened Notes
Reading Festival Bridge Pedestrian bridge (intermittently present) 2008 Temporarily erected on permanent footings during the Reading Festival
Whitchurch Bridge Road bridge 1902 Toll bridge
Gatehampton Railway Bridge Rail bridge 1838
Goring and Streatley Bridge Road bridge 1923
Moulsford Railway Bridge Rail bridge 1838
Winterbrook Bridge Road bridge 1993
Wallingford Bridge Road bridge 1809 Bridge recorded 1141.
Benson Lock bridge Lock and pedestrian bridge
Shillingford Bridge Road bridge 1827 Replaced bridge built 1763.
Little Wittenham Bridge Pedestrian bridge 1870
Day's Lock bridges Pedestrian bridges
Clifton Hampden Bridge Road bridge 1867
Appleford Railway Bridge Rail bridge 1929
Sutton Bridge Road bridge 1807
Culham Lock bridges Pedestrian bridges A bridge across the weir on the Culham Cut, west of Culham Lock; further south, other bridges cross the main river channel
Abingdon Bridge Road bridge 1416
Abingdon Lock Lock and pedestrian bridges
Nuneham Railway Bridge Rail bridge 1929
Sandford Lock Lock and pedestrian bridges
Kennington Railway Bridge Rail bridge 1923
Isis Bridge Road bridge 1962
Iffley Lock Lock and pedestrian bridges
Donnington Bridge Road bridge 1962
Folly Bridge Road bridge 1827 Stone bridge built 1085
Grandpont Bridge Pedestrian bridge 1930s
Gasworks Bridge Pedestrian bridge 1882
Osney Rail Bridge Rail bridge 1850 and 1887 Two adjacent bridges
Osney Bridge Road bridge 1885

Read more about this topic:  List Of Crossings Of The River Thames

Famous quotes containing the words reading and/or oxford:

    After which you led me to water
    And bade me drink, which I did, owing to your kindness.
    You would not let me out for two days and three nights,
    Bringing me books bound in wild thyme and scented wild grasses
    As if reading had any interest for me ...
    John Ashbery (b. 1927)

    Christianity as an organized religion has not always had a harmonious relationship with the family. Unlike Judaism, it kept almost no rituals that took place in private homes. The esteem that monasticism and priestly celibacy enjoyed implied a denigration of marriage and parenthood.
    Beatrice Gottlieb, U.S. historian. The Family in the Western World from the Black Death to the Industrial Age, ch. 12, Oxford University Press (1993)