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on the east bank. It carries the R741 road from
Wexford towards Dublin and the north. The bridge consists of 7 spans of maximum length 63 metres and 12 metres wide, made of continuous steel girders carrying composite concrete slabs. Including the approach roads, the total length of the bridge is 590
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The new bridge was constructed about a kilometre upstream at Carcur, where the river was much wider. By the 1950s, however, the new bridge was unable to support heavy motor traffic and was itself demolished in 1959. In the meantime a third bridge, the current bridge, was constructed by a Dutch firm
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The current bridge, the third to be built, was originally opened on 10 September 1959 but by the 1990s was suffering from severe corrosion. In 1997, therefore, over a 10-week period, the whole superstructure was broken up, the piers and abutments reconstructed, and the roadway replaced by composite
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Construction of the first bridge by Lemuel Cox, an
American, started in June 1794 and was completed the following year. It was constructed in wood with a breadth of some 10 metres. In 1827 a portion of the bridge collapsed into the river and in 1866 the whole structure was demolished after a new
98:. The victims were taken from custody to the bridge, speared by pikes and thrown into the river. As part of the recriminations after the rebellion had been put down, a number of rebel ringleaders were hanged on the bridge, beheaded and their corpses thrown into the river.
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on the site of the original first bridge and completed by 1959. Following corrosion problems, the superstructure of this bridge was replaced in 1997 by Ascon Ltd, using prefabricated units made in Italy.
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Before the first bridge was built the nearest bridge crossing of the River Slaney was at
Enniscorthy, approximately 20 km upstream, although a number of ferry crossings operated at various points.
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The first bridge became infamous as the setting for a massacre of nearly 100 local
Loyalists by pikemen of the
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224:(3rd ed.). Dublin: R. Marchbank, and sold by J. Archer. p.
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140:- Rebel leaders hanged on Wexford bridge, 25/28 June 1798
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The making of
Ireland: from ancient times to the present
221:Memoirs of the different rebellions in Ireland
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50:metres, of which 380 metres are over water.
311:Buildings and structures in County Wexford
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159:"ISEROI Newsletter No 4 November 1997"
45:from Wexford town on the west bank to
74:The bridge spans the Slaney, joining
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306:Bridges in the Republic of Ireland
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218:Musgrave, Sir Richard (1802).
41:. It crosses the mouth of the
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92:Society of United Irishmen
66:Wexford Bridge circa 1800
181:"The Bridges of Wexford"
96:Irish Rebellion of 1798
87:bridge had been built.
138:John Kelly of Killanne
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33:, the county town of
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282:52.34222°N 6.45667°W
122:John Henry Colclough
29:is a road bridge in
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287:52.34222; -6.45667
185:askaboutireland.ie
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112:Wexford Rebellion
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22:Wexford Bridge
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134:Philip Roche
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43:River Slaney
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231:8 September
94:during the
300:Categories
270:52°20′32″N
252:26 October
190:2 December
165:2 December
145:References
273:6°27′24″W
76:Ferrybank
47:Ferrybank
208:, p. 274
161:. ISEROI
106:See also
114:of 1798
58:History
39:Ireland
31:Wexford
254:2015
233:2015
192:2012
167:2012
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