Sandwich Toll Bridge


Sandwich Toll Bridge is a road bridge over the River Stour in Sandwich, Kent. It opened in 1755 on a site that had been a crossing for centuries, and has been part of the A256 road. Tolls were abolished in 1977.

History

A plaque on the bridge indicates there has been a tolled crossing in this rough location since 1127. The crossing forms part of a former turnpike road from Sandwich to the Isle of Thanet that has existed since the late 14th century. A customs house was built at the southern edge of the crossing during Edward IV's reign.
The original bridge was authorised by the Sandwich Bridge Act 1755 and opened that year. It was rebuilt in 1773 from Portland Stone with a timber raised platform. A table of tolls is displayed on the side of the adjacent Barbican Gate to the south. The bridge was rebuilt again as an iron swing bridge in 1892, to allow river traffic to pass through. The reconstruction supported stone arches at the north and south ends.
The bridge originally formed part of the A256, a major road along the East Kent coast from Dover to Thanet. In 1962, the toll was 1 shilling for cars and 1/3 - 1/6 for goods vehicles. By 1965, it had become a significant bottleneck on the A256 as it could only carry a single lane of motor traffic and was the only crossing of the Stour in the local area.
The bridge was Grade II listed in 1976. Tolls were abolished the following year, with the final one being collected by the Mayor Councillor on 30 September. A bypass of Sandwich opened in 1981, taking traffic away from the bridge, yet it continued to attract congestion as it was used as a rat run.
In 2018, the bridge began to suffer reliability problems. While Kent County Council were investigating repairs, on 9 June 2019, the bridge was stuck open after shipping vessel passed through. Following emergency work, it reopened on 24 June. The bridge was expected to close again in February 2020 to all traffic, including pedestrians, but this was postponed.