[Part Two]
The bridge was opened by the Prince of Wales on March 4th 1890. People were initially reluctant to travel over it. Memories of the Tay Bridge, which collapsed carrying a train into the river in 1879, were still vivid. That bridge�s designer (Thomas Bouch) had produced a design for a Forth crossing but he committed suicide soon after the Tay Bridge collapse.
The structure cost �3.2m and took eight years to complete. 57 lives were lost during construction, the majority of these being due to either falls from the structure or being struck by falling objects.
At 1710 feet each span is slightly smaller than the world�s longest cantilever span in Quebec. However, with two main spans of that length and lengthy approaches the overall length is more than a mile and a half. The main towers are 330 feet high and the spans provide 150 feet of headroom at high water. The main steel tubes forming the cantilevers are big enough to accommodate a London tube train.
The legendary continuous painting takes four years to complete. However, this will soon be a thing of the past as the latest high-tech coating currently being applied (due for completion in 2009) will last 20 years.
In 1990 to celebrate its centenary the bridge was opened to pedestrians for just one day and I was privileged to take a stroll across the mighty structure.