New stamps celebrate famous bridges around Britain
- Published
A new set of first class stamps show 10 of the most amazing bridges around the UK.
Some are ancient ones made out of stone, hundreds of years old, while others are famous for their huge size and design.
The oldest bridge is the Tarr Steps, over the River Barle in Exmoor National Park.
The most recently completed is the Peace Bridge, across the River Foyle in Northern Ireland, finished in 2011.
The ten bridges from oldest to youngest:
Tarr Steps (pre-1600s) - Exmoor, south west England
Row Bridge (1700s) - Lake District, north west England
Pulteney Bridge (1774) - Bath, south west England
Thomas Telford's Craigellachie Bridge (1814) - Moray, north east Scotland
Pont Grog y Borth/Menai Suspension Bridge (1926) - Anglesey, North Wales
Robert Stephenson's High Level Bridge (1849) - Newcastle/Gateshead, north east England
Royal Border Bridge (1850) - Berwick-upon-Tweed, north east England
Tees Transporter Bridge (1911) - Middlesbrough, north east England
Humber Bridge (1981) - east Riding of Yorkshire
Peace Bridge (2011) - Northern Ireland
Royal Mail, who make the stamps, say The Menai Suspension Bridge, which links the island of Anglesey to the mainland in North Wales, is one of the most breathtaking ever built in Britain.
Andrew Hammond, head of stamps and collectibles at Royal Mail, said: "These new stamps celebrate 10 beautiful and ground-breaking landmarks that span centuries of our history".
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