Borough of Telford & Wrekin

Ironbridge Gorge World Heritage Site

The Ironbridge Gorge World Heritage Site is a very special place where history and nature have combined over many years to produce a landscape and environment of great beauty.
The Iron Bridge
Nature endowed the area with many of the raw materials of industry - coal, limestone, wood, iron ore, clay and water. Combine with that the genius and entrepreneurial skills of people like Abraham Darby and John Wilkinson and it is no surprise that this once rural area was transformed in the 18th century into "the most important industrial area in the world". The Ironbridge Gorge is now often referred to as the Birthplace of Industry because it was here that in 1709 Darby perfected a technique for manufacturing iron using coke which enabled, for the first time, the mass production of high quality iron.

The iron works of Coalbrookdale and surrounding area gave the world the first iron rails and iron wheels and in 1779, the famous Iron Bridge, the world's first bridge constructed from iron and now an internationally recognised symbol of the Industrial Revolution.

Two hundred years ago, the Ironbridge Gorge would have been a harsh, industrial environment, the air filled with the acrid smell and relentless noise of industry. With the exception of the AGA Rayburn Company, which still produces cast iron cookers and stoves in the historic Coalbrookdale Works, heavy industry has long since disappeared from the valley. Fortunately however, many of the historic buildings, structures and monuments remain, standing testimony to the area's illustrious past.
The Iron Bridge
Since the mines closed and the ironworks fell silent, nature has re-established her presence and the woodlands that were felled to provide wood for the furnaces and mines have regenerated and the spoil tips and old workings have become green and attractive. Today, the Ironbridge Gorge is a place of beauty, attractive historic buildings set in a wooded valley landscape with the River Severn flowing through on its way from the hills of Mid Wales to the Bristol Channel.

The Iron Bridge
At the very heart of the World Heritage Site stands the famous Iron Bridge built by Abraham Darby III and designed by Shrewsbury architect Thomas Farnolls Pritchard. The bridge was completed in 1781 and as the first bridge in the world to be built completely of iron, it immediately became a visitor attraction. It attracted artists, engineers, entrepreneurs and sightseers from across the world, all of whom wanted to view this wonder of the industrial age.

Two centuries later, the Bridge has withstood the test of time and it continues to span the River Severn. The years have not reduced interest in the Bridge and it continues to be a popular attraction drawing visitors from near and far.

For further information on the following topics, please click below:

What are World Heritage Sites?

Managing and Protecting the World Heritage Site

Visiting the Ironbridge Gorge World Heritage Site

European Route of Industrial Heritage

LAWHF

Further Information



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