Bewdley By-pass

From the collection of

Media Archive for Central England
MACE is the strategic lead organisation for screen heritage for the East and West Midlands regions. An independent charity based at University of Lincoln, MACE preserves and makes accessible a collection of more than 100,000 historic moving images representative of the diverse cultures and histories of communities throughout the heart of England from the Lincolnshire coast to the Welsh border.

Bewdley By-pass (ATV Today)


People power brings Bewdley to a standstill as calls for a bypass for the historic Worcestershire town grows.

By 1980 Bewdley in Worcestershire, the onetime home of the Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, was facing a familiar problem. Choked with traffic the roads of the ancient market town, including the Thomas Telford designed bridge over the River Severn, were seeing a level of usage undreamt of in 1798. Not surprisingly Christopher Milner of the Midlands Road Development Group is able to reel off a list of similarly affected local towns to reporter Peter Green.

Bewdley did get its bypass with a new road bridge over the River Severn being opened at Blackstone in 1987.


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