DATE: July 10, 2015
HISTORICAL
SITE: London Bridge
LOCATION: 1550 London Bridge Rd., Lake Havasu City, Mohave
Co., Arizona
"London
Bridge Opened by The Right Honorable
The Lord Mayor of London Alderman Sir Peter Studd G.B.E., M.A.D.Sc. in the presence of The Honorable Jack
Williams Govenor of Arizona October 10,
1981
Robert
P. McCullough Sr. Founder Lake Havasu City
C.V. Wood Jr. Master
Planner Lake Havasu City"
PERSONAL
REFLECTIONS:
Dirk
and I got into Lake Havasu City about mid-day and it's freaking hot. Certainly
not as hot as when Dana and Ron visited a couple of weeks ago where it was
still over 100 at 9:00pm, but definitely hot enough.
Despite
the fact that I was born and raised in Los Angeles, I have never been to Lake
Havasu. I wanted to put my feet in the lake so I could say I was there. I think
we were out of the car maybe 15 minutes when I wanted back in the air conditioning.
So…How
did the London Bridge, the same one that spanned the Thames, get to...of all
places...Arizona?
The
bridge that went over the River Thames was actually several bridges. It is said
there has been a London Bridge for nearly 2,000 years. Romans, Danes, Saxons,
Vikings, invaders and natives alike had a hand in the building and tearing down
of several of the earlier bridges.
The
first stone bridge was built circa 1200. Disaster struck in 1212 when a group
of people were stuck on the bridge with fires on either side. Many died by
fire.
It was
customary between 1305 and 1660 to display the heads of traitors on spikes at
the southern gateway. The head of William Wallace (as Mel Gibson said “Aye,
fight and you may die. Run, and you'll live... at least a while. And dying in
your beds, many years from now, would you be willin' to trade ALL the days,
from this day to that, for one chance, just one chance, to come back here and
tell our enemies that they may take our lives, but they'll never take... OUR
FREEDOM!”) was the first such “traitor”
to be displayed.
In
1623, another fire struck the bridge and burned 43 houses nearby. The bridge
was falling apart; the people were moving away and something had to be done.
In
1657, the bridge was partially rebuilt and remained that way until 1831. A new
bridge was built with granite and had 5 high arches.
The new
bridge was immediately busy and then a new kind of traveler came…the commuter.
Traffic increased and the bridge was widened in 1903.
By
1924, the bridge was sinking on one side. It had been designed for horse drawn
carriages, not the weight of an ever increasing number of automobiles.
In 1962,
it was found that London Bridge WAS indeed falling down.
In 1968, the city of
London put the bridge up for sale and Robert McCulloch, found of Lake Havasu
City bought it for $2.4 million.
In
1968, the then mayor of London visited Arizona and placed the corner stone.
It was
completed in 1971 but not over water…the land below was dredged out and
flooded. Today, it is one of the biggest draws to the area.
As Dirk
told me…”we kicked their asses and then took their bridge”
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