Rivers
Maori had long recognised that rivers were key to traversing inland areas of the Otago and Southland, particularly the mighty Clutha/Mata-au, one of the world’s top ten swiftest rivers, which runs 338 kilometres from Wanaka to the sea. Guides like Te Raki shared their knowledge of routes with Europeans, giving them their first glimpse of the interior of Otago in 1853. Maori made use of ara, pathways or routes, such as the one through the Nevis Valley, which used a natural rock bridge to cross the Kawarau River.
For European pastoralists and the rush of miners who followed after the discovery of gold up Dunstan Gorge in 1862, the need for safe crossing was also vital to enable them, and in the case of pastoralists, their stock, to move around the province. New Zealand rivers were faster and more changeable than many settlers were used to. Water transport, including ferries and punts, was vital when roads and bridges were poor or non-existent. The increasing numbers of wagons and other wheeled traffic that came with a settled population made formed routes and crossings even more important. The Vogel public works scheme in the 1870s saw a great push in infrastructure development, including bridge building.
Bridging the barrier
The Clutha/Mata-au (or Molyneux) River was a major barrier. The town of Alexandra grew up at the confluence of the Clutha/Mata-au and the Manuherikia Rivers. A ferry service was established there in 1868. The river was mighty in flood; a major flood in 1878 swept the Clyde Bridge away along with three other bridges on that river. The local lobbying for a safer crossing gained momentum after the flood. The Manuherikia was bridged in 1879 by a small suspension bridge (Shaky Bridge, Category 2 historic place, Register No. 2082).
Tenders for a bridge across the Clutha/Mata-au in 1874 were unsuccessful, but efforts continued. In July 1878 the Vincent County Council commissioned two engineers – Leslie Duncan Macgeorge and Robert Hay to come up with another design. Macgeorge drew up plans for the ‘horse bridge’ and surveyed the proposed site in June 1877. Macgeorge was well known for his design of such suspension bridges.
Adelaide-born and trained Macgeorge was appointed as Vincent County engineer at the age of twenty three. He trained in the South Australian Public Works Department, moving to a similar position in Otago before being appointed District Engineer for the Otago Provincial Government in Cromwell in 1876. Macgeorge held the position of County Engineer until 1901, when he was replaced by G.L. Cuthbertson. He retired to Melbourne, dying there in 1939.
Macgeorge’s assistant, Robert Hay, was a Dunedin-based engineer. He was Borough Engineer, and had been involved in the construction of a graving dock at Port Chalmers, so was presumably familiar with working in wet environments.
Similar schist piers also designed by Macgeorge are still in use on the Earnscleugh Bridge at Clyde (built 1874, Category 2 historic place, Register No. 2370). The small, elegant Daniel O’Connell Bridge at Ophir was also designed by Macgeorge (built 1880, Category 1 historic place, Register No. 338). Alexandra Bridge was the pinnacle of Macgeorge’s bridge designs, the longest suspension bridge in the country, crossing one of the country’s swiftest rivers.
The catastrophic 1878 flood hastened the Council’s considerations; the ferry was vulnerable and the Clyde Bridge was no longer there. Prominent politician Vincent Pyke and Councillor Michael McGinnis championed Alexandra as the location for a replacement structure.
The first design was deemed too expensive leading Macgeorge to rework his design. The £16,111 tender of local men W. Beresford, J.Simmonds and J. Drummey, was successful. Jeremiah Drummey was born in Canada and trained as a carpenter. He came to Otago in 1861 and to Alexandra the following year. He was a miner and later on the West Coast built the Upper Buller Bridge. Returning to Otago in 1870 he worked as a contractor building buildings, roads, bridges and water races. James Simmond was a Tasmanian-born cabinet maker before following gold to Otago in 1862 and turning his hand to building and was a storekeeper and later mayor of Alexandra and politician. William Beresford was a wheelwright and carpenter, mayor of Alexandra in the early 1870s and a lobbyist for the construction of the Manuherikia Bridge.
Construction of the bridge took three years. The geology of the Clutha/Mata-au River posed some problems for the engineers. While there was solid schist on the southeast side of the river, the northwest side had only a thin crust of stone, necessitating the construction of a concrete raft foundation for the pier on the Alexandra side of the river. Flooding caused delays and the 1880s depression which saw the Government stopping infrastructure subsidies to local councils caused major problems. A special appeal was made to the Government in 1881 which finally secured funding.
The Alexandra Bridge was opened on 1 June 1882. Spectators travelled from around Central Otago, the largest gathering Alexandra had seen. Councillor McGinnis on opening the bridge said that ‘works of such magnitude over the large and dangerous rivers of New Zealand, and on the main arterial highways of the country were decidedly national works.’ ‘One of the largest, strongest most beautiful bridges in the colony’ was named the ‘Alexandra Bridge’ recalling the town’s name after Princess Alexandra of Denmark (1844-1925), then Princess of Wales and the future queen. Architect, engineer and historian Geoffrey Thornton describes it as ‘one of the most beautiful suspension bridges ever built in New Zealand.’
The total length of the roadway from bank to bank was 554 feet (168 metres). The centre arch was 262 feet 6 inches (close to 80 metres). The abutment on the east side was a solid mass of masonry 83 feet long and 26 feet high (25 by 8 metres) made up of blocks of stone on piles of totara and black pine, covered with a double deck of planking. The suspension wires were fixed to anchor rods. On the west site the moorings and pier were all on solid rock. The piers rose over 90 feet (27 metres) from the bedrock in the river. Eight three inch cables supported the structure. The height above the river at the centre of the bridge was 40 to 50 feet (12-15 metres). The approach on the western side was through a cutting. The stonework was pointed with cement.
An Otago Daily Times reporter described the bridge as a structure ‘with a look of airy lightness and grace which makes it an ornamental as wells as highly useful piece of work. This light appearance is greatly added to by the relief which is afforded by having in the piers three arches, two being below the roadway, and the arch of the roadway itself above the road….The whole design and the carrying out of it reflects the utmost credit on the engineer and contractors.’ Alexandra Bridge was the largest of Leslie Macgeorge’s Central Otago suspension bridges. It was, as noted at the time of construction ‘the largest of its kind in the Colony, and is a great undertaking for a young County to carry out.’
Road Traffic
The bridge was in poor condition by 1936 and there was discussion about the possibility of building a new bridge. In 1937 there was a proposal to build a two-way deck with the existing piers partially dismantled and altered. The Public Works Inspector preferred a new structure and surveys were made of possible sites.
By the middle of the twentieth century the increase in road traffic on the arterial route between Alexandra and Roxburgh, and as a link between Alexandra and the suburb of Bridge Hill saw the old bridge under pressure – a single lane bridge could not cope with the volume.
In 1958 a new steel bridge was constructed, running parallel but upriver to the 1882 structure. There was some lobbying for retaining the old bridge – Sir William Bodkin, MP for Central Otago campaigned for retention of the bridge as a monument to the early pioneers. Although there was discussion about keeping the old structure for pedestrian use, concern about the condition of the bridge and the cost of its on-going maintenance saw the deck and suspension cables removed. The freestanding piers/towers and the abutments on the river bank remained.
The surviving piers have become an icon for Alexandra. In 2002 the Alexandra Museum hosted local historian Professor JD McCraw who spoke of the importance of the bridge. As a result of this lecture there was renewed interest in the bridge and the Alexandra Community Board invited the public to form a group to consider the welfare of the piers, and a working group was formed. A conservation maintenance report was completed in 2005. In 2008 the group was successful in having the piers floodlit. The bridge piers have become icons or emblems for many local businesses. A structural assessment and an underwater survey of the piers have been completed and there have been on-going discussions about the future of the structures. The possibility of reinstating a carriageway for cyclists and pedestrians across the historic structure has been raised.
In 2013 the surviving elements of former Alexandra Bridge stand as a monument to the nineteenth century engineers and contractors who built this impressive structure.