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49. Main Road Railway Bridges
(within the Talbot St./Lichfield St. Conservation Area)

This was built in the 1850s to carry the Cannock to Rugeley
Trent Valley railway (opened in 1859) over the two main
roads from Rugeley to the south and east. The two
arches
are enduring examples of the large-scale use of brick
by
19th-century railway engineers. Brickwork in the roof
of the
north-eastern arch demonstrates the bricklayers' skill
in
forming the complicated configuration of a skewed
bridge.
The fact that today it carries trains of very much
greater
weight than those for which it was built is a tribute
to the
skills of its Victorian engineers.
50. Arch Street Railway Bridge
(within the Talbot St./Lichfield St. Conservation Area).

This 1850s bridge of predominantly red brick is a
dominant and impressive feature of the lower
end of Arch Street, its single high arch framing
views from both sides.
51. Victorian Letterbox
(within the entrance hall of
Brereton and Ravenhill Parish Hall in Ravenhill Park).

This was made by W T Allen & Co of London
and bears the letters
VR (Victoria Regina, the Latin for Queen
Victoria). It was originally
on Brereton Road Ravenhill opposite
Ravenhill Terrace.
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