The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

The silvery Tay

- By Murray Scougall mscougall@sundaypost.com

“WE had a great camaraderi­e and I’m very proud to have helped build the bridge, but it was hard work,” Joseph Murray said.

The 89-year-old was part of the concrete squad with his brotherin- law, Sonny Cunningham, and the pair worked furiously in the days leading up to the Queen Mother’s visit to ensure the walkway was finished in time.

“The work was dangerous, especially when the wind picked up, because you couldn’t stand or walk in it,” he continued.

“Then when the snow came – dear God – but you just had to get on with it.

“We didn’t wear hard hats or protective clothing in those days and we were risking our lives at all times.

“But I enjoyed it, and at the end of our shift we would all end up across the road in the pub, where the bartender would have our pints lined up.

“The money was good and we got holidays with pay. But a lot of bad things happened.”

The worst of those were the deaths of five workers killed during the constructi­on.

Three people died when 100ft of the temporary bridge, which the men worked from to build the permanent bridge, collapsed.

In a separate incident a further two men fell from the bridge.

Bert Smith, from Kirriemuir, was supposed to be working on the night three of his co-workers died.

“I drove the puggy, the wee train that took out the materials, and occasional­ly I would do a 36-hour shift,” he said.

“I was supposed to be working all night but my wife was pregnant and wasn’t keeping too well, so I swapped shifts with a man called John McQueen.

“He went home and had his dinner and then came back to take over. I left at the back of nine and the bridge collapsed at 10pm.

“It was only the next morning when I bought a paper that I found out.

“That was in the November and by January I decided I’d had enough and left – it was very dangerous work. “There were other incidents. “One time I couldn’t see where I was going because of a big load and unbeknown to me a ferry’s engine had failed and drifted into the supply line.

“A co- worker came running to warn me, otherwise I would have landed on the ferry.”

But the 76- year- old is in no doubt of the bridge’s quality of constructi­on and longevity.

He added: “I think it will still be there in 100 years.”

Eddie Hill worked on the bridge from the first day to the last, and he too had a lucky escape on the supply line.

“It was heavy rain and one of the other workers had driven their puggy up behind me.

“I didn’t realise, crashed into it and fell right over the side.

“I landed on a pile of mud on the south bank. The tide was out, which was just as well, because I couldn’t swim!”

Eddie went to hospital where he had 17 stitches in his head and was warned not to go straight back to work.

He went home, fell over his new cooker, and burst all of his stitches.

“I had to go back to the hospital, where I was given a row for not listening. They didn’t believe it had happened at home!”

The bridge was completed at a cost of around £6 million (roughly £ 105 million in today’s money), not a bad price for the use it’s had.

Bridge supervisor Jim McDonald has seen a fair percentage of that traffic in his 34 years’ service.

But it’s not just a steady stream of vehicles he’s watched from his control room.

“One day a trailer shed its load, which just so happened to be chickens!

“They were running all around the carriagewa­y, with bridge workers chasing after them,” he smiled.

“Then there was the bull that escaped from a Dundee abattoir by jumping over a 6ft wall.

“It somehow made it into the city ce n t re and on to the northbound carriagewa­y, but luckily no cars hit it.

“A vet was sent out to tranquilis­e it. Houdini, as we called the bull, was due to go back to the abattoir but Carla Lane, who wrote TV

shows The Liver Birds and Bread, pleaded with the owners not to slaughter it. She had it transferre­d to her animal sanctuary in West Sussex to live out the rest of its days.”

Not so amusing was the armed bank robber who came running along the southbound carriagewa­y.

Jim said: “Drivers were locking their doors as he approached and as police closed in he threw his gun and money over the bridge. “That was a scary moment.” So the next time you travel over the bridge, take a moment to think of the blood, sweat and toil of the brave men who built it and the history passing under your wheels.

 ??  ?? Above, the Queen Mother arrives on opening day. Right, Joseph Murray and Sonny Cunningham at work. Below, the Dundee landfall in 1964, with the much-missed Royal Arch still in place. ON August 18, 1966, the Tay Road Bridge was officially opened by the...
Above, the Queen Mother arrives on opening day. Right, Joseph Murray and Sonny Cunningham at work. Below, the Dundee landfall in 1964, with the much-missed Royal Arch still in place. ON August 18, 1966, the Tay Road Bridge was officially opened by the...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? This week there will be a series of events in the area to mark its 50th anniversar­y.
We spoke to some workers past and present about their memories of life building the bridge and working on it over the years.
This week there will be a series of events in the area to mark its 50th anniversar­y. We spoke to some workers past and present about their memories of life building the bridge and working on it over the years.
 ??  ?? Below, and left to right – the bridge takes shape, twisted wreckage after the accident, the last Fifie and crowds gather to see the Queen Mother.
Below, and left to right – the bridge takes shape, twisted wreckage after the accident, the last Fifie and crowds gather to see the Queen Mother.

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