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The Wooden Bridge at Bad Säckingen

The Wooden Bridge at Bad Saeckingen  is 200 meters long. It is the longest covered wooden bridge in Europe. The first bridge between the town on the island and the southern bank was first mentioned in a document in the 13th century.

wooden bridge
Postmark: 21/08/1937.

During the Middle Ages, the bridge was often damaged by floods. In 1570 the town started to build a new bridge on a stone construction. That was when the bridge took on its current form.

From then on, floods could not destroy the bridge anymore, but during all the wars of the following centuries the wooden parts were burnt down several times.

view from the bridge
View from the bridge, circa 1920

In 1801 the Rhine became the new border with Switzerland. In the 1960s the new power station was built upstream, and the stone construction had to be rebuilt.

wooden bridge
Saeckingen with the bridge seen from Stein, Switzerland, Postmark: 14/01/1906.

Until 1979 the wooden bridge was used for all car traffic to Switzerland. Then the new bridge downstream was built, and the Wooden Bridge is now reserved for pedestrians.

Please click on these pictures to see them in original size.
  


Saeckingen with the bridge
from Stein, about 1927


about 1930
  


Postmark: 04/04/1904.


about 1927

next: St. Fridolin's Cathedral
 
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  St. Fridolin
  St. Fridolin Procession
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  Wooden Bridge
  St.Fridolin's Cathedral
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© Hans Fritsche