The bridge spans the River Dove and provides a crossing between the parishes of Stretton, Staffordshire and Egginton, Derbyshire. It is a stone bridge with four arches, founded in the river on cutwaters, and with triangular bastions at the piers. Much of the current fabric of the bridge is 15th-century and it is a scheduled monument.
Current usage
The bridge remains in use as a slip road with access to and from the southbound carriageway of the A38 road. It is signposted as a weak bridge with a maximum gross vehicle weight.
History
Ecclesiatical ownership
A bridge existed at this site by the early 13th century, when it was known as the Egginton Bridge. An earlier structure may have existed at this site to carry the Roman Icknield Street across the river. In 1225 the abbot of Burton Abbey, John of Stretton, considered it was the responsibility of the abbey to maintain the bridge and paid for it to be rebuilt. However in 1256 an inquest found that liability for the repair of the bridge lay instead with the local residents. The wide span of the current arches suggests that they post-date the 1225 rebuilding. The structure was known as Monk Bridge by 1394 when permission was granted by The Crown for a chaplain to erect a chapel on the bridge and collect alms for its maintenance. In 1398 a chantry dedicated to Saint Anne was erected, apparently in honour of the recently deceased queen.
Public ownership
After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, including abbeys, and abolition of chantries the local community became unambiguously responsible for maintenance. By the middle of the centurythe burden fell, at least partly, upon Egginton Parish who, in 1548, sold two church bells to finance repairs. By the late 17th-century the counties of Staffordshire and Derbyshire had accepted joint liability for maintenance and a widening of the structure, on the north side, was carried out in 1775. By the late 19th-century, with the rise of motorised transport, Derbyshire County Council became concerned about the risk of a collapse from overloading. On 1 December 1899 John Peake was fined £1 for driving a traction engine over Monk's Bridge, "in spite of a copy of the bye-law—which prohibits the use of the bridge for locomotives—being conspicuously posted on the bridge". In his defence, Peake and his employer, Messrs. Aveling, made the point that a "Pickford's heavy dray would bring three times more weight per inch to bear on the bridge than a 15-ton steam roller", but the court rejected the argument.
Modern period
In 1924, as part of a project to realign the A38, Derbyshire County Council requested bids for a wide ferroconcrete replacement road bridge north of the Monks Bridge, on land purchased from Edward Every for £50 an acre. They accepted a tender of £30,862 from the firm of G.F. Tomlinson. Construction of the new bridge was complete by 1926. Permission was granted for repairs to be made to the structure in April 2004.