The bridge replaces an earlier structure to the east, known as
Aghalane Bridge, carrying an 'approved road' over the border with formal custom patrols. Aghalane Bridge was named after Aghalane (
Irish:
Achadh Leathan, meaning 'Broad Field'), a
Fermanagh townland on the otherside. This older bridge, which also spanned the Woodford River, was destroyed on 21 November 1972 by
Ulster Loyalists during
The Troubles. No paramilitary group has ever claimed responsibility for the bombing. It was quickly replaced by a temporary bridge, but following the detonation of a bomb in the nearby market town of
Belturbet the following month, the British Government decided to leave the bridge in a state of disrepair and demolish the temporary structure. The lack of a crossing cut off access to farmland in southern
Fermanagh from
Belturbet. Local traffic had to undertake a detour, severing communities and leading to economic decline in the area, with many businesses in Belturbet closing. ==New bridge==