The National Liberal Land Company purchased the land that is now Bitterne Park in 1882, and began developing it for residential purposes. An iron bridge was constructed across the Itchen to St Denys, thus improving access and vastly increasing the value of the land. The bridge was opened with the promise to be "free to the public for ever" and was originally called the "Cobden Free Bridge". This was in clear competition to
Northam Bridge further south, which at that time was a
toll bridge. The bridge was named Cobden Bridge after
Richard Cobden, a prominent
Liberal politician. Cobden was notable as a campaigner for
free trade, and formed the
Anti-Corn Law League. The bridge was opened on 27 June 1883 by
Thorold Rogers, another Liberal politician and friend of Cobden, who was also chairman of the Land Company. The original bridge had five spans of with headway below the bridge of at high water and at low water. The bridge was supported by iron piers, cylindrical in shape and in diameter below the water and above it. The two centre piers extended below the water level and the outer two were deep. The abutments were made of concrete and although the piers were made of cast iron, they were also filled with concrete. The piers were topped with two lattice girders deep and divided into -long panels, set apart from one another. The bridge carried a -wide carriageway with a -wide footway on both sides. In all the bridge contained of wrought iron and of cast iron. The engineer was Corbet Woodall of Westminster. ==The second bridge (1928)==