Stripped down as you've never seen her: Pictures of Tower Bridge during construction found dumped in a skip
This is one of the London's most beloved landmarks as you've never seen her before.
Stripped
 down to her underwear, the never before seen pictures of Tower Bridge -
 one of the world's most recognisable structures - have been unveiled 
after the stash of hundred-year-old prints were found in a skip.
Never seen before: The pictures of London's 
Tower Bridge were found in a skip and then wrapped up in brown paper and
 put in a carrier bag under a bed
 The unique
 pictures, dating back to 1892, document the construction the iconic 
bridge, which at the time was a landmark feat of engineering nicknamed 
‘The Wonder Bridge’.
The
 discarded pictures, which were retrieved by a caretaker who was looking
 after a building being turned into flats in 2006, have spent the last 
five years in a carrier bag underneath his bed.
The 59-year-old, who 
wishes to remain anonymous, said that after the occupants of the 
Westminster office building moved out, the album and a number of 
documents were thrown into a skip outside.
He said: ‘I took the ledgers to the Tower Bridge Museum because I thought they might have some historical value.
Remarkable find: The prints reveal in incredible
 detail the ingenuity behind one of the capital's most popular tourist 
attractions and how it was put together
A view of the bridge: The sturdy steel frame of 
Tower Bridge can be seen, before it was covered with its distinctive 
stone-cladding on the orders of architect John Wolfe-Barry
 ‘They included records of the materials and used in the bridge's construction and what they cost.
‘I told the man at the museum that I had also found some photos but he told me they already had plenty of those.
‘I
 didn't know what to do with them so I wrapped them in some brown paper 
and put them in a bag under the bed.’ It wasn't until earlier this 
month, when the owner of the photos mentioned them to his neighbour, 
City of Westminster tour guide Peter Berthoud that the significance of 
the find fully emerged.
Mr
 Berthoud, an expert in the history of London who gives guided tours 
around famous landmarks including Tower Bridge, said he was gobsmacked 
by the haul.
Stripped down: The photographs show how the 
bridge was put together over eight years, revealing why it was nicknamed
 at the time the 'Wonder Bridge'
Landmark: Tower Bridge remains one of the 
capital's most iconic structures and a tourist attraction today, 125 
years after building started
Sepia to silver screen: The incomplete Tower 
Bridge features in the 2009 film Sherlock Holmes, where Holmes battles 
with his adversary Lord Henry Blackwood
 And contrary to popular 
misconception, the images reveal the bridge is a sturdy steel frame 
beneath the instantly recognisable stone-cladding.
Mr Berthoud said: ‘When my neighbour gave me a disk with the images on I just couldn't believe it.‘I
 spent hours going through my books to see if these pictures were 
already around, but I couldn't see them anywhere - they are totally 
unique.
‘Quite simply 
London Bridge is the world's most iconic bridge, and it's the only 
bridge over the Thames which has never needed to be replaced at some 
point.
Discovery: Peter Berthoud was gobsmacked when 
his neighbour showed him the haul of photos. He spent hours going 
through books to find something similar, only to discover they are 
totally unique
Transformation: The bridge took eight years to 
build and at the time was a landmark feat of engineering, combining 
elements of a suspension and high level bridge and a bascule
 ‘It combines elements of a suspension bridge, a high level bridge and a bascule which allows it to open for ships to pass.
‘Nothing had ever been made like it before, and nothing since.
‘People are always surprised when I tell them Tower Bridge is a steel bridge, as the stone cladding is so recognisable.’ 
According
 to the tour guide, the bridge's original architect, Horace Jones, 
wanted to clad the bridge in brick, however, following his death he was 
succeeded as architect by John Wolfe-Barry who decreed the bridge should
 be clad in stone.
Development: Photos show the progress in the 
construction process, from basic structures to something easily 
recognisable as Tower Bridge as we know it today
Unique: Many of the 50 sepia prints are in good 
condition, despite dating back to 1892. Several are even dated, making 
it possible to trace the progress in construction 
In one poignant
picture flags decorate the body of the bridge and a hand-written pencil
note reads: ‘Note, flags denote Mr Hunter's wedding day’. Mr
Berthoud said: ‘My favourite pictures of the simple, humble guys 
building the bridge, unaware that what they are making will be so 
historic. ‘People are 
so used to seeing images of the Empire State Building being built, but 
this is part of British history being created 50 years earlier.’ 
 
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