Right in front of you is Cambridge’s own Bridge of Sighs: a covered stone bridge with pointed Gothic arches and those delicate lattice windows (that’s the crisscross stonework that looks a bit like a net). It links university buildings over the River Cam-look toward the stretch where the water slides quietly between two grand old college blocks.
Now, here’s the tale. Back in 1831, with builders thumping away and stonemasons shaping blocks by hand, this bridge was finished at St John’s College. Henry Hutchinson designed it to connect the Old Court and the New Court, saving scholars a long detour. Almost immediately, people started calling it the “Bridge of Sighs,” after the famous one in Venice. Truth be told, they mainly share a roof and a reputation for romance-Cambridge doesn’t really do exact copies.
Local legend says Queen Victoria often passed by and named this her favorite little corner of Cambridge. Picture her carriage rolling along, the Gothic windows catching the light, and the faint idea of royal footsteps echoing in your imagination. Did she sigh for love? For beauty? Or because someone made her sit through another earnest university speech? We’ll never know.
But Cambridge being Cambridge, it’s also a stage for legendary student mischief. One night in the 1960s, students used boats to haul a small Austin 7 under the bridge and hang it up with ropes. No damage-just a story that still gets laughs. A few years later they tried again with a Reliant Regal. Same result: bridge unbothered, students delighted.
It’s had its film-star moments too: scenes from Elizabeth: The Golden Age and The Theory of Everything were shot here, and even Pink Floyd used it for a music video. So as you look up, imagine the sighs, the jokes, the cameras-and the occasional misplaced car. In Cambridge, boredom rarely gets a degree.



