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Winnie-the-Pooh bridge fetches over £130,000 at UK auction

Originally known as Posingford Bridge, it captured the imaginations of children as "Poohsticks Bridge" where the honey-loving teddy bear invented one of the most famous children's games.

News Desk (AFP)
London, United Kingdom
Fri, October 8, 2021

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Winnie-the-Pooh bridge fetches over £130,000 at UK auction This undated handout photograph received from Summers Place Auctions in London on October 5, 2021, shows a wooden bridge, originally known as Posingford Bridge, that was constructed in 1907 in Ashdown Forest and which inspired Winnie the Pooh author A.A. Milne to write the books following a game of 'Poohsticks' with his son Christoper. (AFP/Handout/Summers Place Auctions)

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bridge depicted by author A.A. Milne in his children's books about honey-loving teddy bear Winnie-the-Pooh has sold at auction for more than twice its estimated price, a UK-based auctioneer said Thursday.

Built in 1907 in Ashdown Forest in southern England but later replaced and restored, the bridge fetched £131,625 ($179,167, 154,830 euros) in a sealed bid, auctioneer Summers Place Auctions said.

Originally known as Posingford Bridge, it captured the imaginations of generations of children as "Poohsticks Bridge" where the bear protagonist invented a game dropping sticks and pinecones into the water below.

Milne's son Christopher Robin, who inspired the books and shared his name with the boy who joined Pooh in his adventures, played on the bridge in the 1920s before it appeared in the books, illustrated by E.H Shepard.    

Though the lot attracted global bids, the bridge was ultimately claimed by local aristocrat William Sackville, whose Buckhurst Park estate is located just a short distance from where the bridge was built.

Sackville, whose lands encompass the area recreated in the Pooh books as the "Hundred Acre Wood" said he was "delighted" with the purchase. 

"It will take pride of place on the estate close to its original position and I hope that many children (and adults) will be able to admire the original bridge which inspired one of the most famous games still played by children in the UK and abroad -- 'Poohsticks'," he said.

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