Acton grange is a bridge that signifies a place that seems to have fallen through the cracks over time. When the bridge was built, Acton Grange was a township in the Daresbury chapelry of Runcorn Parish. ‘Navvies’ huts’ were built there where entire families would live during the construction of the canal. In the years that followed, the widespread disruption of Moore village following the construction of three major railway lines displaced most of the small community at Acton Grange. To make matters worse the Manchester ship canal unfortunately piled straight through it in the late 1800’s, and in 1936 the remainder of Acton Grange was added to Walton. Nowadays it is mostly dominated by the port of Warrington which sits along the ship canal in Moore. This bridge is a Historic England Grade II listed building with following text. "Road Bridge over Bridgewater Canal circa 1770 by James Brindley for the Duke of Bridgewater. Brown brick with stone dressings. Deep segmental arch with stone springers and projecting stone band around brick voussoirs. Abutments curved in plan and battered in section. Flush stepped sandstone copings to parapets. Sandstone retaining walls to canal banks beneath bridge. Small patches of repair to bridge in harder red brick; otherwise unaltered." It is one of only five of Brindley’s bridges in Halton to still support single-lane traffic, connecting each side of Holly Hedge Lane. GPS Coordinates: 53.358133, -2.620733