Queenie Bridge
| Queenie Bridge | |
|---|---|
| The bridge in 2019, looking east to Ship Row in Greenhill | |
| Coordinates | 57°30′15″N 1°46′20″W / 57.50411°N 1.77227°W | 
| Carries | Bridge Street and Greenhill Road | 
| Crosses | Middle Harbour | 
| Locale | Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland | 
| Characteristics | |
| Design | Bascule bridge | 
| Longest span | 106 feet (32 m) | 
| History | |
| Opened | 1954 | 
| Statistics | |
| Daily traffic | Yes | 
| Toll | No | 
| Location | |
Queenie Bridge is a toll-free bascule bridge in Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Opened in 1954, it connects Bridge Street and Greenhill Road in the town's harbour area. It replaced a swing bridge which had stood on the site since 1850 and was built at a cost of £8,000. There has been a crossing at this point in the harbour since at least 1739.
The bridge's name is a play on Quinzie (the Scots version of the French word coin, which signifies a corner), the historic name of the area of town to the south of Port Henry, which was constructed in 1593. Quinzie was a causeway of boulders, covered only by spring tides, which linked the islands of Keith Inch and Greenhill to the mainland.