The Welsh Bridge is a masonry arch viaduct in the town of Shrewsbury, England, which crosses the River Severn.
[1] The bridge was designed and built from 1793 to 1795 by John Tilley and John Carline (whose namesake father was a mason on the English Bridge), who had built Montford Bridge for Thomas Telford.
It replaced the medieval St George's Bridge.
The bridge is 30 feet wide, and built from Grinshill sandstone.
On the south end of the bridge, on the junction with Victoria Avenue, one of the parapets of the bridge has the words "Commit No Nuisance" chiselled into the stone.