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Lifestyle
Ed Cullinane

Campaign Wants To Remove ‘lovelocks’ From Bridge With Somber History

Padlocks left on Pero’s Bridge across Bristol’s Floating Harbor. A campaign has been launched to remove hundreds of lovelocks from a bridge - as they are a symbol of oppression. PHOTO BY SWNS 

A campaign has been launched to remove hundreds of “lovelocks” from a bridge – as they are a “symbol of oppression.”

The petition has been made to remove the padlocks – left by loved-up couples and friends – on the crossing named after a slave.

Pero’s Bridge in Bristol’s harbor was named after Pero Jones, an 18th-century slave brought to live in the city by his ‘owner’ after he was purchased at the age of just 12.

Since it’s construction in 1999, locals have copied the tradition best known from the Pont des Arts bridge in Paris of attaching padlocks to the railings.

They attach heartfelt messages as a symbol of their love for someone.

Padlocks left on Pero’s Bridge across Bristol’s Floating Harbor. The petition has been made to remove the padlocks – left by loved-up couples and friends – on the crossing named after a slave. PHOTO BY SWNS 

The practice has taken place for years, and while not technically allowed, Bristol City Council have never enforced a ban on the practice – instead removing the locks every few years.

City resident Helen Tierney says that Pero was never granted his freedom – and the thousands of ‘hideous’ love locks dishonor his memory.

In a petition on 38 Degrees, she is calling on Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees to remove the locks from the bridge which is “weighed down by the very symbols of oppression”.

She wrote: “To Marvin Rees, Mayor of Bristol. In the heart of Bristol is a pedestrian bridge crossing the harbor.

Padlocks left on Pero’s Bridge across Bristol’s Floating Harbor. The petition has been made to remove the padlocks – left by loved-up couples and friends – on the crossing named after a slave. PHOTO BY SWNS 

“The City Council agreed the name Pero’s Bridge to honor a young enslaved African, Pero Jones, who in the 18th century was sold into slavery aged 12 & brought by his ‘owner’ to live in Bristol.

“Pero was never granted his freedom & died enslaved. A tiny plaque by the bridge tells this story.

“Pero’s Bridge is now defaced with thousands of padlocks, so called ‘lovelocks’ locked on to its structure.

“The keys most likely dropped into the water below. Only a few steps from the bridge is the place where, in 2020, the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was thrown into the harbor.

“I call upon the Mayor & City Councillors of Bristol to remove these hideous padlocks, not symbols of love at all but of oppression down the centuries, of enslaved people chained & padlocked with the keys thrown away, those people disrespected still today in the very place where they should be honored.”

The pedestrian bascule bridge linking Queen Square and Millennium Square also sits a matter of meters from the site of controversial Black Lives Matter protests in 2020.

In that protest, campaigners famously threw a statue of Bristol slave trader Edward Colston into the city harbor just meters from the bridge.

The statue was later recovered and put on exhibition from 4 June to 5 September 2021 at the M Shed museum in Bristol.

Produced in association with SWNS Talker

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