A structure used to hold a lantern in place with the intention of lighting roads, footpaths,
car parks or other such areas at
night. They generally consist of a post (or 'column'), and an arm (or 'bracket') onto which the lantern is inserted. The first 'lamp posts' probably consisted of burning torches on
top of wooden poles around villages.
Gas lamps were originally used in modern
society, but their light had a very limited range, and they had to be lit by
hand every
night. In the twentieth century electric lamp posts became commonplace, are now to be found in towns, villages, cities, on motorways and other main roads everywhere. Originally they were made of cast-iron, but throughout the decades lighter metal lamp posts gradually came into use. Concrete lamp posts became
popular during the fifties, as they did not need to be painted and were sturdy. These kinds of lamp posts (which are the best in my personal
opinion, especially the older, more ornate ones)have concrete brackets with metal pipes inside them. Although there were concrete lamp posts before the
war, the shortage of metal during and after the
war probably helped their popularity. In recent years, however, concrete lamp posts are all being removed due to corrosion or the worry they could be dangerous if someone crashed into one and it fell on either them or a passer-by. (It is actually the metal piping inside the bracket, along with the bolts holding it to the post, which rust, buckling out of shape and cracking the concrete. If it wasn'
t for this you could probably have a concrete lamp post which lasted
forever). Metal and plastic lamp posts are now in common use, many without brackets.