ACOL
Because the original bridge was the ONLY bridge in London at that time.
London Bridge. The Olympic rings are on Tower Bridge - not London Bridge.
London Bridge spans the River Thames
There is a village, where I live in Kent called Acol. Pronounced like Acorn, since the origin is the same. Acol means oak wood. The land is on the Quex Estate, an old 'stately' home owned by the Powell-Cotton Family. The Powell Cottons developed an area of London, called the Quex Estate, giving street names all from this part of Kent - Birchington, Shottendane, Acol etc. I believe the answer is that In Acol Road was someone high up in bridge in a bridge club in Acol Road. He invented the system of bridge scoring and named it after the Acol Road club. Now known as Acol scoring. And remember it is really ACOL like ACORN, not AKKOL as mispronounced by most bridge players.
London Bridge
London Bridge
London Bridge
It is called Tower Bridge. Or you might be talking about the one that was on Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, which is the wobbly bridge, but it's proper name is the Millenium Bridge.
There are 107 bridges across the Thames - to many to name here
Were ia it
The Globe stood on Bankside, Southwark, South London, across London Bridge from the City of London.
No it isn't. London Bridge is a very ordinary bridge which crosses the river Thames in central London. Many tourists from other countries think that the iconic Tower Bridge is London Bridge, but it isn't. The name of London Bridge is famous throughout the world because of the children's song, 'London Bridge is Falling Down'.