Wellington Bridge is the first pedestrian bridge across the Liffey River. Before the 19th century, the pedestrian notice stated that half a penny was required to cross the bridge, so it was called "half a penny bridge". The unprovoked taxes and miscellaneous taxes had their own end, the outbreak of the Irish people's uprising, the establishment of the Republic and the new government, and the harsh announcement of bridge tolls was removed. The name of Half Penny Bridge continues to this day. It stands alone on the Lifei River, stares at the dark bank, blossoms and withers year after year, and continues the mission of infinite glory, so it gradually grows old. Back in 2000, in order to meet the millennium, the construction of the second pedestrian bridge, the Millennium Bridge, changed the lonely fate of the Half Penny Bridge for a hundred years.