|
|
|
2004 -- A GOOD YEAR FOR OLD KING BRIDGES BY ALLAN KING SLOAN DECEMBER , 2004
In our on-going quest to document and help preserve old relics of the King Bridge Company’s six decades of bridge building, 2004 was an excellent year. There were a number of important preservation completions, along with new sightings and other happenings that we learned about thanks to those of you who visited the King Bridge Company Museum website and contacted us. As a result, we can now account for over 75 King bridges that are still standing, many of them built before 1900. The company claims to have built 10,000 bridges in the period before the turn of the century, so the 75+ existing bridges would represent less than one percent of their total production, but still not bad.
PRESERVATION EFFORTS Two bridge preservation projects were completed for which we are delighted that our family Charitable Gift Fund had provided some assistance: the Beech Road Bowstring in Newfield, New York and the relocation of the Mill Creek Bridge in Ashtabula County, Ohio. These bridges are now open for walkers and bikers. We also we made additional grants in 2004 to the Grasse River Heritage Area Development Corporation for continuing help with the restoration of the King bowstring in Canton New York and to the Friends of Historic Northport, Alabama for the relocation and restoration of the 1882 Black Warrior bowstring. Check the PRESERVATION section of the website for the latest updates. We also provided additional funding to the Special Collections Library of Cleveland State University for the publication of a brochure on historic Cleveland bridges and to supplement the costs of publishing William Boyer’s major book on the history of Cleveland’s Veterans Memorial (Detroit-Superior) Bridge to be produced in the near future. In other preservation news, the Hojack swing bridge in Rochester, New York, despite the work of the dedicate group of historic preservationists our fund has been supporting, has received its official death sentence from the U. S. Coast Guard, but its owner, Conrail, has not yet begun the final execution. On a more positive note, the people responsible for the successful rehabilitation of the Aldrich Change Bridge in Palmyra, New York designed by Squire Whipple are planning to focus their energy and well-earned expertise to the restoration of the King-built Town Line Bridge in nearby Arcadia. Our fund has agreed to help when the effort is organized.
NEW FINDSThrough the website, we have received information and pictures from our visitors on nine additional King bridges that should be added to the inventory in the EXISTING BRIDGES section last updated in 2003. They include a variety of bowstring, standard trusses and beam girder bridges in locations ranging from Vermont to Mexico. These include: 1. An 1892 Bowstring known as the Waverly Street Bridge in Westernport, Alleghany County, Maryland, which was listed in the State’s historic bridge inventory in 1984 (Ref: AL-V1-D-308). Thanks to B. Chute for sending us this reference with a photo on 8/9/04. This would be the second known King bowstring in Maryland, joining the Bennie’s Hill Road Bridge across Catoctin Creek in Middletown, Frederick County.
3. A small Pony Truss with a King Bridge plate on the end post dated 1880 and still carrying traffic. It is also in Unadilla, New York. Jim Stewart also provided the pictures.
We also received new pictures and up-dated information on two other King bridges that are listed in our 2003 inventory: the 1874 Bowstring across Cadron Creek in Faulkner County, Arkansas, which has been documented both in the HAER inventory and in Donald Jackson’s book on Great American Bridges and Dams. . Wayne Kizzlar furnished the new pictures of this reportedly “oldest bridge in Arkansas” (See item # 7 in our inventory). The other is the Through Truss bridge in Marion, Virginia, (item # 35 in our inventory), for which Scott Wilson furnished new pictures of this still used bridge known locally as “Happy’s Bridge”.
We thank all our visitors for their contributions and hope to have more in the future. |