Trevorton Bridge

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Trevorton Bridge
Coordinates40°42′35″N 76°51′08″W / 40.70972°N 76.85222°W / 40.70972; -76.85222Coordinates: 40°42′35″N 76°51′08″W / 40.70972°N 76.85222°W / 40.70972; -76.85222
CrossesSusquehanna River
LocaleNorthumberland, Pennsylvania, United States
Other name(s)Port Trevorton
Characteristics
DesignCovered bridge
Total length3,460 ft (1,050 m)
History
Built1850s
Closed1870
Location

The Trevorton Bridge was a wooden covered bridge that crossed the Susquehanna River. It was erected between Herndon in Northumberland County and Port Trevorton in Snyder County, Pennsylvania. The bridge was 3,460 feet (1,050 m) long,[1] with a 1,400-foot (430 m) trestle leading up to it.[1] It was originally built as a railroad bridge by the and, in 1885, the bridge was adapted for use as a road bridge as well as for trains.[1] The bridge was most often used to cross the Susquehanna by cattle. The continuous crossing of cattle endangered the already weakened bridge (weakened from acid in the bark the pine used to construct the bridge).[1] The bridge was eventually dismantled for fear that it would collapse.

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References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Faris, John Thomson (1919). Seeing Pennsylvania. J. B. Lippincott Company. pp. 173.


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