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The Simon Kenton Memorial Bridge is a suspension bridge built in 1931 that carries U.S. Route 62 across the Ohio River to connect Maysville, Kentucky with Aberdeen, Ohio.Its main span is 1,060 feet (320 meters) long, and the total length of the bridge is 1,991 feet (607 meters).
The William H. Harsha Bridge is a cable-stayed bridge carrying U.S. Route 68 that connects Maysville, Kentucky, and Aberdeen, Ohio, over the Ohio River. It is named for William Harsha, who represented the Ohio portion of the area in the United States House of Representatives. Construction on the bridge started in 1997 and it opened in 2000.
U.S. Route 62, which passes just west of Maysville and links Kentucky and Ohio via the William H. Harsha Bridge. US 62 and 68 also provide Maysville with a direct route to Lexington and the Bluegrass Region of Central Kentucky. Other highways serving Maysville are: Kentucky Route 8, which follows the Ohio River west of Maysville to the greater ...
John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge: KY 17: Cincinnati and Covington 1867 ... Aberdeen and Maysville: 2000 Simon Kenton Memorial Bridge ...
The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) approved $75,000 to temporarily stabilize the bridge, which was completed in February 2018, per The Ledger Independent, but work to restore the bridge ...
U.S. Route 62 (US 62) in Kentucky runs for a total of 391.207 miles (629.587 km) across 20 counties in western, north-central, and northeastern Kentucky. [1] It enters the state by crossing the Ohio River near Wickliffe, then begins heading eastward at Bardwell, and traversing several cities and towns across the state up to Maysville, where it crosses the Ohio River a second time to enter the ...
Dashcam video from inside the cab of a tractor-trailer that was left dangling from a Kentucky bridge after a collision was shown in court Wednesday. The crash happened on March 1 on the Clark ...
Brent Spence Bridge project gets $1.6 billion in federal grant, which Gov. Andy Beshear calls the “largest infrastructure grant in US history.”