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A map of numbered covered bridges in New Hampshire, 1967 Stark Covered Bridge, built in 1857, over the Upper Ammonoosuc River Contoocook Railroad Bridge is the oldest covered railroad bridge of its kind in the United States Conway is home to the Saco River Bridge, built in 1890 Sign for NH Covered Bridge No. 2 (Coombs Covered Bridge) along NH Route 10
Location (in Maine) Built Length Truss Notes Union Falls Bridge Dayton: 1860 112 feet (34 m) Unknown A covered bridge built at Union Falls, a village that used to be in Dayton. It was blown up in 1921. [2] Watson Settlement Bridge: Littleton: 1911 170 feet (52 m) Howe: Farthest north and the youngest of Maine's original covered bridges.
List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in New Hampshire; List of bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in New Hampshire; List of crossings of the Connecticut River; List of New Hampshire covered bridges; List of waterways forming and crossings of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway
This is a list of bridges and other crossings of the Merrimack River from its mouth in the Gulf of Maine at Newburyport, Massachusetts, upstream to its source at the merger of two rivers in Franklin, New Hampshire. Some pedestrian bridges and abandoned bridges are also listed.
[5] In 2006, it was reported that there are 54 surviving bridges administered by the New Hampshire Department of Transportation, the most famous being the Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge (1866), spanning the Connecticut River from Cornish, New Hampshire to Windsor, Vermont; this bridge was formerly the longest wooden covered bridge in the ...
10 Maine. 11 Maryland. 12 Massachusetts. 13 Michigan. 14 Minnesota. 15 Missouri. 16 New Hampshire. 17 New Jersey. 18 New York. 19 ... This is a list of all covered ...
Originally built in 1907 to carry the Boston and Maine Railroad across the Sugar River, it now carries the multi-use Sugar River Trail, which was built on the abandoned right-of-way. It is one of a modest number of historic covered bridges in New Hampshire, and is named for the fact that it has a central pier. [2]
Name Image Built Listed Location County Type Ashuelot Covered Bridge: ca. 1864: February 20, 1981: Ashuelot: Cheshire: Town lattice truss Bath Covered Bridge