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Historical notes Bell Ford Bridge: Seymour, Jackson County: 1869 330 feet (100 m) East Fork, White River Post Truss: Western span collapsed in 1999, while the remaining eastern span collapsed in 2006. It was the fourth longest and fifth oldest covered bridge in the state. Bridgeton Bridge (old) Bridgeton, Parke County: 1868 245 feet (75 m)
Indiana State Highway Bridge 42-11-3101: 1939 2000-03-15 Poland ... New Deal Resources in Indiana State Parks MPSPark Rustic Thorpe Ford Bridge: 1912 1978-12-22
Gospel Street Bridge Extant Pratt truss: 1880 1981 South Gospel Street Mill Creek Paoli: Orange: IN-25: Tippecanoe River Bridge Replaced Baltimore truss: 1890 1981 CR 350 E Tippecanoe River: Rochester: Fulton
Shields' Mill Covered Bridge, also known as Shieldstown Covered Bridge, is a historic covered bridge located in Brownstown Township and Hamilton Township, Jackson County, Indiana. It spans the White River and is a multiple kingpost Burr Arch Truss bridge. It was built 1876, and is a two-span wooden bridge resting on cut limestone pier and ...
Stone Arch Bridge over McCormick's Creek is a historic arch bridge located at McCormick's Creek State Park in Washington Township, Owen County, Indiana. It was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1934, and is solidly constructed of mortared roughcut limestone. The round arch has a 54-foot (16 m) span and reaches approximately 25 feet (7 ...
also: Buildings and structures: by country: United States: by state: Indiana: Bridges Bridges in the U.S. state of Indiana . Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bridges in Indiana .
The Laughery Creek Bridge aka Triple Whipple Bridge was built in 1878 and is the last triple-intersection Pratt truss bridge in the United States.. Laughery Creek is an 88.6-mile-long (142.6 km) [2] stream that flows through Ripley, Dearborn, and Ohio counties in southeastern Indiana, and is a tributary of the Ohio River.
Madison County Bridge No. 149 is a historic Pratt Through Truss bridge located at Pendleton, Madison County, Indiana. It was built about 1920, and measures 124 feet long. The bridges features rivets instead of pins in its construction. [2]: 5–6 It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2008. [1]