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The Charlestown Bridge, [a] officially named the William Felton "Bill" Russell Bridge, [b] is located in Boston and spans the Charles River. As the river's easternmost crossing, the bridge connects the neighborhoods of Charlestown and the North End. The bridge carries a portion of the Freedom Trail linking to the USS Constitution and Bunker Hill.
Replaced Charlestown High Bridge, built 1956, demolished 2004 ... Map of local Charles River crossings – Harvard College Marathon Challenge website;
Route 99 is a 6.67-mile-long (10.73 km) north–south state highway in metropolitan Boston, leading from the Boston neighborhood of Charlestown through the northern suburbs of Everett, Malden, and Melrose, and terminating in Saugus at U.S. Route 1 (US 1).
The Charlestown High Bridge (referred to as the John F. Fitzgerald Bridge on old AAA Tourbook maps) spanned the Charles River in Boston, Massachusetts and was part of I-93/US 1 at the north end of the Central Artery.
Charlestown is the oldest neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts, in the United States. [1] Also called Mishawum by the Massachusett, it is located on a peninsula north of the Charles River, across from downtown Boston, and also adjoins the Mystic River and Boston Harbor waterways.
A map of the proposed route [7] shows that the completed Harborwalk will consist of a continuous trail from Charlestown in the north to Dorchester in the south, plus many other discontinuous trail segments. A map [8] and trail guide [9] describe the current status of the route.
Charles River Dam Bridge; Charlestown Bridge; Charlestown High Bridge; Chelsea Street Bridge; Eliot Bridge; Grand Junction Railroad Bridge; Great Bridge; Harvard Bridge;
The bridge was sold to the Hancock Free Bridge Corporation in 1846, [8] and became toll-free on January 30, 1858. [ 9 ] The current bridge was constructed in 1910, along with the dam that turned the lower Charles River from a tidal estuary into a fresh-water basin.