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Trestle located just north of the Phoenix Mills Bridge. Susquehanna St Bridge Village of Cooperstown is a two lane bridge located in Cooperstown, New York that passes over the river near the Clark Sports Center. Mill St Bridge Village of Cooperstown is a two-lane Bailey bridge located in Cooperstown, New York that passes over the Otsego Lake dam.
This list includes bridge and ferry crossings of the Susquehanna River in New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland The main article for this category is List of crossings of the Susquehanna River . Subcategories
On November 16, 2004, the Turnpike Commission let a contract for a bridge to replace the 1950 span. [2] Two new 3-lane segmental , concrete signature spans were constructed just upriver from the old 4 lane span.
The Port Deposit Bridge (also known as the Susquehanna River Bridge or Rock Run Toll Bridge) was the earliest bridge crossing of the Susquehanna River below Columbia, Pennsylvania, providing the first reliable link between the northern and southern United States. The bridge was also the fifth and last of Theodore Burr's
A bridge crosses the Susquehanna at Owego, New York. Today 200 bridges cross the Susquehanna. The Rockville Bridge, which crosses the river from Harrisburg to Marysville, Pennsylvania, is the longest stone masonry arch bridge in the world. It was built by the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1902, replacing an earlier iron bridge. Two seasonal ferries ...
M. Harvey Taylor Memorial Bridge; Market Street Bridge (Clearfield, Pennsylvania) Market Street Bridge (Susquehanna River) Market Street Bridge (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania) Marysville Bridge; Millard E. Tydings Memorial Bridge
The Philadelphia & Reading Railroad Bridge carries Norfolk Southern rail lines across the Susquehanna River between Lemoyne, Pennsylvania and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.Some of its concrete piers encase stone masonry piers from an earlier truss bridge on this site, completed in 1891 by the Philadelphia, Harrisburg and Pittsburgh Railroad, which was then acquired by the Philadelphia and Reading ...
More than 80 daily passenger trains on Amtrak's busy Northeast Corridor speed through the city at 90 miles per hour (145 km/h) on an elevated line connected to the adjacent Amtrak Susquehanna River Bridge. [30] The double-track bridge was built by the Pennsylvania Railroad between 1904 and 1906 for its New York City–Washington, D.C. line.