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Name Image Built Listed Location County Type Auchumpkee Creek Covered Bridge: 1898 1975-04-01 Thomaston: Upson: Covered Town lattice truss: Coheelee Creek Covered Bridge
Pages in category "Covered bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Vermont" The following 86 pages are in this category, out of 86 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Name Image Built Listed Location County Type Arlington Green Covered Bridge: 1852 1973-08-28 Arlington: Bennington: Town lattice truss Bartonsville Covered Bridge
Name Image County Location Built Length Crosses Ownership Truss Notes Ashland Covered Bridge [1] New Castle: Ashland: ca. 1860: 52 feet (16 m) Red Clay Creek: Delaware Dept. of Highways and Trans. Town: Smith's Bridge [2] New Castle: Beaver Valley
Scuppernong River Bridge: 1926, 1927 1992-03-05 Columbia: Tyrrell: Warren ponytruss swing span Skeen's Mill Covered Bridge: 1885–1900 1972-01-20 Flint Hill: Randolph: Town lattice-truss/queenpost Southern Railway Company Overhead Bridge: 1919 2007-04-19
Daniel Good's Fording Covered Bridge (Used to make Willow Hill Covered Bridge in 1962) Miller's Farm Covered Bridge (Used to make Willow Hill Covered Bridge in 1962) Pennsylvania Railroad Bridge ‡ - Created in the 1820s, burnt during the American Civil War in July 1863. It was the longest covered bridge in the world (over a mile and a quarter ...
Fairfield County has 18 covered bridges. [1]: 68–69 The Smolen–Gulf Bridge, at 613 feet, is currently the longest multi-span covered bridge in the United States. The West Liberty Covered Bridge, at 18 feet, has been called the shortest covered bridge in the United States. The list below is not comprehensive.
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