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The Northwood Bridge, also known as Goose River Bridge, was a historic 56-foot-long (17 m) bridge across the Goose River about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from Northwood, North Dakota. Dating from 1906, it was significant as a relatively rare example of a half-hip type of Pratt pony truss bridge.
Hi-Line Railroad Bridge as seen from Chautauqua Park, Valley City. Originally called the High Bridge, the Hi-Line Bridge is a historic railroad bridge located over the Sheyenne River in Valley City, North Dakota. The bridge is 3,860 feet (1,180 m) long and 162 feet (49 m) above the river.
The bridge crossed the Midland Continental Railroad track. According to its nomination, the bridge is significant "for its association with efforts to modernize and improve North Dakota's roadway system during the New Deal era, including the state's first large-scale program of railroad-highway grade separation construction. The overpass is ...
Name Image Built Listed Location County Type Beaver Creek Bridge: 1913 1997-02-27 Finley: Steele: Pratt through truss Caledonia Bridge: 1895 1997-02-27
I-94 BL, across the Missouri River, Bismarck, North Dakota: Area: 19 acres (7.7 ha) Built: 1920: Built by: American Bridge Company: Architectural style: Warren-Turner through truss: MPS: Historic Roadway Bridges of North Dakota MPS: NRHP reference No. 97000172 [1] Significant dates; Added to NRHP: March 11, 1997: Removed from NRHP: March 25, 2009
Four Bears Bridge is one of two bridges built over the Missouri River on the Fort Berthold Reservation in the U.S. state of North Dakota. It carries North Dakota Highway 23. The current bridge which opened in 2005 is the second largest bridge in the state and replaced an earlier bridge built in 1934. The 1934 bridge was moved in 1955 following ...
The railway has not been used since the mid-1980s. In 1996 the bridge was owned by Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway Company. [5] It is located in McKenzie County, North Dakota, [6] and is a few hundred feet south of a 1955-built truss bridge of North Dakota State Highway 200. About 300 feet east of the lift bridge along the rail line is the ...
Through truss bridges with documented construction dates and builders, such as this one, best illustrate this important trend in North Dakota bridge construction. It is also significant as being the oldest surviving metal truss bridge in Ransom County. It was built in 1907 for a contract price of $3,890. [2]: 7 It crosses the Sheyenne River.