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Media related to McGilvray Road Bridge No. 4 (HAER) at Wikimedia Commons . Photo from 1979; Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. WI-22, "McGilvray Road Bridge No. 1, Van Loon Wildlife Area, La Crosse, La Crosse County, WI", 4 photos, 3 measured drawings, 21 data pages, 1 photo caption page, includes information about Bridge No. 4
The I-90 Mississippi River Bridge, or the Dresbach Bridge, consists of a pair of parallel bridges that traverse the Mississippi River, connecting the La Crosse, Wisconsin area to Dresbach in rural Winona County, Minnesota. The current bridge was fully opened to traffic in October 2016, replacing a previous 1967 plate girder bridge.
Another bridge, the La Crosse West Channel Bridge connects Barron Island to La Crescent, Minnesota. The Mississippi River Bridge carries U.S. Routes 14 and 61 with WI 16. There is another bridge about four miles upstream, the I-90 Mississippi River Bridge that connects North La Crosse, French Island, and Dresbach, Minnesota. [2]
U.S. Route 53, or U.S. Highway 53 (U.S. 53), is a north–south U.S. highway that runs for 404 miles (650 km) from La Crosse, Wisconsin to International Falls, Minnesota. It is the primary north–south route in northwestern Wisconsin, serving as a vital link between I-94 at Eau Claire, Wisconsin and the Twin Ports of Superior, Wisconsin , and ...
The following are images from various Michigan highway-related articles on Wikipedia. Image 1 Milemarker used in 1922 for M-14 Image 2 Grand River Avenue, once a part of M-16 and later US 16 , was originally an Indian trail converted as a plank road before becoming a state highway.
State Trunk Highway 32 (often called Highway 32, STH-32 or WIS 32) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Wisconsin that runs north–south in the eastern part of the state. . It runs from the Illinois border (at Illinois Route 137) north to the Michigan border (concurrent with U.S. Highway 4
A road was constructed to provide access from Lake Michigan to the fertile hunting grounds of the marsh, to provide food for the crews of ships on the lake. Starting in 1918, WIS 33 used to travel from WIS 12 in Baraboo to Camp Douglas via parts of present-day WIS 136, WIS 33, the WIS 80/WIS 82 concurrency, WIS 80 alone, and CTH-H. [ 4 ] In ...
This span replaced a series of bridges built to connect Marinette, Wisconsin, and Menominee, Michigan, across the river. The first bridge was built in 1865 with a second built in 1872 that was replaced in 1929 with the third bridge. This third crossing was 850 feet (259 m) in length, consisting of eleven 80-foot (24 m) spans. [73]