Thursday, April 30, 2026

Spellacy Covered Bridge and Pleasant Hill Dam Clear Fork Mohican River near Loudonville, OH

Bridge: (Satellite)
Dam: (Satellite)

Wally Road Scenic Byway posted five photos with the comment:
A little history about the name of our beautiful Spellacy Covered Bridge 
Spellacy Bridge
The mystery of the name Spellacy had hopes of being a romantic story of a long gone family that lived in the area. A story filled with blood, sweat and tears soaking the soil in the efforts to keep the family and farm thriving.  A story that would lead us to generations of family members that broke ground, fell trees and became a vital part of the areas history. 
But in actuality…….the name arrived in the form of Matthew Spellacy, a railroad contractor, born in 1843 in Ireland who got the contract for that section of the railroad track. 
According to his obituary, Mr Spellacy, who died in  September 1912 at 67 years of age, was a well-known contractor, director and large stockholder of the Driving Park Association, died at his home in Alton Ohio. During his life in Franklin County he managed some of the most important contracting work in the country.  He built the Norfolk and Western, worked for the Pennsylvania Railroad and built the Toledo and Ohio Central Belt Line.  He accumulated much wealth and gave generously to many charities and to individuals among the poor.
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Luke O'Neal, Oct 2018

This shows the outlet control works on the right and the morning glory spillway in the right foreground.
Street View, Jul 2024

I hope the morning glory spillway is big enough because I could not find an emergency spillway for this earthen dam.
Satellite

Wild Marks, Aug 2023

Allegheny Portage Railroad Engine House #6 for an Incline

(Satellite)

A nearby skewed arch bridge went over the Allegheny Portage Railroad.

Jenn Gray, Oct 2023

Kirk (kirkevonphilly), Sep 2025

Sam L, Aug 2024

CJ Q, Oct 2025

Kevin Horst, Oct 2024

Gregory Wood, Mar 2020

Joshua Warzel, Sep 2022

Joshua Warzel, Sep 2022

There is a large visitor center nearby.
lindsta, Sep 2025

Facebook Reel


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

1930 Cotter and 1905 MNA/MoPac/SIMS Bridges over White River at Cotter, AR

Cotter: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; Historic Bridges; HAERSatellite)

MNA = Missouri & Northern Arkansas
SIMS = St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern

Street View, Jul 2023

Bridges Now and Then posted
Cotter Bridge, Flippin, Arkansas. (Historic American Engineering Record, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C.)
HAER ARK,3-COT,1--5
5. VIEW OF CENTER SPAN OF BRIDGE FROM RIVERBED, LOOKING SOUTHWEST - Cotter Bridge, Spanning White River at U.S. Highway 62, Cotter, Baxter County, AR

"Significance: The Cotter Bridge is the only bridge in Arkansas known to be designed and engineered by the Marsh Engineering Company, a significant twentieth-century bridge-building company. Among the largest they ever designed, it is also an excellent example of the company's patented Marsh Rainbow Arch. A unique feature of the bridge is that it was constructed by means of a cableway, suspended across the river, over which all materials were transported to various parts ofthe structure. The Cotter Bridge was instrumental in making accessible a new region of the Ozarks, an important recreational area in the United States. It became Arkansas' first National Civil Engineering Landmark in 1986." [HAER_data, at the end of that webpage are some blueprints for this bridge]

Fredrick Garcia via BridgeHunter_Cotter

Street View, Jul 2023

HAER ARK,3-COT,1--4
4. LOOKING NORTHEAST, GENERAL VIEW OF BRIDGE

HAER ARK,3-COT,1--10
10. VIEW OF BRIDGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION, SHOWING CENTRAL ARCH AND PIERS, WITH CABLEWAY ABOVE AND TOWER ON BACKGROUND

HistoricBridges_Cotter
"While the nearby state of Kansas may have the greatest quantity of surviving Marsh type rainbow arch bridges in the country, it is this single surviving example in Arkansas that is ironically also the greatest Marsh arch bridge. This bridge's impressive height over the waterway, enormous arch spans over the river (complimented by a single small arch span over railroad tracks), and the overall multi-span layout of this bridge that all combine to form what is the most impressive and historically significant Marsh rainbow arch bridge in the entire country. In a very real sense this bridge also represents the ultimate aesthetic potential of concrete in bridge construction. From every angle that this bridge is viewed it projects a profound beauty that is unmatched in more simple concrete bridge forms.
"Beautifully preserved, this bridge remains in good condition today. Repairs and replacements made, such as railing and lighting, are respective of the original bridge design."
[This is one of the few bridges that HistoricBridges rates with two 10s.]

MoPac Swing Bridge


The swing span is now over an island! I wonder how much further upstream steamboats used to travel on this river.
Street View, Jun 2014

Back when the channel was under the swing span.

Photo by Fredrick Garcia via BridgeHunter_MoPac

Photo by Nicky Elmore via BridgeHunter_MoPac

HistoricBridges_MoPac
"This bridge is unusual because it is fairly high above normal water level for a swing bridge. Most boats would be able to fit under this bridge. Today, the bridge is even more unusual because with trees growing under one of the swing span arms, and shallow water under the other, it is clear this river has not been navigable for large boats for a very long time!"

1931 McBee Rainbow Bridge over Holston River in Mascot, TN

(Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; Historic Bridges; Satellite)

The 785' (239m) long bridge has a main span of 222.5' (68m). "This bridge is among the largest rainbow arch bridges in the country. However this is not the only thing that makes it stand out; it is also extremely massive with enormous arch ribs. Among rainbow arch bridges it is also extremely rare for its skew. The bridge is a tied arch or bowstring type rainbow arch. It retains excellent historic integrity and appears to be in good condition despite heavy traffic including truck traffic. The bridge is the only rainbow arch bridge in Tennessee." [HistoricBridges]

2008 Photo by Calvin Sneed via ArchivedBridgeHunter
"Only example of an Open-Spandrel, Through Arch (Tied Arch--also known as a Bowstring Arch) entirely concrete bridge in Tennessee. Commonly referred to as a Rainbow Bridge."

Street View, Aug 2023

Wayne Wood posted
The McBee Ferry Bridge spanning the Holston River in Mascot, TN (just outside Knoxville) . It is a concrete through arch bridge named for the ferry it replaced.

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Bridge Collapse in Cranston, RI

(Satellite)

The railing (parapet wall) fell down on the Amtrak tracks blocking all of them. There were no injuries. But there was a lot of service interruptions.
8:06 video @ 0:37

It was the south parapet wall on the ramp from westbound RI-10 to northbound I-95 that fell. That is why that ramp is now closed.
Satellite

A follow-up video.
6:04 video @ 1:45


2:40 video @ 1:06
Professional engineer shares insight into on-ramp barrier collapse
The wall was installed by Amtrak, and Amtrak is supposed to maintain it.

11:39 video @ 2:09
Update Number 2 on Partial Collapse of RiDOT Bridge - The Public Can Help! (see pinned comment)

NS/N&W Bridge over New River at Radford, VA

(Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)

Street View, Aug 2022

Eastern Rails Photography posted
With a fresh crew onboard, specially painted Norfolk Southern AC44C6M 4001 is in charge of westbound manifest 127 as it crosses over the New River in Radford, VA on an unseasonably warm autumn afternoon. 10/28/23
Roger Allen: What does the first engine's new paint job represent?
Eastern Rails Photography: Roger Allen 4000 & 4001 wear this special paint scheme to designate the units as prototypes for the DC to AC conversion program - which now has about 800 units!

Street View, Oct 2024

Abandoned in Virginia posted three photos with the comment: "The old New River bridge that was burned down during the Civil War. New bridge built right next to where the old stone pillars still stand!"
Jessica Johnson-Whitaker: This is not actually true - the pillars from tbt old bridge that was burned was used to build the one they use now. The other pillars are the remains of another trestle project Norfolk Southern was trying to build but abandoned it.
Randall Hampton shared with the commet: "Radford, VA."
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Brick Lincoln Highway (US-30) Segments between Mansfield and Ashland, OH

West Curve: (Satellite, Jim's coordinates)
East Curve: (Satellite, see street view below. It is just east of the bridge and south of the road.)

Lincoln Highway Overview

Street View, Jun 2024

Street View, Jun 2024

Joe Belcastro posted four photos with the comment: "Between Ashland Ohio and Mansfield."
Randy Keys: Exactly where is this? I grew up in Ashland and never heard about it.
Joe Belcastro: Randy Keys if you are traveling North on 42 from Mansfield turn left on 1688 and it's on left a few miles out. You can't miss it.
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Jim Roepke commented on Joe's post
On the same road a little closer to Mansfield.
Here the Google Maps coordinates

This is another example of where today's US-30 takes a much more direct route across the country than the Lincoln Highway originally took. The goal of the highway back then was to connect existing towns rather than a speedy trip across the country. So the original route probably went from Wooster to Ashland and then to Mansfield.
Satellite

But why was it on 1688 and Windsor Road? Because the Black Fork Mohican River was not drained as well as it is today. Or else there was a mill dam that has since been removed.
1908/1948 Ashland Quad @ 62,500