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| QuimbysCruisingGuide |
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| USACE via pfbc |
Going upstream (north to south)
These are notes that I am writing to help me learn our industrial history. They are my best understanding, but that does not mean they are a correct understanding.
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| QuimbysCruisingGuide |
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| USACE via pfbc |
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| Street View, Sep 2007 |
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| Facebook Reel |
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| Perry Lake, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers posted Due to flooding, the following closures are in effect until further notice... BOAT RAMPS Old Town Boat Ramp Longview Boat Ramp Devils Gap Boat Ramp CAMPSITES Rock Creek Campground • All of Peninsula C-loop (PC63-PC78) Slough Creek Campground • Bur Oak 11 • Southpoint 10-13-17-19-21-65-67-70 • Limestone Cove Group Camp Oldtown Campground • B5 We are monitoring the situation and will update as conditions change. |
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| Street View, Oct 2024 |
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| Street View, Oct 2024 |
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| Street View, Aug 2021 |
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| Bob Dover posted The High Street Bridge, now renamed the Wisconsin Avenue Bridge, is the oldest bridge in the District of Columbia. The bridge was constructed in 1831 to carry the Georgetown High Street across the newly constructed C&O Canal. Even though it carries busy vehicle and pedestrian traffic on what is now Wisconsin Avenue just a block from M Street, one of the busiest thoroughfares and shopping districts in the city, its historic importance is known to few DC residents, and even fewer tourists and visitors. There is little car traffic in this area, because the streets are not through streets, and there is very little public parking available in the narrow sliver of land south of the canal. Even cars and pedestrians crossing the bridge are unlikely to notice that it is historic, because it is a sub-structure arch bridge with no superstructure above the deck. The only way to view the bridge is to walk along the C&O Canal towpath beneath the arch, and the early date and historic importance of the bridge will become immediately apparent to even casual observers. The sandstone blocks range in color from tan to orange, with many of them blackened by decades of weathering and burning of coal. On the western side of the bridge, the block above the keystone identifies John Cox as the Mayor of Georgetown, and James Dunlop as Recorder. The keystone below this block is inscribed with the construction date of 1831. None of these inscriptions are easy to read from the towpath, but they can be read with binoculars or a telephoto camera lens. The obelisk on the northwest corner of the High Street Bridge also deserves a visit. This monument was erected in 1850, to commemorate the completion of the C&O Canal to its western terminus at Cumberland. The obelisk itself is only about five feet high, but sits on a square, white marble base that is also about five feet high. The base is engraved, on all four sides, with the names of the engineers, directors, and other officials associated with the construction of the canal. |
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| Street View, Dec 2024 |
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| Street View, Oct 2018 |
This is Tunnel No. 5 of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad’s Wheeling-Pittsburgh Subdivision. Completed in 1857 for the Hempfield Railroad, it remained in active railroad service until 1985, when the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad sought to abandon the line because of declining freight, particularly coal traffic.A portion of the former rail corridor has since been converted into a rail trail west of the tunnel. However, the reuse of Tunnel Nos. 4 and 5 has been delayed by falling brickwork in one tunnel and an unresolved dispute with a private landowner.🔗 More photographs and the full history are available through the link in the comments. A visit helps support Bridges & Tunnels's ongoing work documenting these places through research, photography, and preservation-focused storytelling.
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| 1964/66 Claysville Quad @ 24,000 |
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| TopoMapExplore |
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| 1958 |
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| Postcard via BridgeHunter |
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| Postcard via BridgeHunter_1906 |
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| 2007 photo by Jason and Birgit Smith via BridgeHunter_1906, cropped |
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| 2007 photo by Jason and Birgit Smith via BridgeHunter_1906 |
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| Andrea Strauss posted Pedestrian bridge across the Cedar River - Charles City, lowa. |
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| Street View, Jul 2021 |
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| 2013 photo by John Marvig via BridgeHunter_1910 |
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| 2013 photo by John Marvig via BridgeHunter_1910 |
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| Roger Puta photo scanned by Marty Bernard via BridgeHunter_1910 |
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| Satellite |
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| Street View, Jun 20223 |
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| Franklin Wirtz, Aug 2022 |
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| Franklin Wirtz, Aug 2022 |
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| 1953/57 East Kittitas Quad @ 24,000 |
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| Satellite |
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| montanatom1950 via ArchivedBridgeHunter_judith via Flickr |
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| 2015 photo by David Jones via BridgeHunter_indian |
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| Tracy Scott posted The Indian Creek Trestle was originally part of the route constructed by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad during its expansion across Montana in the early 1900s. This line required numerous major bridges and trestles to cross the deep coulees and river valleys of the Judith Basin region. This trestle is located in the rugged coulee country west of Lewistown in Fergus County. It carries the former Milwaukee Road line, now operated by the Central Montana Rail, across a deep drainage carved by Indian Creek. At 1303 feet long, it was built in 1912-1913. The line remains one of the few surviving segments of Milwaukee Road trackage in Montana still carrying freight traffic today. Central Montana Rail continues to serve agricultural customers throughout the Judith Basin. |