US-2: (Bridge Hunter; Satellite)
It looks like they have stared disassembling the falsework that was used to help construct the main truss.
Joe Dockrill posted Great Northern's Two Medicine Bridge in Montana in 1891. |
Marty Bernard posted 1. Great Northern Railway trestle over Two Medicine [River Montana] in course of construction circa 1887. LarryDoyle commented: The single track steel structure which replaced it (similar in design and appearance) is still in daily use in Montana. LarryDoyle also commented: Lewis and Clark pursued the Two Medicine River in their search of a Northwest Passage. They gave up, deciding the pass impossible, If they had only gone another 6 miles they would have found it. Instead, they backtracked about 200 miles or so and instead followed the Yellowstone River to find a land route to the Pacific. Jim Hills construction engineers succeeded where Lewis Clark failed. Photographs and captions from the Minnesota Historical Society Marty Bernard shared |
Ian Lothian posted Another favorite bridge that I like to photograph, even its its over 5,000 miles from home! This is Two Medicine Trestle on BNSF's Hi-Line sub, east of East Glacier Montana. The Great Northern use to use this view for publicity to try and attract visitors to Glacier National Park. Its a nice piece of engineering in a fabulous part of the world and looks even better when there's a train crossing it. This was an eastbound Intermodal on 21 July 2006 with 4903 leading 5372 and 5271. |
Street View |
American-Rails.com posted In this publicity photo, a handsome set of new Great Northern FT's, leading a string of new 40-foot boxcars, pose on Two Medicine Bridge, Montana in the summer of 1944. [A comment indicates that this is the BNSF mainline.] |
Street View |
Street View |
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