Look at BridgeHunter-1880s for a couple photos of the bowstring bridge. Here is a higher resolution of the overview photo.
The 1880s bridge was destroyed by a flood in 1913. That flood impacted a lot of Indiana. Here are views of the flood at Wheeling Ave. and High St. in Muncie and in Gosport on the White River. Also in Shoals on the East Fork White River.
The bowstring bridge was replaced by a multi-span Camelback truss in 1914. "These are among the longest Camelbacks extant in Indiana and one of a handful of riveted ones." [HistoricBridges]
2015 Photo by Ed Hollowell via BridgeHunter-1914, License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC) |
The metal piers are rather unique.
2015 Photo by Ed Hollowell via BridgeHunter-1914, License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC) |
1955 Cedar Grove Quad @ 24,000 |
safe_image for "The Cedar Grove Bridge, Cedar Grove, Indiana" 5:37 video Back in 1880 a three span bowstring through truss bridge crossed this section of the Whitewater River near the town of Cedar Grove, Indiana. It was built by the King Iron Bridge Company but was destroyed in the massive Flood of 1913 which wiped out many other bridges in the area. In 1914 this dual span Camelback steel through Truss Bridge was built and eventually it was incorporated into the new state route system. This particular bridge became part of State Route 1. It served the rural area of southeastern Indiana particularly Franklin County until a new bridge was built upstream in 1998. This bridge was closed to traffic on September 3rd 1999. Since 1999 it served as a bridge for people to walk across getting to and from Cedar Grove and to take in the beautiful view of the river below. Unfortunately in 2011 the Indiana Department of Transportation decided it was time to demolish the bridge. However a state based group called Indiana Landmarks teamed up with a grassroots group called "The Friends of the Cedar Grove Bridge" to help save the structure from demolition. Plans were to restore the bridge for pedestrian traffic and to reopen it as a park for the local community. After two years of fighting to save the bridge, the campaign was finally shelved due to the lack of interest and support from the area residents and local government officials. It was demolished on February 17, 2016. GPS Location: 39°21'12.2"N 84°56'34.5"W |
Documentation of the demolition of the bridge in the above video starts here.
5:37 video @ 3:20 |
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