Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge

The Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge is a 154-year-old, two-span, timber Town lattice-truss, interstate, covered bridge that crosses the Connecticut River between Cornish, New Hampshire (on the east), and Windsor, Vermont (on the west). Until 2008, when the Smolen–Gulf Bridge opened in Ohio, it had been the longest covered bridge (still standing) in the United States.[3][4]

Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge
Coordinates 43°28′26″N 72°23′02″W
CrossesConnecticut River
LocaleCornish, New Hampshire to Windsor, Vermont
Maintained byNew Hampshire Department of Transportation
Characteristics
DesignTown lattice truss bridge[1]
Materialwood
Total length449 ft 5 in (137.0 m)
Width24 ft (7.3 m)
Longest span204 ft (62.2 m)
Load limit10 US tons (9.1 metric tons)
Clearance below12 ft 9 in (3.89 m)
History
Construction end1866[1]
Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge
Nearest cityWindsor, VT
Built1866
NRHP reference No.76000135 [2]
Added to NRHPNovember 21, 1976

History

Previous bridges

There were three bridges previously built on this site—one each in 1796, 1824 and 1828.[5] The 1824 and 1828 spans were constructed and operated by a group of businessmen which included Allen Wardner (1786–1877).[6]

1866 bridge (current)

The current bridge was built in 1866 by Bela Jenks Fletcher (1811–1877) of Claremont and James Frederick Tasker (1826–1903) of Cornish at a cost of $9,000 (equivalent to $157,152 in 2019). The bridge is approximately 449 feet (137 m) long and 24 feet (7 m) wide. The structure uses a lattice truss patented in 1820 and 1835 by Ithiel Town (1784–1844).[7]

From 1866 through 1943, it operated as a toll bridge. According to a 1966 report by the New Hampshire Division of Economic Development, the bridge was plenty long enough to earn the name "kissin' bridge", a vernacular of covered bridges referring to the brief moment of relative privacy while crossing.

[In 1866] It connected 'temperance' Windsor with 'wet' Cornish, so authorities asked 2 cents for foot travelers to enter New Hampshire but upped the fee to 3 cents for the return to dry Windsor.

Boston Globe (1966)[8]

Other tolls, in 1866, ran as high as 20 cents (equivalent to $3 in 2019) for a four-horse carriage.

The span was purchased by the state of New Hampshire in 1936 and became toll-free in 1943.

Landmark designation and restoration

Clarification of "longest bridge" status

While the Old Blenheim Bridge had and Bridgeport Covered Bridge has longer clear spans, and the Smolen–Gulf Bridge is longer overall, with a longest single span of 204 feet (62 m), the Cornish–Windsor Bridge is still the longest wooden covered bridge and has the longest single covered span to carry automobile traffic. (Blenheim was and Bridgeport is pedestrian only.) The Hartland Bridge in Hartland, New Brunswick, Canada, is longer than the Cornish-Windsor Bridge, and is currently open, but the claim that Cornish-Windsor was the longest was made when the Hartland was closed.

Access

From Vermont
Vermont Route 44 in Windsor heading southeast, ends at Main Street. (Main Street is also US 5 and VT 12.) Continuing past Main, the road becomes Bridge Street. Traveling on Bridge Street from Main, the Windsor bridge approach is about 2 tenths of a mile or 350 yards (320 m). After crossing the bridge, Bridge Street ends at New Hampshire Route 12A, which runs along the Connecticut River on the west and Cornish Wildlife Management Area on the east. Although the public sometimes perceives the bridge as being solely in Windsor, the bridge is mostly in Cornish, given that the New Hampshire-Vermont boundary runs along the western mean low-water mark of the Connecticut River. Put another way, when one enters the bridge from the Windsor side, one is immediately in New Hampshire.[9]

From New Hampshire
On New Hampshire Route 12A (Town House Road) in Cornish, coming from the south, Bridge Road is a T intersection on the left (west). Traveling from the north, from West Lebanon, New Hampshire, New Hampshire Route 12A is a notably scenic route along the Connecticut River.

Historical marker Traveling from Cornish, just before the bridge intersection (about 100 ft. south of the bridge intersection), on the left, there is a parking area (about 175 ft. x 27 ft.) for viewing the bridge, which includes a New Hampshire historical marker. The marker (number 158) is one of four in Cornish.[10]

Cornish-Windsor Bridge, looking north-north-westerly from the Cornish side (September 6, 2018)
gollark: If I were to publish it, it would not contain the same things, thus bad.
gollark: Replying to https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348671457808613388/752981641080864799... no, and I wouldn't write that anyway, my journal just contains private things for obvious reasons.
gollark: I don't do todo lists.
gollark: You store your journals as old unixy archive files?
gollark: ... no.

See also

Other covered bridges in Cornish

Covered bridges in West Windsor, Vermont

Other bridges elsewhere



References

  1. Cornish–Windsor Bridge at Structurae
  2. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  3. Horton, John (2008-08-23). "Ashtabula County really has it covered; New roofed span snatches title of nation's longest". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved 2008-08-28.
  4. "Cornish-Windsor Covered Bridg," American Society of Civil Engineers
  5. New Hampshire Department of Transportation, "Cornish–Windsor Bridge," by Richard G. Marshall, New Hampshire Department of Transportation (retrieved January 11, 2014)
  6. History of the Town of Cornish, New Hampshire, (Vol. 1 of 2), by William Henry Child (1832–1920, The Rumford Press (1911), p. 216
  7. New Hampshire's Covered Bridges, by Thedia Cox Kenyon, drawings by Stan Snow, Wake-Brook House (1957; revised 1966); OCLC 1029380110
  8. "Covered Bridges Sunpike – Two Built By Geniuses Unable to Read, Write," by Jean O'Brien Erickson (née Jean Marie O'Brien; born 1929), Boston Globe, October 21, 1962, sec. B, p. 24 (www.newspapers.com/image/433418759)
  9. Vermont v. New Hampshire 289 U.S. 593 (1933) says the river, and therefore the bridge, is all in New Hampshire.
  10. "List of Markers by Town" (PDF). nh.gov. New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. November 2, 2018. Retrieved July 5, 2019.

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