Longley Covered Bridge

The Longley Covered Bridge, also known as the Harnois Covered Bridge,[2] is a wooden covered bridge that crosses the Trout River in Montgomery, Vermont on Longley Bridge Road. Built in 1863, this Town lattice truss bridge is the oldest of a group of area bridges built by brothers Sheldon & Savannah Jewett. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.[1] The bridge is closed to traffic, and has been bypassed by an adjacent temporary bridge.

Longley Covered Bridge
Bridge in U.S. state of Vermont
Coordinates 44°54′25″N 72°39′18″W
CarriesAutomobile
CrossesTrout River
LocaleMontgomery, Vermont
Maintained byTown of Montgomery
ID numberVT-06-08
Characteristics
DesignCovered, Town lattice
MaterialWood
Total length84 ft 7 in (25.78 m)
Width16 ft 1.25 in (4.91 m)
No. of spans1
Load limit3 tons
Clearance above11 ft 0 in (3.35 m)
History
Constructed bySheldon and Savannah Jewett
Construction end1863 (1863)
Coordinates44°54′26″N 72°39′19″W
Area1 acre (0.40 ha)
NRHP reference No.74000220[1]
Added to NRHPDecember 30, 1974

Description and history

The Longley Covered Bridge is located in a rural area northwest of the village center of Montgomery, on Longley Bridge Road just west of its junction with Vermont Route 118. It crosses the Trout River in an east–west orientation, resting on abutments of stone and concrete. The bridge consists of flanking Town lattice trusses 84.5 feet (25.8 m) long. The bridge is 19.5 feet (5.9 m) wide, with a roadway width of 16 feet (4.9 m) (one lane). The exterior is finished in vertical board siding, which extends around to the interior of the portals. The siding does not extend the full height on the sides, leaving an open strip below the eaves. The bridge deck consists of wooden planking, and reinforcing stringers have been added to its underside. The bridge has a roof of standing seam metal.[3]

The bridge was built in 1863 by the Jewett brothers, who are credited with the construction of all of Montgomery's surviving covered bridges; it is the oldest of their surviving bridges. The brothers operated a sawmill in Montgomery's West Hill area. They prepared the wood for the bridges at their sawmill. The brothers are credited with building seven area surviving covered bridges, distinctive in Vermont as the highest concentration of bridges in the state with a single attributed builder.[3]

A complete restoration of the bridge was conducted in 1992 by Jan Lewandoski.[4] The bridge is currently leaning to one side and the trusses are bowed in the middle. It has been closed and bypassed by a temporary bridge.

gollark: ·Oh, `bot.run`, right.
gollark: ```pythonfrom transformers import GPT2LMHeadModel, GPT2Tokenizerimport discord.extfrom discord.ext import commandsTOKEN = 'NOT TELLING YOU'bot = commands.Bot(command_prefix='$')@bot.eventasync def on_ready(): print("done!")@bot.command()async def test(ctx, arg): inputs = arg # initialize tokenizer and model from pretrained GPT2 model tokenizer = GPT2Tokenizer.from_pretrained('gpt2') model = GPT2LMHeadModel.from_pretrained('gpt2') outputs = model.generate( inputs, max_length=200, do_sample=True, temperature=1, top_k=50 ) response = (tokenizer.decode(outputs[0], skip_special_tokens=True)) await ctx.send(response)client.run(TOKEN)```
gollark: Yes, you can just use `@bot.event` or something.
gollark: This is probably obvious but you're sending it in a channel the bot sees, right?
gollark: Do you need horrible amounts of computing power for this? I could use this for purposes.

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: West Hill Covered Bridge
  3. Hugh Henry (1974). "NRHP nomination for Longley Covered Bridge". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-11-11. with photos from 1974
  4. Evans, Benjamin and June. New England's Covered Bridges. University Press of New England, 2004. ISBN 1-58465-320-5
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