Bennett's Meadow Bridge

Route 10 Bridge
Coordinates 42°41′00″N 72°28′18″W / 42.68333°N 72.47167°W / 42.68333; -72.47167Coordinates: 42°41′00″N 72°28′18″W / 42.68333°N 72.47167°W / 42.68333; -72.47167
Carries Route 10
Crosses Connecticut River
Locale Northfield, Franklin County, Massachusetts
Maintained by MassHighway
ID number N2200412EMHDNBI
Characteristics
Design Steel Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder
Material Steel (and concrete)
Total length 215.5 metres (707.0 ft)
Width 13.4 metres (44.0 ft)
Number of spans 3
Load limit 57.5 Metric Tons
History
Opened 1969
Statistics
Daily traffic 4,267 (2002)
Route 10 Bridge
Location in Massachusetts

The Route 10 bridge, also known as Bennett's Meadow Bridge is a 215.5-metre (707 ft) steel stringer bridge crossing the Connecticut River in the town of Northfield, Massachusetts. The bridge carries state highway Route 10 and was built in 1969.

History

The town of Northfield first authorized a bridge at or near the site of the current bridge in 1810. The bridge was built by a private corporation with the town holding stock. The new bridge was destroyed in a flood after only a few years. A horse boat ferry, known as Bennett's Meadow Ferry, replaced the river crossing.[1] In 1897, the state legislature authorized Franklin County to construct a second bridge at or near the site of the ferry at a cost not to exceed $35,000. The new bridge was designed by Edward Shaw of Boston and was opened to traffic in 1899.[2] The bridge was one of the first bridges erected by a then novel method without the use of false works that has since become standard procedure.[3] The 1899 bridge was later demolished and a third bridge (the current bridge) was constructed just south of the former bridge, resulting also in the slight realignment of the highway.

See also

References

External links

Footnotes

  1. J.H. Temple,G. Sheldon, and M.T. Stratton, A History of the Town of Northfield, (J. Munsell, 1875)
  2. Massachusetts General Court, Acts of 1897, Chapter 497
  3. "A Novel Method of Bridge Erection; Connecticut River Bridge, Northfield, Mass.", Engineering News, Sept. 7, 1899.


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