Jump to content

Grants Mills Bridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Grant Mills Covered Bridge)
Grant Mills Bridge
A brown wooden covered bridge with pointed roof. Above its portal are signs saying "Millbrook 1902" and "Pedestrians only". To the right a faded sign says "Safe load 6 tons"
South portal, 2008
Coordinates42°04′49″N 74°38′12″W / 42.0804°N 74.6367°W / 42.0804; -74.6367
CarriesPedestrians
CrossesMill Brook
LocaleHardenburgh, NY, USA
Official nameMillbrook Bridge
Other name(s)Marks' Bridge
Maintained byTown of Hardenburgh
Heritage statusNRHP #98001538
Characteristics
DesignTown lattice truss covered bridge[1]
Total length69+12 feet (21.2 m)[1]
Width13 feet 10 inches (4.22 m)[1]
Height11 feet (3.4 m)
History
Constructed byEdgar and Orrin Marks
Construction end1902[1]
Opened1902[1]
Closed1964[1]
Statistics
Daily trafficn/a
Location
Map

The Grant Mills Bridge, officially the Millbrook Bridge, is a wooden covered bridge over Mill Brook in Hardenburgh, New York, United States. It is one of 29 covered bridges in the state.

It was built in 1902 by a pair of local builders in the lattice truss design perfected early in the previous century by Ithiel Town. It was taken out of service in 1964 when Mill Brook Road was relocated a short distance to the south, but remains in excellent condition and is open to foot traffic. In 1999, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Structure

[edit]

The bridge is located on the west corner of the junction of Mill Brook and Fred Davis roads a short distance east of the Delaware County line. The area is wooded, just under 1,900 feet (580 m) in elevation with the ground sloping gently to the northeast. It spans the brook, a tributary of the East Branch of the Delaware River that drains into New York City's Pepacton Reservoir, just to the west of a more modern bridge carrying vehicle traffic.[1]

It is a single span, 69+12 feet (21.2 m) in length, supported by rough abutments of dry-laid fieldstone. Its superstructure incorporates the Town lattice truss design. Both chords and the diagonals, connected by wood pins at each intersection, are formed by heavy paired planks. Planks laid on stringers form the deck; alternating timbers protrude to create a series of four buttresses on the sides of the bridge. Vertical board sheathing on horizontal nailers constitutes the bridge's siding; the roof and buttresses are clad in wood shingles.[1]

History

[edit]

In 1902 the town of Hardenburgh awarded local carpenter Edgar Marks the contract to build a bridge over Mill Brook near the county line, a couple of miles below its headwaters on Balsam Lake Mountain. It would serve the small population of farmers and millers that lived in the remote valley.[1]

With help from his son Orrin, he got to work hauling the stone and cutting the planks. He used the Town lattice truss, a reliable design for building a lasting bridge of this size from local materials. With the help of several other local craftsmen, the bridge was opened late that year.[1]

It took its popular name from a mill two miles (3 km) to the west at the intersection of Mill Brook and what is now Kittle Road. Grant's Mill was often used in giving directions, as at that time the road was not maintained year-round. Marks called it the Lattice Bridge in his reports to the town; officials referred to it by his name.[2]

It would later withstand and serve automobile traffic as well. When Mill Brook Road was realigned in 1964, the bridge was taken out of service. It remained in place despite the neglect. In the early 1990s Marks' descendants restored it.[1] The town board renamed it the Millbrook Bridge in 2002, after it had been listed on the Register, to avoid further confusion.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Smith, Raymond (September 1999). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Grant Mills Covered Bridge". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved February 13, 2010.
  2. ^ a b Baker, Betty. Notice posted in bridge. December 2004.
[edit]