Brookwood Bridge: Difference between revisions

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(New page: right|thumb|275px|Brookwood Bridge The '''Brookwood Bridge''' was a covered bridge over Hurricane Creek in Tuscaloosa County. It was constructed with...)
 
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[[Image:Brookwood Bridge.jpg|right|thumb|275px|Brookwood Bridge]]
[[Image:Brookwood Bridge.jpg|right|thumb|275px|Brookwood Bridge]]
The '''Brookwood Bridge''' was a covered bridge over [[Hurricane Creek]] in [[Tuscaloosa County]]. It was constructed with a Town lattice truss of light members pegged together according to the system patented in 1820 by Ithiel Town of Connecticut.
The '''Brookwood Bridge''' or '''Hurricane Creek Bridge''' was a 177-foot-long covered bridge over [[Hurricane Creek]] in [[Tuscaloosa County]]. It was constructed about [[1850]] using a Town lattice truss of light pine members fastened with [[White oak]] pegs according to the system patented in 1820 by Ithiel Town of Connecticut. The passage was 16 feet wide by 10 feet high.


The bridge was destroyed by fire in the 1960s.
The bridge was bypassed with the construction of [[I-59]]. In [[1965]] a group of picnickers took shelter from the rain in the bridge and built a fire. The extinguished it before leaving, but the embers set the wood structure ablaze during the night.
 
==References==
* {{Prince-1981}}


[[Category:Covered bridges]]
[[Category:Covered bridges]]
[[Category:1850 buildings]]
[[Category:Tuscaloosa County]]
[[Category:Tuscaloosa County]]
[[Category:Demolished buildings]]
[[Category:Burned buildings]]

Revision as of 13:26, 15 March 2011

Brookwood Bridge

The Brookwood Bridge or Hurricane Creek Bridge was a 177-foot-long covered bridge over Hurricane Creek in Tuscaloosa County. It was constructed about 1850 using a Town lattice truss of light pine members fastened with White oak pegs according to the system patented in 1820 by Ithiel Town of Connecticut. The passage was 16 feet wide by 10 feet high.

The bridge was bypassed with the construction of I-59. In 1965 a group of picnickers took shelter from the rain in the bridge and built a fire. The extinguished it before leaving, but the embers set the wood structure ablaze during the night.

References

  • Prince, A. G. (1981) Alabama's Covered Bridges: Past and Present. revised edition. Ensley: Best Printing Service