Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki

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Difference between revisions of "Annapolis Royal Bridge"

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Image:Burro at allain river bridge 1989b.jpg|The [[Burro Crane]] working on the [[Annapolis Royal Bridge|Allain River Bridge]], 1989.
 
Image:Burro at allain river bridge 1989b.jpg|The [[Burro Crane]] working on the [[Annapolis Royal Bridge|Allain River Bridge]], 1989.
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Image:Allain River Bridge a.jpg|The bridge from Fort Anne, circa 1990.
  
 
Image:AnnapolisRoyalBridgea.jpg|The [[Annapolis Royal Bridge]] looking east to the town of [[Annapolis Royal]], September 9, 2005.
 
Image:AnnapolisRoyalBridgea.jpg|The [[Annapolis Royal Bridge]] looking east to the town of [[Annapolis Royal]], September 9, 2005.
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File:AnnapRoyal 3 (1280x853).jpg|A track view of the [[Annapolis Royal Bridge]] crossing the Allain River, facing east on August 30, 2011.
 
File:AnnapRoyal 3 (1280x853).jpg|A track view of the [[Annapolis Royal Bridge]] crossing the Allain River, facing east on August 30, 2011.
  
Image:Allain River Bridge a.jpg
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File:Annapolis Royal Allain River Bridge.jpg|West end of the bridge, 2019.
 
 
File:Annapolis Royal Allain River Bridge.jpg
 
  
 
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Revision as of 20:01, 8 February 2020

Annapolis Royal Bridge

Mile 00.27 on the Yarmouth Subdivision[1]

This bridge crossed the the wide, tidal Allen's Creek (also know as the Allen River), just west of Annapolis Royal. It was originally built as a wooden bridge, 325 feet long exclusive of the wooden approaches. It was replaced by a new bridge in 1914. The substructure consisted of 2 piers and two abutments, all of concrete, and the superstructure was one 150 foot Through Truss span and two 85 foot Through Plate Girder spans with standard wooden trestle approaches at both ends.[2] The length of all spans totaled 468 feet in 1968.[3]

The 1914 structure remained essentially the same until the line west of Coldbrook was abandoned in March 1990. The bridge remains intact but heavily weathered as of 2020 with gaps dug at approaches to discourage recreational use.

Gallery

References