General Pierce Bridge

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General Pierce Bridge
File:IMG 3965 Montague City Road Bridge.jpg
General Pierce Bridge, taken from the Canalside Railtrail Bridge
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Carries vehicular and pedestrian traffic
Crosses Connecticut River
Locale Greenfield and Montague, Massachusetts
Maintained by MassHighway
ID number G-12-020
Characteristics
Design steel truss bridge
Total length 229.5 m (753.0 ft)
Width 7.9 m (25.9 ft)
History
Construction end 1947
Statistics
Daily traffic 19,400
General Pierce Bridge is located in Massachusetts
General Pierce Bridge
General Pierce Bridge
Location in Massachusetts

The General Pierce Bridge is a steel truss road bridge over the Connecticut River between Greenfield, Massachusetts and Montague, Massachusetts carrying Montague City Road.

File:IMG 3949-Montague-City-Road-bridge-between-spans.jpg
General Pierce Bridge, between spans facing northeast.

It is currently being scheduled for major repairs. After the Gill - Montague Bridge upstream is refurbished, the state will perform further work on this structure.[1][2]

Previous structures

File:Montague-City-Covered-Bridge.jpg
Montague City Bridge with the Trolley Bridge just visible behind it.
File:Montague-old-toll-bridge.jpg
Earlier image of the covered bridge and the trolley bridge, with the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Bridge (now known as the Canalside Railtrail Bridge) in the background

The current bridge was preceded at that location by two bridges destroyed in the Flood of 1936. Upstream was the wooden double-decked covered bridge known as the Montague City Bridge, and carried rail traffic on top, with other traffic below. It was built in 1866, and was over 860 feet (260 m) long, with 5 spans. Next was the trolley bridge, which was a metal through-truss.[3]

When the Flood of 1936 came, the trolley bridge was knocked off its piers and sunk into the river, where it remains. The covered rail bridge floated down the river, where it knocked two spans off the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Bridge (now known as the Canalside Rail Trail Bridge), then proceeded down the river to destroy the Sunderland Bridge.[3]

See also

External links and references

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  1. Franklin Region Transportation Plan, January 2007, chapter 5
  2. Article in the Greenfield Recorder
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.