Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Bridge No. 4 (La Crosse, Wisconsin)

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NRHP Reference #
  
80000149

Area
  
2,800 m²

Added to NRHP
  
27 February 1980

Opened
  
1902

Built by
  
Clinton Bridge Company

Nearest city
  
La Crosse

Bridge No. 4 (La Crosse, Wisconsin)

Architectural style
  
Bowstring Arch Truss Bridge

MPS
  
Van Loon Wildlife Area Truss Bridge TR

Similar
  
Salmon Bay Bridge, Mons Anderson House, Main Hall/La Crosse St, Harley‑Davidson Museum, Lake Michigan

Bridge No. 4, near La Crosse, Wisconsin, United States, was built in 1902. It is a Bowstring arch truss bridge built by the Clinton Bridge Company. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

It is one of seven bridges built during 1891-92 by the Clinton Bridge Company, of Clinton, Iowa, to bring a La Crosse County road through backwaters of the Black River and then cross the Black River itself, connecting the city of La Crosse with rural Trempeleau County. All seven were bowstring arch truss bridges, but one was replaced by a kingpost truss bridge nine years after being damaged in 1911. The kingpost one and all but the main bridge spanning the Black River itself survived in 1979.

The Black River had previously been crossed by a ferry started by Alex McGilvray in 1861.

The bridge consists of two spans, and is 17 feet (5.2 m) wide and 131 feet (40 m) long. It has a concrete deck. Its steel was from the Jones and Laughlin Steel Company. The tension members of the bridge "are a combination of round and square eye-bars with the eyes made by looping over and welding the end of the bar."

References

Bridge No. 4 (La Crosse, Wisconsin) Wikipedia