Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Chain Bridge (Massachusetts)

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Crosses
  
Merrimack River

Design
  
Suspension bridge

Opened
  
1910

Location
  
Newburyport

Body of water
  
Merrimack River

Official name
  
Essex-Merrimac Bridge

No. of spans
  
1

Longest span
  
69 m

Bridge type
  
Suspension bridge

Architect
  
George Fill Swain

Chain Bridge (Massachusetts) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Carries
  
Vehicular and pedestrian traffic

Locale
  
Newburyport, Massachusetts

Similar
  
Superior Courthouse and Bartl, Maudslay State Park, Tyngsborough Bridge, Lowell's Boat Shop, Plum Island

The Chain Bridge is a 225-foot, single-span suspension bridge, which crosses the right branch of the Merrimack River flowing around Deer Island. As the boundary between the city of Newburyport and the city of Amesbury, Massachusetts runs through Deer Island, Chain Bridge does connect the two communities. Crossing from the island to the left bank of the Merrimack requires traversing the Derek S. Hines Memorial Bridge, formerly the Essex-Merrimack Drawbridge (reconstructed and reopened in August, 2012). As the Chain Bridge is better known because of its structure, it is often incorrectly represented in literature as a single bridge spanning the Merrimack.

History

The current span was completed in 1910 at the site of two previous bridges. The first was a timber-arch truss which existed between 1792 and 1810. It was replaced in 1810 by a wrought-iron chain suspension bridge. This was replaced by the current span in 1909, which is still referred to as "Chain Bridge".

The Chain Bridge is the only suspension bridge currently maintained by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. In 1990 the bridge was part of a statewide survey as part of the Massachusetts Historic Bridge Recording Project. It has undergone several renovations, most recently in 2003.

References

Chain Bridge (Massachusetts) Wikipedia