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Green River Covered Bridge

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Built
  
1870 (1870)

NRHP Reference #
  
73000203

Area
  
4,000 m²

Architectural style
  
Town lattice truss

Opened
  
1870

Added to NRHP
  
28 August 1973

Green River Covered Bridge

Location
  
Across the Green River, Guilford, Vermont

Address
  
Jacksonville Stage Rd, Guilford, VT 05301, USA

Green river covered bridge


The Green River Covered Bridge is a covered bridge in western Guilford, Vermont. Built in the 1870s, it is a Town lattice truss bridge, carrying Green River Road over the eponymous river in a small rural village of the same name. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.

Contents

Description and history

The Green River Covered Bridge is located in far western Guilford, at the junction of Green River Road with the Jacksonville Stage Road. The bridge spans the Green River, a generally south-flowing tributary of the Deerfield and Connecticut Rivers. The bridge is 105 feet (32 m) long, with a road width of 15 feet (4.6 m) and a total width of 18.5 feet (5.6 m). It rests on dry-laid stone abutments that have been capped in concrete. The bridge trusses are built out of large planks to the patented design of Ithiel Town, and the bridge floor has been reinforced with laminated beams. The sides of the bridge are clad in vertical board siding, and the gabled ends of the bridge are finished in flushboard.

The bridge was built in the 1870s, and forms an important visual component of the village of Green River, which includes modestly scaled 19th century buildings, an old mill pond, and features unpaved roads and few modern intrusions. Because of its remote location it does not see the heavy traffic that has stressed other covered bridges in the state.

References

Green River Covered Bridge Wikipedia