Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Johnson Creek Covered Bridge

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Built
  
1874

NRHP Reference #
  
76000941

Opened
  
1874

Architectural style
  
Smith "Type 3" truss

Area
  
8,094 m²

Added to NRHP
  
27 September 1976

Johnson Creek Covered Bridge

Location
  
4.0 miles north of Blue Licks Battlefield State Park

Similar
  
Walcott Covered Bridge, Cabin Creek Covered, Ringos Mill Covered Bridge, Hillsboro Covered Bridge, Valley Pike Covered Bridge

Johnson creek covered bridge monotype


The Johnson Creek Covered Bridge is located four miles north of Blue Licks Battlefield State Park in Robertson County and open to vehicular traffic with a weight limit of six tons. The bridge is important as the only known example of Robert Smith's truss system in Kentucky and the only covered bridge extant known to have been built by Jacob N. Bower (1819-1906).

The bridge was constructed in 1874 and is one of 13 that remain of more than 400 covered bridges in Kentucky. Around 1912, Jacob Bower's son, Louis, added an arch on each side to support increased traffic using the bridge. The bridge is 114 feet long and 16 feet wide, according to Louis Bower, grandson of Jacob Bower and a local covered bridge builder.

Later generations have advanced numerous reasons for the construction of covered bridges, but the historical reason for their existence was the maintenance of structural integrity. The cover allowed timbered trusses and braces to season properly and kept water out of the joints, prolonging their lives by seven to eight times that of an uncovered bridge.

References

Johnson Creek Covered Bridge Wikipedia