Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Mark Twain Memorial Bridge (1936)

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Carries
  
US 36

Opened
  
1936

Bridge type
  
Continuous truss bridge

Crosses
  
Mississippi River

Location
  
Hannibal

Body of water
  
Mississippi River

Mark Twain Memorial Bridge (1936)

Locale
  
Hannibal, Missouri / Levee Township, Pike County, Illinois

Design
  
Continuous truss bridge

Closed
  
2000; 17 years ago (2000)

Similar
  
Wabash Bridge, Bill Emerson Memorial, Washington Street Bridge, Champ Clark Bridge, Bayview Bridge

The Mark Twain Memorial Bridge was a Cantilevered Through Truss Bridge carrying US 36 over the Mississippi River. It was replaced in 2000 with the extension of I-72 and subsequently demolished.

Contents

History

The bridge, which replaced motor vehicle use of the Wabash Bridge, was opened in 1936 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and entered Missouri at the foot of Cardiff Hill which appeared in Twain's books The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. A crosswalk crossed the highway, connecting the Twain boyhood home with the lighthouse at the top of the hill. It originally carried the two-lane U.S. Route 36, but with the extension of Interstate 72 west across Missouri, a new bridge was needed and was built to the north of the original bridge. On the Missouri side, the bridge ran into downtown Hannibal, just north of Hill Street. On the Illinois side, the route connected to present-day Illinois Route 106 (Old US 36), now served by I-72's Exit 1 to go east to Hull, Pittsfield, and points beyond.

The Mark Twain Bridge was initially a toll bridge.

Replacement

In the late 1990s, construction started on a new bridge to carry I-72 west into Hannibal (I-72 turned into I-172 at milepost 4). Increased traffic on the deteriorating, old, narrow bridge was also a contributing factor. After the new bridge opened in 2000, the bridge was demolished. Today, only the Western abutment remains with informational signs along the old roadway.

References

Mark Twain Memorial Bridge (1936) Wikipedia