Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki

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Difference between revisions of "Bear River Bridge"

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Image:BearRiverBridgee.jpg|Is this the Bear River Bridge?
 
Image:BearRiverBridgee.jpg|Is this the Bear River Bridge?
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Image:1903-LANDOFEVANGELINE-P19.jpg|Bear River Bridge and adjacent scenes circa 1890s.
 
Image:BearRiverBridgec.jpg|The Bear River railway bridge in the background, circa 1900, with the old highway bridge on left and the new highway bridge on right.
 
Image:BearRiverBridgec.jpg|The Bear River railway bridge in the background, circa 1900, with the old highway bridge on left and the new highway bridge on right.
 
Image:BearRiverBridged.jpg|Photograph of the [[Flying Bluenose]], [[Train No. 124]] crossing the [[Bear River Bridge]], circa 1906.
 
Image:BearRiverBridged.jpg|Photograph of the [[Flying Bluenose]], [[Train No. 124]] crossing the [[Bear River Bridge]], circa 1906.

Revision as of 23:15, 10 February 2009

Mile 12.86 on the Yarmouth Subdivision. Just east of the Bear River station.

The longest bridge on the DAR: 1640 feet long. In its final configuration, it included, from east to west - Seven Deck Plate Girder spans, three Deck Truss spans, one Swing span, one Deck Truss span and two more Deck Plate Girder spans.(1)

Built by the federal government in 1890 to close the expensive "missing gap" between Annapolis Royal and Digby, it evolved over many versions starting as a wooden trestle structure and eventually ending up years later as steel spans.

References

(1) Memorandum of General Information on the Dominion Atlantic Railway, Feb. 17, 1969, Dominion Atlantic Railway, Library and Archives Canada HE2810 D7 D7 fol.