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Difference between revisions of "Clementsport Bridge"

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(added File:Clementsport Bridge Closed.jpg)
(→‎Clementsport Bridge: added File:Clementsport Bridge Postcard Front.jpg and File:Clementsport Bridge Postcard Back.jpg)
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File:Clementsport Bridge Closed.jpg|The [[Clementsport Bridge]] closed to shipping, circa 1895.
 
File:Clementsport Bridge Closed.jpg|The [[Clementsport Bridge]] closed to shipping, circa 1895.
 
Image:ClementsportBridgea.jpg|[[:Category: Nova Scotia Museum|Nova Scotia Museum]] postcard of the [[Clementsport Bridge]] open for schooner, circa 1907.
 
Image:ClementsportBridgea.jpg|[[:Category: Nova Scotia Museum|Nova Scotia Museum]] postcard of the [[Clementsport Bridge]] open for schooner, circa 1907.
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File:Clementsport Bridge Postcard Front.jpg|Postcard of first [[Clementsport Bridge]].
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File:Clementsport Bridge Postcard Back.jpg|Back of [[Clementsport Bridge]] postcard, postmarked 1912.
 
Image:ClementsportBridgeb.jpg|[[Clementsport Bridge]] and wharves.
 
Image:ClementsportBridgeb.jpg|[[Clementsport Bridge]] and wharves.
 
Image:BearRiverBridgee.jpg|Believed to be the [[Clementsport Bridge]]
 
Image:BearRiverBridgee.jpg|Believed to be the [[Clementsport Bridge]]

Revision as of 19:37, 25 January 2020

Clementsport Bridge

Mile 7.67 on the Yarmouth Subdivision, spanning the Moose River.

This bridge, the third largest on the Dominion Atlantic was built in 1890 at the same time as the Bear River Bridge and The Joggins Bridge, to close the "missing link" between the Annapolis Royal and Digby. The bridge was completed by the federal government allowing the Windsor and Annapolis Railway and the Western Counties Railway to combine and form the Dominion Atlantic Railway. There were two versions of the bridge. The first was a wooden Howe deck truss bridge built in 1890. The second was a steel deck truss bridge built in 1912 and completed by 1913. Both contained a large swing span in the centre to allow sailing vessels passage.

Specs in the bridge's final form:

Length: 894 feet long: open deck plate girder span, four deck truss spans, three deck plate girder spans on concrete piers.

References

Memorandum of General Information on the Dominion Atlantic Railway, Feb. 17, 1969, page 15, Dominion Atlantic Railway, Library and Archives Canada HE2810 D7 D7 fol.