Old St. Charles Bridge
Coordinates38°47′00″N 90°28′36″W / 38.78333°N 90.47667°W / 38.78333; -90.47667
CrossesMissouri River
LocaleSt. Louis County and St. Charles County in Missouri
Characteristics
DesignTruss bridge
Total length2,873 feet (876 m)
Width20 feet (6.1 m)
Longest span420 feet (130 m)
History
Opened1904
Closed1998
Location

The Old St. Charles Bridge once connected St. Louis County to the city of St. Charles.

History

Construction on the bridge began in August, 1902 with the sinking of the piers. Workers who worked inside the piers were called sandhogs. They worked one hour at a time twice a day inside the piers. One worker died as a result of the bends.

Progress on the bridge was slow for several reasons. Shipments of raw materials including lumber and steel were delayed. Inclement weather threatened work stoppages on several occasions. A dispute developed over the right-of-way needed for construction that had to be settled in court. And finally, raw materials had to be stored on the St. Louis County side due to the lack of available space in St. Charles. This forced workers to ferry materials and supplies across the river when needed on the St. Charles side.

Construction was completed in the spring of 1904 in time for the world's fair in St. Louis. The bridge was a combination highway and streetcar bridge. The streetcar station at the western terminus of the bridge still stands at 2nd and Adams in St. Charles. It was operated as toll by the St. Charles and St. Louis County Bridge Company until December 1931. At that time it was incorporated in the state highway system as part of U.S. Route 40. Tolls and trolleys ceased in January 1932.

In the late 1920s, the bridge was fitted with a pair of 34.5kV transmission lines when the Union Electric Co. (now part of Ameren) extended its system into the St. Charles area. The original insulators used on the river spans were a unique style developed by the Lapp Insulator Co. of LeRoy, NY (the prevailing wisdom being the need to compensate for the higher humidity in the area of the river; standard 'post' style insulators were later installed as replacements when the original insulators failed).

In June 1959, the bridge was redesignated as part of Route 115 after a new U.S. Route 40 bridge opened that would later become part of Interstate 70. The bridge remained part of SR-115 until it was replaced by the Discovery Bridge. It was documented for the Historic American Engineering Record in 1989, prior to being closed to traffic in 1992 and demolished in 1998.[1]

See also

References

  1. Crampton, David B. (December 1989). "Old St. Charles Bridge" (PDF). Historic American Engineering Record. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
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