Bridge 6, Erie Canal

Bridge 6, Erie Canal

Geobox|Bridge
name = Bridge 6
other_name = Crescent Bridge
category = Bridge



image_caption =
country = United States
country_

state = New York
state_

region_type = Counties
region = Albany, Saratoga
municipality =
parent_typed = Road
road =
road_note = (4 lane)
river_type = Crosses
river = Mohawk River
length_imperial = 1229
length_note = cite web|title=National Bridge Inventory - 000000004005580| publisher=National Bridge Inventory|date=2008|accessdate=2008-05-08|url=http://nationalbridges.com/nbi_record.php?StateCode=36&struct=000000004005580]
width_imperial = 80
width_note =
height_type =
height =
height_note =
style_type = Design
style = Girder
material = Steel
lat_d = 42
lat_m = 49
lat_s = 17.15
lat_NS = N
long_d = 73
long_m = 43
long_s = 54.73
long_EW = W
established_type = Built
established = 1996
established1_type =
established1 =
management_type = Maintained by
management = NYSDOT
code_type = NBI Number
code_label = National Bridge Inventory identification number
code = [http://nationalbridges.com/nbi_record.php?StateCode=36&struct=000000004005580 000000004005580]
free_type = Load
free_label = Max allowable load limit
free = 79 tons (71.7 t)
free_note =


map_caption = Location of Bridge 6 in New York
map_locator = New York
map1 = Map of USA NY.svg
map1_caption = Location of New York in the United States

Bridge 6 is a convert|1229|ft|m|sing=on over the Mohawk River/ Erie Canal is in Crescent, New York.

Crescent is a hamlet in the town of Halfmoon in southern Saratoga County on the northern side of the Mohawk River.

The Crescent Bridge carries U.S Route 9 over the Mohawk River between the towns of Colonie in Albany County and Halfmoon.

History

The first crossing at Crescent was the Erie Canal Aqueduct which carried the canal over the river. The "Clinton's Ditch" aqueduct was a wooden structure supported by twelve stone piers. It served from the canal's opening in 1825 until 1842. Before the aqueduct was built people and goods were ferried across the river at the nearby Dunsback Ferry and Forts Ferry. The Crescent aqueduct was one of two that crossed the Mohawk River, the other was at Rexford. The one in Crescent was called the Lower Mohawk Aqueduct, and the one at Rexford was the Upper Mohawk Aqueduct. When the Erie Canal was widened in 1842 a second larger Crescent aqueduct was built beside the first one. Afterwards the piers of the 1825 aqueduct were used to support a plank road at one point and later an iron toll bridge. The Lower Mohawk Aqueduct of 1842 was convert|1137|ft|m in length, convert|40.5|ft|m wide (interior width) and had 26 stone arch spans. It stood for 73 years until the New State Barge Canal system opened in 1915. It was the longest aqueduct in the state.

When the State Barge Canal replaced the Erie Canal a new five-span truss bridge was built across the river (1914) and the 1842 aqueduct and the iron toll bridge were dismantled to clear the river for the passage of barge traffic. There are only a few cut stone remnants of the abutments on both the north and south banks of the Mohawk River which mark the opposite ends of the aqueduct.

In the 1950s a steel girder bridge was built to replace the truss bridge. This multi-girder bridge was replaced in 1996 with a new steel girder bridge.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bridge 8, Erie Canal — Bridge 8 straddles the Erie Canal in Rexford in the U.S. state of New York.Rexford is located just east of the City of Schenectady.This view shows the west side of the bridge. Beyond the bridge is the historic remains of the 1842 Erie Canal… …   Wikipedia

  • Bridge 10, Erie Canal — Bridge 10 Schenectady, New YorkBridge 10 over the Erie Canal and Mohawk River in Schenectady. Photo taken from Freeman s BridgeBridge 10 is a railroad bridge used by the Canadian Pacific Railway. The photo was taken at time of high water on the… …   Wikipedia

  • Erie Canal — at Lockport, New York in 1839 Original owner New York State Principal engineer Ben …   Wikipedia

  • Erie Canal Harbor — History= Originally built in 1825 as the portal to the west, the Erie Canal Harbor served as the terminus for the passage of goods and passengers from the East Coast across the Great Lakes for much of the 19th century. More importantly for… …   Wikipedia

  • Ohio and Erie Canal — Historic District U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. National Historic Landmark District …   Wikipedia

  • Wabash and Erie Canal — The Wabash and Erie Canal was a shipping canal that linked the Great Lakes to the Ohio River via a man made waterway. The canal provided traders with access from the Great Lakes all the way to the Gulf of Mexico.The canal known as the Wabash Erie …   Wikipedia

  • Beaver and Erie Canal — The Beaver and Erie Canal, also known as the Erie Extension Canal, was part of the Pennsylvania Canal system and consisted of three sections: the Beaver Division, the Shenango Division, and the Conneaut Division. The canal ran convert|136|mi|km|0 …   Wikipedia

  • Miami-Erie Canal Site Historic District — U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. Historic district …   Wikipedia

  • Erie (disambiguation) — Erie may refer to: General*Erie (tribe), the name of a tribe of Native Americans whose name is used for various locations. The word was borrowed into English from French which had previously borrowed the word (and gallicized it) from a… …   Wikipedia

  • Canal Street — may refer to:* Canal Street (Manchester), England, UK * Canal Street, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA * Canal Street (Manhattan), New York City, New York, USA * Canal Street (Buffalo), a historically notorious street and district at the western… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”