Adams Covered Bridge, Indiana

Adams Covered Bridge
Bridge
Official name: Adams Covered Bridge
Named for: The Adams Family
Country  United States
State  Indiana
County Parke
Township Adams
Road C.R. 100N
Crosses Little Raccoon Creek
Coordinates 39°46′52″N 87°8′42″W / 39.78111°N 87.14500°W / 39.78111; -87.14500Coordinates: 39°46′52″N 87°8′42″W / 39.78111°N 87.14500°W / 39.78111; -87.14500
Length 170 ft (52 m) 154ft +8ft overhangs on each end
Width 16 ft (5 m) [1]
Clearance 12.5 ft (4 m)
Builder Adams Construction
Design Burr Arch truss single-span bridge
Material Wood
Built 1907
WGCB Number 14-61-23[1]
Destruction 1969 Flood
Location of the Adams Bridge in Indiana
Location of Indiana in the United States

The Adams Covered Bridge was east of Rockville, Indiana. The single-span Burr Arch covered bridge structure was built by the Adams Construction in 1907 and destroyed by flood in 1969.[1][2]

History

Philip Adams, who was an Ohio veteran of the War of 1812, purchased 80 acres of land in Parke County in 1835. His son, Harvey Adams, continued to farm and by 1893 had acquired 2300 acres in Parke County. By 1959 Roy Adams still owned over 1500 acres and as late as 1990 Adams Farms Inc. owned the same acreage. The bridge was built on land owned by the Adams Family.

The bridge got its "Ray's Bridge" name from the fact that the crossing had earlier been called Ray's Ford from the grist mill that Mr. Ray owned upstream from the ford.

Even though the Adams Construction was awarded the contract to build the bridge apparently they subcontracted the Frankfort Construction Company to actually build it. J.P. Van Fossen, inturn, was the onsite forman for the project.

After the bridge was destroyed in 1969 the Jessup Covered Bridge was moved to replace it. This bridge was also destroyed by a flood in 1989 when it washed downstream under the State Sanitorium Covered Bridge and then over the U.S. 36 concrete bridge at the Plank Road Covered Bridge site.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Adams Covered Bridge". Covered Bridges. 12 February 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  2. "Adams Covered Bridge". Indiana Covered Bridges. 12 February 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, January 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.