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Rockville Bridge

Rockville Bridge
Rockville Bridge in 1999
Coordinates40°20′00″N 76°54′37″W / 40.3334°N 76.9103°W / 40.3334; -76.9103
Carries2 rail lines for Norfolk Southern Railway and Amtrak Pennsylvanian
CrossesSusquehanna River
LocaleJust south of Marysville, Pennsylvania
Maintained byNorfolk Southern Railway
Characteristics
DesignStone masonry arch bridge
Total length3,820 feet (1,164 m)
Width52 feet (16 m)
Longest span70 feet (21 m)
(48 equal spans)
Clearance below43 feet (13 m)
to avg. level of rock bottom
History
OpenedMarch 30, 1902
DesignatedApril 29, 2010[1]
Location
Map

The Rockville Bridge is the longest stone masonry arch railroad viaduct ever built,[2] at 3,820 feet (1,160 m). It has 48 70-foot spans.[2]

The bridge crosses the Susquehanna River about 5 miles (8 km) north of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The eastern end is located in Rockville and the western end is just south of Marysville.

Completed in 1902 by the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR), it remains in use today by the Norfolk Southern Railway and Amtrak's Pennsylvanian route.

The bridge was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 and was designated as a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark in 1979.[3][4]

History

The first bridge erected at this site was a one-track wooden truss built by the PRR and opened on September 1, 1849.[5] The Northern Central Railway began to use it after abandoning its Marysville Bridge.

It was replaced in 1877 with a double-track iron truss bridge.[5]

The third and current bridge was built between April 1900 and March 1902 by Drake & Stratton Co., which erected the eastern half, and H.S. Kerbaugh, working from the west.[6] The laborers included men of Italian heritage and local residents.[7]

Control of the bridge passed to Penn Central after the PRR merger in 1968, then to Conrail and finally the Norfolk Southern.

For most of its life, the bridge carried four main line tracks, which were reduced to three during the 1980s when the former PRR Main Line was modernized across Pennsylvania.

In the late 1990s, an intermodal container was blown off an intermodal freight train and landed in the river, prompting Norfolk Southern to stop using the wye track to Enola at the west end of the bridge. This reduced the number of main line tracks to two, but left a buffer zone on either side to prevent further containers ending up in the river, although high winds from the departing December 2010 North American blizzard sent another overboard on December 27, 2010.[8]

The track from the west side of the bridge was shortened to a new control point named "Mary" because the curve in the switch at the former location caused lateral forces to blow out the side of the spandrel. This led to the failure of the downriver side under the weight of a coal train. When the spandrel failed, it also disproved the once-popular thought that the core of the bridge was filled with concrete.[citation needed]

During times of high wind, it is routine to park heavy trains on the bridge as a wind shield.[citation needed]

Currently, the bridge is used by the Norfolk Southern Railway and Amtrak.

See also

References

  1. ^ "PHMC Historical Markers Search" (Searchable database). Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 2014-01-25.
  2. ^ a b "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  3. ^ "Rockville Bridge". archiplanet.org/. 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-08.
  4. ^ Treese, Lorett (2003). Railroads of Pennsylvania: Fragments of the Past in the Keystone Landscape. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. p. 77. ISBN 9780811726221.
  5. ^ a b Alexander, E.P. (1967). The Pennsylvania Railroad, A Pictorial History. Bonanza.
  6. ^ Record, Historic American Engineering. "Pennsylvania Railroad, Rockville Bridge, Spanning Susquehanna River, North of I-81 Bridge, Rockville, Dauphin County, PA" (PDF). www.loc.gov. Retrieved 2021-11-30.
  7. ^ Harrisburg Area Riverboat Society (November 29, 2006). "Bridges on the Susquehanna River". harrisburgriverboat.com. Archived from the original on December 16, 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
  8. ^ WHTM-TV article on containers blown off bridge Retrieved 2010-12-27

Further reading

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