Columbia, PA: August 2008 Archives

LM-Wrightsville bridge.jpg
Lewis Miller drawing of himself and friends admiring 1868 Wrightsville bridge.

Bridges make our lives so much more convenient.

We have recently been hearing about the high cost of maintaining bridges. They are, of course, much more expensive to build from scratch.

Where would we be if we didn't have the four bridges (Norman Wood in the south, two at Wrightsville in the middle, and Route 76 in the extreme north) that cross the Susquehanna River from York County?

Wrightsville Was Hopping in 1877

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Wrightsville has always occupied an important location in the transportation network. The Monocacy Trail, orginally a Native American path, became one of the first roads for the European settlers to York County and beyond. That road crossed the Susquehanna River at Wrightsville, first by ferry and then over bridges covered and modern.

The Susquehanna and Tidewater Canal, opened in 1840, followed the west bank of the river from the Chesapeake Bay to Wrightsville. Then the mules, working from towpaths on the covered bridge, pulled the canal boats across the river to Columbia to continue on their journey up the east bank.

Railroads soon replaced canals as movers of people and freight, again crossing the bridge at Wrightsville. The excerpt below from the November 20, 1877 Gazette shows the hazards passengers could face and the volume of products shipped out from Wrightsville.


Grazr



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This page is a archive of entries in the Columbia, PA category from August 2008.

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