Sakonnet River rail bridge

Coordinates: 41°38′20″N 71°12′48″W / 41.638926°N 71.2132°W / 41.638926; -71.2132 (Sakonnet River Rail bridge)
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Sakonnet River rail bridge
The former bridge in 2005
Coordinates41°38′20″N 71°12′48″W / 41.638926°N 71.2132°W / 41.638926; -71.2132 (Sakonnet River Rail bridge)
CarriesNewport Secondary
CrossesSakonnet River
Localebetween Portsmouth and Tiverton
Characteristics
Designswing bridge
History
Opened1899 (1899)
Closed1988 (1988)
(removed 2006–07)
Location
Map

The Sakonnet River rail bridge was a swing bridge that spanned the Sakonnet River between Portsmouth and Tiverton, Rhode Island, and provided the only rail link between Aquidneck Island and the mainland. It was closed in 1988 and removed in 2006–07

History[edit]

1910 postcard of the bridge

The first drawbridge at the site was built when the Newport and Fall River Railroad opened in 1864. It was replaced with an iron span in 1879.[1] A new span was built in 1899 by the Pennsylvania Steel Company and served a succession of railroads; the Providence and Worcester Railroad took over the line in 1982.[2]

The bridge was removed from service in 1980 after being damaged by an overweight train loaded with military equipment, which severed the rail connection to the island. The swing bridge was left in the open position to allow boat traffic to pass. In 1988 a barge ran into the bridge.[3] Since then, equipment for the Newport and Narragansett Bay Railroad, a tourist railroad on the island, has been brought in by barge. The bridge swing structure was removed in late 2006 and the supporting piers were demolished by explosion on February 9, 2007. Only the bridge itself was formally abandoned; the tracks on either side are considered formally active to allow future restoration of service.[4]

After the Anthony Road overpass in Portsmouth was rebuilt in 2019, work was done repairing several washouts to allow use to end of track. The tourist train ran past the Hummocks station built in 2017 to the end of the track on June 15, 2021 to the Sakonnet River rail bridge site. This was the first Old Colony & Newport train past the derail about 200 feet (61 m) from the bridge's western pier. The last train from the previous operators on this segment was 1988. The railroad track now officially ends at a bumper post at the foot of an electrical transmission tower on the bridge's western pier point. The Newport & Narragansett Bay Railroad now regularly operates its Dinner Train to the bumper post.[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sixteenth Annual Report of the Old Colony Railroad Co. to the Stockholders. Old Colony Railroad Company. November 1879. p. 9.
  2. ^ Schmidt, Gloria (22 April 2012). "Railroad Bridge". Portsmouth History Notes. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  3. ^ Newport County, Rhode Island. "NH - Sakonnet River Bridge". Bridgehunter,com: Historic Bridges of the United States. Historic Bridge Foundation. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  4. ^ Karr, Ronald Dale (2017). The Rail Lines of Southern New England (2 ed.). Branch Line Press. pp. 415–418. ISBN 9780942147124.
  5. ^ St. Louis, Michael. "Locomotive ride on reactivated north end of Newport Secondary - 6/15/2021". South Coast Rail Videos. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 30 June 2021.

External links[edit]

Media related to Sakonnet Bridge and Sakonnet Rail Bridge at Wikimedia Commons