Shippingsport Bridge

Not to be confused with Shippingport Bridge.
Shippingsport Bridge
Coordinates 41°18′52″N 89°05′30″W / 41.314368°N 89.091641°W / 41.314368; -89.091641Coordinates: 41°18′52″N 89°05′30″W / 41.314368°N 89.091641°W / 41.314368; -89.091641
Carries Two lanes of Illinois Route 351
Crosses Illinois River
Locale LaSalle, Illinois and Oglesby, Illinois
Official name Harvey J. Shippingsport Bridge
Maintained by Illinois Department of Transportation
ID number 000050023736203
Characteristics
Design Steel girder concrete deck
Total length 1,775 feet (541 m)
Width 2 traffic lanes, 39 feet (12 m)
History
Construction end 1929 (restoration completed October 29, 2003)
Opened 1929 (reopened October 30, 2003)

Shippingsport Bridge has been the name of three similarly-located bridges over the Illinois River in LaSalle Township, LaSalle County, Illinois: an 1872 swing span bridge, a 1929 vertical-lift bridge nearby, and a 2003 bridge in the same location as the 1929 bridge. The third bridge still exists and carries Illinois Route 351.

The Shippingsport Bridge historically carried traffic for U.S. Route 51, a major north-south highway between Wisconsin and New Orleans. A bypass was built around Peru and La Salle in 1958. The bypass took the designation of US 51, leaving the Shippingsport Bridge being Business 51. Interstate 39 was extended south to the Peru and LaSalle area in 1987. I-39 featured the mile and a half long Abraham Lincoln Memorial Bridge just east of Shippingsport. I-39 ended when it merged into the US 51 bypass south of town. At that time, the old US 51 bypass was turned back to the state of Illinois and was given the designation IL 251. Business 51, which used the Shippingsport Bridge, was given the designation IL 351.[1]

The bridge is named for American Civil War hero Harvey J. Shippingsport as well as the failed settlement of Shippingsport, Illinois, located just west of present-day Oglesby. After settling on the southern bank of the Illinois River in this area, he made his fortune supplying bait to the commercial fisherman who used to fish the Illinois River.[1]

First bridge

The first bridge to be built in this location was built in 1872 and had a swing span.[2]

Second bridge

1929 bridge's vertical lift span, viewed from the north side of the Illinois River
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shippingsport Bridge (1929).

The second bridge, opened on November 7, 1929, was a 1,679-foot-long (512 m) multi-span truss bridge with a lift span across the main navigation channel.[1]

It cost $500,000 to build, and opened on November 7, 1929.[3]

The bridge deteriorated to the point where it was no longer safe to commute on. The Illinois Department of Transportation considered simply closing highway 351. The local people organized and convinced IDOT to rebuild the bridge.

Third bridge

Current bridge, from the west

Due to navigation requirements, the new bridge had to be located in the same spot as the 1929 bridge. The result is that the old bridge was removed before the new bridge could be built. This resulted in the river crossing being closed for 2 years from late 2001 to October 29, 2003. That was 1 year shorter than planned due to the bridge being built much faster than was expected.[1]

The third bridge cost $16,000,000 to construct.[3] The new Shippingsport Bridge uses a newly developed high-performance steel. This allowed for thinner girders that could carry across a longer span. This resulted in the need for fewer piers, and gives the bridge a thin, graceful profile. Edward Kreamer & Sons was responsible for the replacement of the bridge.[1]

The bridge came close to being hit by the April 20, 2004 tornado outbreak: A category F3 tornado swirled through the Illinois River, knocking over an electrical tower just 20 feet away, although an adjacent tower is still standing. It somehow turned and missed the bridge, heading straight for the nearby community of Utica, Illinois.[4] Nine people were killed when the floor of a tavern collapsed into the basement.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Weeks, John A. III. "Shippingsport Bridge". John A. Weeks III. Retrieved 2014-11-16. (Note edit summary for this Wikipedia article's creation.)
  2. "Shippingsport Bridge". Bridgehunter.com. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
  3. 1 2 Churney, Dan (October 29, 2003). "Need a lift? Shippingsport Bridge opens without irksome lift". The Times (online ed.). Ottawa, Illinois. Retrieved 2014-11-16.
  4. http://www.stormeyes.org/pietrycha/040420/summary.html
  5. https://www.flickr.com/photos/guano/493098385/?rb=1

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.