Lordville–Equinunk Bridge
Lordville–Equinunk Bridge | |
|---|---|
The Lordville–Equinunk Bridge in March 2017 from the New York side. | |
| Coordinates | 41°52′04″N 75°12′50″W / 41.867779°N 75.213880°W |
| Carried | Lordville Road (SR 1023) |
| Crossed | Delaware River |
| Locale | Lordville, New York to Equinunk, Pennsylvania |
| Official name | Lordville Equinunk Bridge |
| Other name(s) | Lordville Bridge |
| Owner | New York–Pennsylvania Joint Interstate Bridge Commission |
| Maintained by | New York–Pennsylvania Joint Interstate Bridge Commission |
| Characteristics | |
| Design | Girder bridge |
| No. of spans | 2 |
| Piers in water | 1 |
| History | |
| Construction start | May 1991 |
| Construction end | 1870, 1904, July 24, 1992 |
| Collapsed | 1903; November 24, 1986 |
| Statistics | |
| Toll | None |
| Location | |
The Lordville–Equinunk Bridge is a girder bridge that connects Lordville, New York with Equinunk, Pennsylvania, United States over the Delaware River. The current structure opened on July 24, 1992, five and a half years after the previous suspension bridge was demolished after quick deterioration.
In 1850, George Lord was granted a license to operate a ferry over the Delaware River on this site. In time, the area outgrew the ferry and planned a bridge. This bridge was designed by E. F. Harrington of the John A. Roebling's Sons company as a wire suspension bridge with wooden towers. It opened on January 1, 1870 and was destroyed by flood on October 10, 1903. It was replaced by an eye-bar suspension bridge which opened June 4, 1904. This second bridge lasted until February 1984 when it was closed due to an undermined pier, which caused one tower to lean and the bridge to sag. The bridge was demolished on November 24, 1986. Construction of the replacement bridge started in May 1991, and the new bridge opened in 1992.
The current bridge is the furthest crossing upstream after the Delaware River converges from the east and west branches at Hancock, New York.