Belle Hall Covered Bridge Explained

Belle Hall Covered Bridge
Coordinates:40.2356°N -82.6406°W
Built:1879
Architecture:Multiple kingpost truss plan
Added:October 22, 1976
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:76001464

The Belle Hall Covered Bridge, east of Croton, Ohio, was a covered bridge which was built in 1879. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.

It spanned the little Otter Fork, a tributary of the north fork of the Licking River. It is a single-span wooden truss bridge, built by an unknown builder. In 1999, it was one of only seven surviving covered bridges in Licking County, Ohio, out of about 80 which once existed.

The bridge was named for a lady, Belle Hall, who lived nearby.[1]

The bridge collapsed in 1999.[2] It was replaced by a contemporary girder bridge which has an unusual wooden deck: the deck and its supports were salvaged for re-use from the historic bridge.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ohio Historic Places Dictionary, Volume 2 . 1999 . Somerset Publishers, Inc.. Lorrie K. Owen . 860. 9781878592705 .
  2. http://landmarkhunter.com/169723-belle-hall-covered-bridge/ Belle Hall Covered Bridge