Dean Covered Bridge Explained

Dean Covered Bridge
Nearest City:Brandon, Vermont
Coordinates:43.7786°N -73.0975°W
Architecture:Town lattice truss
Added:September 10, 1974
Refnum:74000252

The Dean Covered Bridge was a Town lattice truss covered bridge, carrying Union Street across Otter Creek in Brandon, Vermont. Built in 1840, it was one of Vermont's oldest covered bridges at the time of its destruction in 1986 by an arsonist. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and was replaced by a modern steel and concrete bridge.

Description and history

The Dean Covered Bridge was located about 1miles south of the center of Brandon Village. Union Street is a local road, providing access from the village to the rural southwestern part of the town, and crosses Otter Brook on a roughly northeast-southwest alignment. The bridge was a single-span Town lattice truss structure with an overall length of 132feet and a truss length of 121feet. It was 21.5feet wide, with a roadway width of 18feet. Laminated stringers had been tied to its underside to add strength, as were iron sway braces. The exterior of the bridge was finished in flush vertical board siding, and it had a gabled slate roof.[1]

The bridge was built about 1838, and was (along with the Sanderson Covered Bridge) one of two surviving 19th-century covered bridges in Brandon at the time of its listing on the National Register in 1974.[1] The bridge was destroyed by an arsonist in 1986,[2] and has been replaced by a modern steel and concrete bridge.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|74000252}} NRHP nomination for Dean Covered Bridge]. National Park Service. 2016-03-22.
  2. Web site: Not Arson. VermontBridges.com. 2016-03-22.