Helena Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Helena Bridge
Carries:2 lanes of
Crosses:Mississippi River
Locale:Helena, Arkansas and Lula, Mississippi
Id:000000000002899
Design:Cantilever bridge
Mainspan:804feet
Length:5204feet
Width:28feet
Below:119feet
Traffic:6,000 (2007)
Open:July 27, 1961

The Helena Bridge is a cantilever bridge carrying U.S. Route 49 across the Mississippi River between Helena, Arkansas and Lula, Mississippi.

The main cantilever span was modeled on the similar Benjamin G. Humphreys Bridge which had been built downstream by Arkansas and Mississippi roughly two decades earlier. However, the river navigation issues that led to the replacement of the Humphreys Bridge with the Greenville Bridge do not apply to the Helena Bridge, as the river curve here is far less severe than the one just upstream from the Humphreys and Greenville Bridges.

The bridge had a stated construction cost of $14 million, and was opened as a toll bridge in 1961 until that initial cost was repaid. The total length of the bridge is slightly less than a mile and it replaced an earlier ferry.[1] [2] The bridge superstructure suffered its first substantial damage from a barge accident in July 1997.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://www.arkansashighways.com/historic_bridge/Early%20Arkansas%20Highway%20Magazines/1960-69%20Volumes%208-15%20pdfs/Volume%209%20%E2%80%93%201961/Vol.%209,%20August%201961,%20No.%208.pdf "Helena Celebrates! July 27, 1961"
  2. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/4070274/the_delta_democrattimes/ "Helena Bridge Adds One More River Gateway, Helps Helena"
  3. https://thecabin.net/stories/071797/casino.html#.Vp0d2E_krF8 "Mississippi River bridge out after hit; casino artery severed"