Lower Cox Brook Covered Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Lower Cox Brook Covered Bridge
Carries:Automobile
Crosses:Cox Brook
Locale:Northfield, Vermont
Maint:Town of Northfield
Id:VT-12-10
Builder:unknown
Design:Covered, Queen post
Material:Wood
Spans:1
Length:56.752NaN2
Width:15.52NaN2
Clearance:122NaN2
Complete:
Embed:yes
Coordinates:44.1728°N -72.6525°W
Added:October 15, 1974
Area:1acres
Refnum:74000262

The Lower Cox Brook Covered Bridge is a wooden covered bridge that crosses Cox Brook in Northfield, Vermont on Cox Brook Road. Built in 1872, it is one of five surviving 19th-century covered bridges in the town, in the only place in Vermont where two historic bridges are visible from each other. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

Description and history

The Lower Cox Brook Covered Bridge is one of three 19th-century covered bridges that carry Cox Brook Road within a span of 0.25miles near the village of Northfield Falls. The three Northfield bridges stand within a quarter mile of one another. The Northfield Falls Covered Bridge, from which this bridge is visible, spans the Dog River near the mouth of Cox Brook, while this bridge and the Upper Cox Brook Covered Bridge both span Cox Brook. the Slaughterhouse Bridge stand slightly below the three bridge. This bridge is a Queen post truss design, 56.5feet long and 18.5feet wide, with a roadway width of 15.5feet (one lane). It is covered by a metal roof, and its exterior is clad in vertical board and batten siding painted red. The siding extends a short way into each portal. The bridge rests on abutments that are either stone faced in concrete, or have been completely rebuilt in concrete. The wooden bridge deck is supported by four steel I-beams; the trusses now carry only the bridge's superstructure.[1]

This locality is the only place in Vermont where one can see a historic covered bridge over one stream from another one over a different stream.[1] There are two covered bridges located in succession over channels of the Ottauquechee River in North Hartland, Vermont: one of those, the Willard Covered Bridge is a 19th-century bridge, while the other is a modern construction.

This bridge was built about 1872; its builder is unknown.[1] Its bridge deck supports were replaced by I-beams in the 1960s.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=74000262}} NRHP nomination for Lower Cox Covered Bridge]. National Park Service. 2016-10-24. Hugh Henry . 1974. with
  2. Evans, Benjamin and June. New England's Covered Bridges. University Press of New England, 2004.