Pakenham Bridge Explained

The Pakenham Bridge is a stone bridge with five arches that crosses the Mississippi River at the town of Pakenham within Mississippi Mills, Ontario, Canada. The bridge measures long, high, and wide. It is the only one of this type in North America.[1]

The bridge was built in 1903 by O'Toole & Keating, Scottish masons from Ottawa, for a cost of $14,500. The stones, the largest of which weighs 5 tons, came from a local quarry. As a result of local pressure to preserve it, the bridge was never replaced with a newer one and restored in 1984. At that time, the bridge was also strengthened with reinforced concrete to accommodate car and truck traffic.[1]

With a parking lot and rapids right at the bridge, it is a popular picnic spot. Here the Mississippi River drops a few meters over a wide cascade with exposed bedrock, but below the rapids there is a strong undertow that has claimed several lives.[2]

External links

45.3356°N -76.2871°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Seven Wonders of Lanark County: Pakenham Five Span Bridge. County of Lanark. 28 December 2014.
  2. Web site: John Carter. Drowning in Pakenham prompts undertow warning. insideottawavalley.com. Metroland Media. 28 December 2014. July 21, 2011.