Powerscourt Covered Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Powerscourt Covered Bridge
Native Name:Pont Percy
Native Name Lang:fr
Carries:2-lane road (reduced to one lane + 2 sidewalks in 2010)
Crosses:Châteauguay River
Locale:Between Elgin and Hinchinbrooke
Design:McCallum Truss
Mainspan:26m (85feet)
Length:51m (167feet)
Width:6.2m (20.3feet)
Height:8m (26feet) to top
Clearance:3m (10feet)
Traffic:Automotive and pedestrian
Open:1861
Coordinates:45.0087°N -74.1595°W

The Powerscourt Covered Bridge is a covered bridge that takes the First Concession Road across the Châteauguay River in Hinchinbrooke, Quebec. It is also known as the Percy Bridge.

It was constructed in 1861, and employs the McCallum inflexible arched truss, developed by Daniel McCallum. It was the only McCallum truss bridge that was not a railway bridge, and since wooden truss railway bridges have all but been replaced with steel and concrete bridges, it is the last bridge of its kind in the world.[1] In 2009 it was fully restored to its original 1861 plans.[2]

It is supported on three masonry piers and the two spans are structurally independent of each other.

The Powerscourt Covered Bridge was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1984 because:

The bridge was also named an Historic Monument of Quebec in 1987. It was documented by the U.S. Historic American Engineering Record in 2003 with assistance from Public Works and Government Services Canada.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Morgan . James . Powerscourt, home to Canada’s oldest covered bridge . NCPR . 9 January 2019.
  2. Web site: Galbraith . Robert . Gallery: Powerscourt Bridge . Montreal Gazette . 9 January 2019 . 2009.
  3. Web site: Title Sheet - Powerscourt Bridge . Behrens . Thomas M. . Hernandez . Naomi . 2003 . . Library of Congress . Washington, D.C. . October 25, 2020.