Upper Cox Brook Covered Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Upper Cox Brook Covered Bridge
Carries:Automobile
Crosses:Cox Brook
Locale:Northfield, Vermont
Maint:Town of Northfield
Id:VT-12-11
Builder:unknown
Design:Covered, Queen post
Material:Wood
Spans:1
Length:51.25feet
Width:14.1feet
Clearance:12feet
Complete:1872
Embed:yes
Coordinates:44.1736°N -72.6553°W
Added:October 1, 1974
Area:1acres
Refnum:74000267

The Upper Cox Brook Covered Bridge is a wooden covered bridge that crosses Cox Brook on Cox Brook Road in Northfield, Vermont. It is one of five surviving 19th-century covered bridges in the town, and one of three on the same road. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

Description and history

The Upper Cox Brook Covered Bridge stands west of the village of Northfield Falls, crossing Cox Brook, a tributary of the Dog River. It is the westernmost of three covered bridges on Cox Brook Road; the other two are the Northfield Falls Covered Bridge (crossing the river), and the Lower Cox Brook Covered Bridge. The bridge is of Queen post truss design, its two trusses 51.5feet in length, and resting on abutments either faced or rebuilt in concrete. The trusses are set at an offset, skewed to form a parallelogram. The bridge is covered by a metal gabled roof, and its exterior is clad in vertical board siding, which extends around to the insides of the portals. The bridge deck consists of steel I-beams supporting wooden planking. The trusses no longer carry the bridge's active load, and only support its superstructure. The siding does not rise all the way to the roof, leaving an open strip between them, and there are long rectangular strip openings on the sides, sheltered by projecting siding.[1]

On August 28, 2011, the Upper Cox Brook bridge appeared to have been severely damaged by flooding caused by Hurricane Irene. A tree was thrust up through the bridge into the roof and the approaching road was washed out. The bridge was closed for a brief time, but reopened within 2 weeks after the storm apparently suffering only minor damage.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=74000267}} NRHP nomination for Upper Cox Covered Bridge]. National Park Service. 2016-11-20. Hugh Henry . 1974. with
  2. Web site: Kane. Trish. Video clips and news on covered bridge damage due to Hurricane Irene. Vermont Covered Bridges Society website. 31 August 2011.