Dan Patch Line Bridge

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Coordinates44°47′25″N 93°21′10″W / 44.79028°N 93.35278°W / 44.79028; -93.35278
CarriesOne rail crossing; formerly two traffic lanes
Dan Patch Line Bridge
Dan Patch Line bridge in the open position
Coordinates44°47′25″N 93°21′10″W / 44.79028°N 93.35278°W / 44.79028; -93.35278
CarriesOne rail crossing; formerly two traffic lanes
CrossesMinnesota River
LocaleBloomington, Minnesota and Savage, Minnesota
ID numberN/A
Characteristics
DesignSwing bridge
Total length489 feet[1]
Clearance below20 feet
History
Opened1908
Location
Interactive map of Dan Patch Line Bridge

The Dan Patch Line Bridge is a railroad swing bridge that carries the Canadian Pacific Railway's MN&S Subdivision across the Minnesota River in the U.S. state of Minnesota. The MN&S Subdivision originated as the Minneapolis, St. Paul, Rochester and Dubuque Electric Traction Company, more commonly known as the Dan Patch Lines. Today's name for the rail line comes from the Minneapolis, Northfield and Southern Railroad, which took over the Dan Patch route after the original railroad fell into bankruptcy. Despite being met by Canadian Pacific rails at either end, the bridge itself is owned by the Twin Cities and Western Railroad which has trackage rights on the CP line to the north. The TC&W purchased the bridge in order to protect a route that may become important in the future.[2]

The bridge was built by Marion W. Savage, owner of the racehorse Dan Patch, as part of a railroad extending from Minneapolis to Northfield. The span cost $50,000.00 to build.[3] A single-lane deck to carry motor vehicles was added to the east side of the bridge, with semaphore traffic lights allowing alternate travel to the north and south. [citation needed] The railroad undertook major maintenance projects on the bridge in 1927 and 1952, and in 1965 planned to reconstruct the span. This project was not carried out, however, and routine bridge maintenance was performed in 1967. [4] In the late 1970s, the highway portion of the bridge was closed because the Minneapolis, Northfield, and Southern wanted to raise the rental fees charged for use of the highway portion. The fees were requested to help pay for maintenance costs, because the bridge was suffering from deterioration caused by road salting in the winter. [5] The traffic deck was removed in the 1980s. The road side of the bridge carried CSAH-34[6] (Normandale Road on the north side, and Vernon Road on the south side). By the time the Soo Line acquired the MN&S in 1982, the bridge had been under water four times during Minnesota River floods and been often struck by barges. The bridge's approach spans were basically sound, but the main span was showing the effects of the barge strikes, as well as shifting of its piers, advanced localized corrosion, and general wear on the swing span's gears and turning machinery. By 1982, all trains would stop before proceeding over the bridge at slow speed. The Soo Line concluded that the span would require slow speed restrictions unless "substantial maintenance" was done on the bridge. [7] Twin Cities & Western began operating over the northern section of the former MN&S in 1996. Shortly after these operations commenced, the railroad upgraded the Dan Patch Line bridge in order to begin operations to Savage. [8] Due to a downturn in the Minnesota River market, TC&W last used the bridge in 2007, but it retained ownership.[9]

Current status

References

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