Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge (1890)

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The 1890 bridge, photographed about 1938 shortly before it was demolished.

The Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge was a crossing of the Anacostia River in Washington, DC at the site of the present John Philip Sousa Bridge. It was constructed in 1890 and demolished around 1939.

The 1890 Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge was slightly upstream from the location of an earlier 1815 bridge. It had two northwestern abutments made of stone, both of which rose 38 feet (12 m) above the low-water mark. The single southwestern abutment was made of compacted earth covered with stone slabs. There were nine piers in the river itself, each made of brownstone masonry and rising 10 feet (3.0 m) above the low-water mark. Because bedrock could not be located in the riverbed, the piers rested on pilings and grillage.[a] The substructure of the bridge consisted of iron Pegram trusses. On the northwestern side of the bridge, the trusses from the shore to the first and second abutments were above the bridge, so as not to interfere with the passage of the B&PR trains below the bridge.[1] The other trusses were all slung below the bridge.[1][2] Each of the 10 trusses over the piers was 112 feet (34 m) long and painted dark red. They had a clearance of just 2 to 3 feet (0.61 to 0.91 m) over the high-water mark.[1] The roadway was just 24 feet (7.3 m) wide,[3] and consisted of oak planks over iron beams.[1] Unlike the previous bridges, there was no draw span.[2]

A watchman's hut was constructed near the northwestern terminus. Because of the concern that pedestrians might interfere with vehicular traffic, causing carriages to drive off the bridge and land on the railway tracks below, a 5-foot (1.5 m) wooden fence was erected on the first two city-side spans to separate the carriageway and pedestrian walkway. For the rest of the bridge, a timber curb separated the two paths. The edges of the bridge had a 5-foot (1.5 m) ornamental iron fence to keep people or carriages from falling into the river. Coal gas-lit lampposts providing lighting along the bridge. Fences lined the side of the roadway on the southwestern abutment to prevent carriages from driving off the embankment.[1]

The bridge was served on its city-side by Pennsylvania Avenue. Although the avenue was paved only to within 0.25 miles (0.40 km) of the bridge, cement sidewalks on both sides of the avenue provided improved pedestrian access to the bridge. Kentucky Avenue SE, which met Pennsylvania Avenue SE just before the bridge, was graded prior to the bridge's dedication. East of the river, the state of Maryland constructed a new road along the old Upper Marlboro Turnpike to link to Pennsylvania Avenue SE. To many observers, however, the bridge seemed isolated. There were no homes close to either end of the structure, and the area on east side was mostly goat pasture, farms, and clay bottom land. The nearest streetcar line was more than 0.5 miles (0.80 km) away, although area streetcar companies were hoping to build a rail line over the new Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge to serve the area.[4]

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