San Juan River Bridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates14°36′06″N 121°01′13″E / 14.601660°N 121.020302°E / 14.601660; 121.020302
Carries2 lanes of vehicular traffic; pedestrian sidewalks
San Juan River Bridge

Tulay ng Ilog San Juan
San Juan River Bridge towards San Juan in 2020
Coordinates14°36′06″N 121°01′13″E / 14.601660°N 121.020302°E / 14.601660; 121.020302
Carries2 lanes of vehicular traffic; pedestrian sidewalks
CrossesSan Juan River
LocaleSan Juan and Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines
Other name(s)Pinaglabanan Bridge
San Juan del Monte Bridge
Old Santa Mesa Bridge
Balsa Bridge
Characteristics
Total length46.85 m (153.7 ft)
Load limit10 metric tons (9.8 long tons; 11 short tons)
No. of lanes2-lane single carriageway (1 per direction)
History
Rebuilt2018–2020
Location
Interactive map of San Juan River Bridge

The San Juan River Bridge (Filipino: Tulay ng Ilog San Juan), also known as Pinaglabanan Bridge, San Juan del Monte Bridge, San Juan Bridge and the Old Santa Mesa Bridge, is a bridge that connects San Juan and Manila, spanning the San Juan River. The 46.85-meter (153.7 ft) bridge connects the N. Domingo Street in San Juan and Old Santa Mesa Street in Manila. The location of the bridge served as a battlefield during the 1896 Philippine Revolution against the Spaniards and the 1899 Philippine–American War.

On, January 29, 1899, Colonel Luciano San Miguel, Filipino Commander had his first meeting with Colonel John M. Stotsenburg, Commander of the First Nebraska Volunteers on this bridge to discuss the boundaries of their respective forces. On February 4, 1899, an encounter between the Filipino and American forces in present-day Sampaloc, Manila led to a shooting incident and sparked the Battle of Manila.[1]

On February 5, 2009, the National Historical Commission of the Philippines installed a historical marker on San Juan River Bridge commemorating its role to the start of the Battle of Manila.

Outbreak of the Philippine-American War

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI