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Lye Creek Bridge

Montgomery County Bridge 57

Lye Creek Bridge

Primary Photographer(s): Nathan Holth

Bridge Documented: February 18, 2017

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Facility Carried / Feature Intersected
Indianapolis Greenways Over Central Canal
Location
Indianapolis: Marion County, Indiana: United States
Construction Date and Builder / Engineer
1879 By Builder/Contractor: Wrought Iron Bridge Company of Canton, Ohio
Rehabilitation Date
2000
Main Span Length
70.0 Feet (21.3 Meters)
Structure Length
77.0 Feet (23.5 Meters)
Roadway Width
16 Feet (4.88 Meters)
Spans
1 Main Span(s)
Inventory Number
Not Applicable

Historic Significance Rating (HSR)
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Bridge Documentation

This is one of the oldest and most impressive examples of a rare bedstead truss bridge in the country. Most bedstead truss bridges date from 1890 to 1910. This 1879 example is well before that period and dates to the historically noteworthy experimental period of metal truss bridge design. It is also notable as a work of the Wrought Iron Bridge Company, which does not appear to have built this bridge type frequently especially in this period. The bridge is also noted as a longer example of a bedstead pony truss spans. This bridge type was normally used for very short truss spans.

This bridge has been relocated and beautifully preserved here in Indianapolis.

Information and Findings From DHPA Historic Bridge Survey

Statement of Significance

Montgomery County Locations CR 475E, which crossed Lye Creek, had linked Darlington with the Lye Creek Prairie and its churches since the mid-nineteenth century. Lye Creek near Jonathan Winter's residence was probably spanned with a timber structure before 1889 when the county commissioners decided to move an 1879 Wrought Iron Bridge Company bedstead here and to append an I-beam approach to it. The board first hired Daniel Milner to build an abutment on the northwest of boulders laid in cement. The county furnished the stone and the cement, and Milner laid the masonry for $1.75 per cubic yard. Then the board contracted with I. A. Shriver for $298 to erect the bedstead with one set of legs astride Milner's stone abutment and the other anchored to bedrock as a pier to which the I-beam approach was attached. The southeast end of the structure rested directly on an out-cropping of bedrock. Exactly where in the county the Wrought Iron Bridge Company had originally erected the bedstead remains a mystery. The pin-connected truss leg or Pratt bedstead pony trusses were made of wrought iron members connected with a number of cast iron shoes and blocks. The span extends 70 ft. in five panels and has a 19-ft. I-beam approach added to the southeast. The vertical end-posts and top chord members of the pony are fabricated of a pair of channels riveted together with a cover plate and battens. The outer panel of the lower chord also relies on a pair of angles and battens; the interior ones rely on a pair of die-forged eyebars. The verticals consist of latticed Ts riveted on their ends to pin plates. A pair of die-forged rectangular eyebars supply the diagonals except in the center panel where round rod with turnbuckles and loop-welded ends double as diagonal and counter. Variable-depth girders are U-bolted to the lower pins as floor-beams. They supported rows of steel stringers which carried the 16-ft. timber roadway. Latticed rails lined the trusses; double-sized ones bordered the outer approach perimeter. The floor-beams and the truss legs were X- braced with round, adjustable rod as some protection against sway. This fairly long wrought and cast iron bedstead, designed and fabricated by a major Ohio firm, is probably the oldest extant one in Indiana. The structure retains its original members, including latticed guardrails of different sizes for the two spans. Indianapolis Greenways Location The pony-truss span was removed from its second home in 1999 to be restored and relocated in 2000 on the Indianapolis Greenways system. Restoration of the superstructure retained all the original truss members and floor-beams with modest repairs and shortening of the legs for seating on new concrete abutments. The stringers and deck are new. The original approach rails served as a model for replacements modified to meet contemporary code for pedestrian use by moving the lattice bars closer together. The cast iron name and date plates are replicas of the originals.

Other Information

References: Montgomery County Records Butler, Fairman and Seufert, Inc., Bridge Inspection/Reinspection Report: Montgomery County (Indianapolis, 1973, 1978). bridge name and date plates. Indiana Historic Sites & Structures Inventory, Montgomery County: Interim Report (Indianapolis, 1986), 30-31. Montgomery Co., "Commissioners Record," 19: 90-91, 97, 99.

Bridge Considered Historic By Survey: Yes

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