Crawfordsville Covered Bridge

Crawfordsville Covered Bridge

Linn County, in Crawfordsville. Built 1932, 105 ft. long. Spans the Calapooia River; site of an annual summer Bridge Day festival.

1932
Year Built
Oregon
Linn County
Crawfordsville
1932
44.35778,-122.85889
Pedestrian only, maintained by Linn County Parks & Recreation. NRHP-listed 1979.
Calapooia River
Howe Truss
105

The Crawfordsville Covered Bridge spans the Calapooia River in the small community of Crawfordsville, which takes its name from pioneer settler Philemon Crawford, on whose land the town was platted in the 1870s. Built in 1932, the 105-foot Howe truss span was bypassed by a modern highway bridge in 1963 and has since been preserved as a pedestrian crossing within a small streamside park maintained by the Linn County Parks and Recreation Department. The bridge originally featured rounded portal openings, which state highway crews later squared off and enlarged to accommodate taller farm equipment and loads passing through. It gained a moment of screen fame as a filming location for the 1976 made-for-television movie "The Flood." Listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 29, 1979, the bridge has become a community gathering point: since 1990, the bridge and its adjoining park have hosted an annual "Bridge Day" festival each summer, drawing residents and covered bridge enthusiasts alike. With its accessible riverside park setting and picnic facilities, the Crawfordsville Bridge remains one of the more visited and photographed pedestrian covered bridges in Linn County.

Location

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