Amtrak Susquehanna River Bridge

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Amtrak Susquehanna River Bridge
Southbound Acela Express crossing the Susquehanna River Bridge.jpg
Southbound Acela Express crosses the bridge. The piers of the predecessor P.W. & B. Railroad Bridge are to the right.
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Carries Amtrak Northeast Corridor rail line
Crosses Susquehanna River
Locale Havre de Grace and Perryville, Maryland
Official name Susquehanna River Movable Bridge
Maintained by Amtrak
Characteristics
Design Howe deck truss
Material Steel
Total length 4,153 feet (1,266 m)[1]:119
Number of spans 18 (including center swing span)[1]:119
Clearance below 52 feet (15.8 m) when closed; 127 feet (38.7 m) when open [2]
History
Opened May 29, 1906[3]
Amtrak Susquehanna River Bridge is located in Maryland
Amtrak Susquehanna River Bridge
Amtrak Susquehanna River Bridge
Location in Maryland
File:Amtrak Susquehanna Bridge Swing Span.jpg
Aerial view of center swing span. Stone piers of the 1866 P.W. & B. Railroad Bridge can be seen in the foreground. Other bridges visible upstream are, front to back: the Thomas J. Hatem Memorial Bridge (U.S. Route 40), the CSX Susquehanna River Bridge, and the Millard E. Tydings Memorial Bridge (I-95).

The Amtrak Susquehanna River Bridge is a Howe deck truss structure that carries two tracks of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor line across the Susquehanna River between Havre de Grace and Perryville, Maryland.[4]

History

The vicinity of the bridge has been used as a river crossing for more than 300 years. In 1695, the colonial General Assembly granted the first licenses to operate a ferry between Perryville and what is now Havre de Grace. In 1837, railroad lines south from Wilmington, Delaware, and north from Baltimore arrived at the riverbanks. For 29 years, including the duration of the American Civil War, a train ferry carried passengers (on foot) and freight cars between the two towns. In 1854, a larger ferryboat began to transport entire passenger cars across the river.[1]:37–40,111

In 1866, after 12 years of intermittent construction, the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad (PW&B) completed a wooden single-track railroad bridge. Iron reinforcements were added between 1874 and 1880. In 1881, when the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) formally took control of the PW&B, it cut rival Baltimore & Ohio Railroad's access to the PW&B. The B&O was forced to construct a parallel route between Baltimore and Philadelphia, including a new bridge about 1 mile (1.6 km) upstream.

In 1904-06, the PRR replaced the PW&B crossing with a new bridge just a few yards upstream.[1]:40–43,117–118 Opened on May 29, 1906,[3] it includes a center swing span to increase vertical clearance for water traffic from the nominal 52 feet (15.8 m).[2] In 1934, the PRR began installing catenary on the span to help extend 11,000-volt electrification south from Wilmington to Washington, D.C. Regular electrified passenger service across the bridge began on February 10, 1935.[1]:44–45

Ownership of the bridge passed to Amtrak in 1976 when it acquired much of the Northeast Corridor infrastructure.[5]

Present status

About 100 Amtrak and MARC passenger trains cross the bridge each weekday at a speed of 90 miles per hour (140 km/h); about 12 freight trains a day cross at a speed of 30 miles per hour (48 km/h). Freight traffic, operated by Norfolk Southern Railway under a trackage rights agreement, is generally restricted to nighttime hours to avoid interfering with passenger operations.[6]

The only significant commercial water traffic under the bridge consists of barges from a large granite quarry just upstream of Havre de Grace.[7]:233 The bridge's swing span rarely needs to be opened; vessels that require such an opening must provide 24-hour advance notice.[1]:125

In 2005 and 2007, Amtrak replaced the ties on the bridge, installed continuous welded rail, and installed new deck-level maintenance walkways, changes meant to extend the life of the bridge by 20 to 25 years.[8]

In May 2011, the U.S. Department of Transportation announced $22 million in funding for engineering and environmental work to replace the bridge.[9] The Bush River and Gunpowder River bridges, two spans of similar age on the Northeast Corridor in Maryland, are also under consideration for replacement.[10]

References

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