News:

Thanks to everyone for the feedback on what errors you encountered from the forum database changes made in Fall 2023. Let us know if you discover anymore.

Main Menu

Harahan Bridge

Started by edwaleni, September 23, 2018, 06:07:03 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

edwaleni

Seems US-64 used to cross the Mississippi River using a railroad bridge and it was called the Hanrahan Bridge to reach Memphis.

The approach ramps are still there on the Arkansas side and it seems to be a pedestrian trail now.

But the girders and beams which held up the road over the river are still there on both sides.  Eastbound on the south side and west bound on the north side.

I know that many of the early road bridges over the Mississippi ran off the backs of the railroad (like the MacArthur & McKinley in St Louis)

Does anyone know if this was a toll bridge or not?


usends

It's actually called the Harahan Bridge.  Lots of good info about it can be found online.  The Wiki article says it was never a toll bridge.
usends.com - US highway endpoints, photos, maps, and history

rlb2024

The Big River Crossing website has lots of history on the Harahan Bridge (which is still an active rail bridge) and the pedestrian trail that now crosses where the westbound roadway once was located.

http://www.bigrivercrossing.com/

froggie

^ Have they completed that bike/ped trail?  Last I heard, it was planned but not built yet.

Wayward Memphian

#4
Quote from: froggie on September 24, 2018, 10:53:35 AM
^ Have they completed that bike/ped trail?  Last I heard, it was planned but not built yet.

Yes, has been done for over a year.

https://youtu.be/a_e2-g-dchk




New lighting for Hernando Desoto is also planned but no bike paths

edwaleni

Quote from: usends on September 23, 2018, 06:18:53 PM
It's actually called the Harahan Bridge.  Lots of good info about it can be found online.  The Wiki article says it was never a toll bridge.

Thanks, yes I did find a wealth of info.

There is a good backstory here. The Mayor of Memphis made the Rock Island put those "wagon ways" on each side of the bridge.

When the Rock opened it they declared the wagon ways "free to all" and to be owned by Memphis and Carruthers County Arkansas.

An odd concession in 1916.

rte66man

My 91 year old father , a native Memphian, used to tell stories of how the road decks would catch fire from sparks thrown off the locomotives.  Apparently, those planks were heavily creosoted.
When you come to a fork in the road... TAKE IT.

                                                               -Yogi Berra

MikeTheActuary

Quote from: rte66man on September 29, 2018, 06:36:59 PM
My 91 year old father , a native Memphian, used to tell stories of how the road decks would catch fire from sparks thrown off the locomotives.  Apparently, those planks were heavily creosoted.

Found on the Big River Crossing website, a picture of such a fire:


Also - a map from 1949, showing the use of the road decks just before the "old bridge" opened (via the Crème de Memph blog):

sparker

Looks like there was a tight loop to get the roadway off the west end of the bridge.  Now there's a tight loop, albeit across the river, to get I-55 traffic on to its 1949 replacement.  I guess some things just don't change much!  :-/

MikeTheActuary

Quote from: sparker on September 30, 2018, 05:16:24 AM
Looks like there was a tight loop to get the roadway off the west end of the bridge.  Now there's a tight loop, albeit across the river, to get I-55 traffic on to its 1949 replacement.  I guess some things just don't change much!  :-/

The map shows a ramp, but I'm not certain that was reality, at least for most of the history of vehicular use of the Harahan roadways.

Here's a YouTube video of what the Arkansas end of the roadways looked like in 2012, before they started work on the Big River Crossing: https://youtu.be/neRc6bKJc9E    The roadways suggest that westbound traffic simply would have had a sharp left turn at the end of the crossing.

You can see it more clearly in a GSV photo taken in 2015, presumably in the early stages of building the new pedestrian/bike facility: https://goo.gl/maps/L4M6Ly6fHGE2

...and here's an overview of the plans for the Arkansas end of the Crossing, in which you can see the access road-bridge transition:

(the looped bike/pedestrian trail, #2, was added for the Crossing)

I wonder if the loop shown on the Esso map was just a temporary feature, made necessary because of the construction of the access to the highway bridge.  I certainly don't remember seeing any hint of it from when I grew up down there, before the area was cleaned up for the Crossing, but if you compare the grade of I-55 to the old bridge access road, presumably something had to have been done, and the kudzu and trees present in the 80's would have made finding hints of that extremely difficult.

edwaleni

Quote from: sparker on September 30, 2018, 05:16:24 AM
Looks like there was a tight loop to get the roadway off the west end of the bridge.  Now there's a tight loop, albeit across the river, to get I-55 traffic on to its 1949 replacement.  I guess some things just don't change much!  :-/

There was no loop there. It was a left turn onto the 2 way ramp.

I looked at some historical aerials of the bridge going back to 1944.  The auto bridge for US63 was built in 1954.

On the Memphis side, the westbound traffic had to go north through the Indiana Street Viaduct to get under the Rock Island tracks.  That viaduct has been filled in, but if you go to Martyr's Park and walk around Virginia Place, (which used to be the Municipal Rail Yard) you can still see the concrete used for the viaduct.

From the aerials, you can tell the city abandoned the use immediately after the new bridge was built. By 1963 the ramp on the west side was cutoff completely and it appears the supporting roadway was pulled up on the bridge, just the beams were left behind.  Going forward it has sat that way for 50+ years.



Opinions expressed here on belong solely to the poster and do not represent or reflect the opinions or beliefs of AARoads, its creators and/or associates.