Honey Run Covered Bridge
Honey Run Covered Bridge | |
Location | Butte County, California |
---|---|
Nearest city | Chico, California |
Coordinates | 39°43′43″N 121°42′13″W / 39.72861°N 121.70361°W |
Built | 1886 |
Architect | American Bridge and Building Company of San Francisco |
Demolished | 2018 |
Restored | Planned for 2022[1] |
Restored by | Honey Run Covered Bridge Association (HRCBA) |
NRHP reference No. | 88000920 |
Added to NRHP | June 23, 1988[2] |
Honey Run Covered Bridge was a wooden covered bridge crossing Butte Creek, in Butte County, northern California in the United States. It was located on Honey Run Road at Centerville Road, about halfway in between Chico and Paradise, until it was destroyed in the Camp Fire on November 8, 2018.[3]
History
[edit]Built in 1886 and accepted as completed by the Butte County Board of Supervisors on January 3, 1887, the Honey Run Bridge (originally Carr Hill Bridge) was constructed by the American Bridge and Building Company of San Francisco. George Miller was appointed Superintendent of Construction by Butte County to oversee the project.
The three-span wooden bridge was originally built uncovered, as evidenced by the timber trusses of the two original, remaining spans covered with sheet metal on three sides. The cover was added in 1901.
Crossing Butte Creek, the Honey Run Bridge was the only surviving example of a three-span timber Pratt-type covered bridge in the United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[2]
The bridge was open to vehicular traffic until a truck crashed into the eastern span and damaged it in 1965, thus making the bridge virtually impassable. A new steel bridge was built upstream for vehicular traffic.
The covered bridge was then used as a pedestrian footbridge, protected within Honey Run Covered Bridge County Park. Local residents raised funds and rebuilt the eastern span from the ruins, and the bridge re-opened in 1972.[4]
It was destroyed by the Camp Fire on November 8, 2018.[5] There is a possibility that Historic American Engineering Record documentation of the bridge could be used in its reconstruction.[6]
Gallery
[edit]-
The bridge as seen fourteen months prior to being destroyed by the Camp Fire
-
View of the construction site during the rebuild in July 2024
-
View of the construction site during the rebuild in August 2024
See also
[edit]- List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in California
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Butte County, California
References
[edit]- ^ "ABOUT HONEY RUN COVERED BRIDGE". HRCBA.
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
- ^ Robertson, Michelle (2018-11-10). "132-year-old Honey Run Covered Bridge, the last of its kind, destroyed by wildfire". SFGate. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
- ^ Miller, Terry E. (25 March 2014). America's Covered Bridges. Tuttle. ISBN 9781462914203.
- ^ "Camp Fire in Paradise as Wildfire destroyed Buildings". November 2018.
- ^ *Witcher, T. R. (January 2019). "Fifty Years of Preservation: The Historic American Engineering Record" (PDF). Civil Engineering. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-02-09. Retrieved 2019-02-07.
External links
[edit]- Honey Run Covered Bridge
- Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. CA-312, "Honey Run Bridge, Spanning Butte Creek, bypassed section of Honey Run Road (originally Carr Hill Road), Paradise vicinity, Butte County, CA", 18 photos, 2 color transparencies, 9 measured drawings, 15 data pages, 2 photo caption pages
- 1887 establishments in California
- 2018 disestablishments in California
- Bridges completed in 1887
- Bridges in Butte County, California
- Buildings and structures demolished in 2018
- Covered bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in California
- Demolished buildings and structures in California
- Former road bridges in the United States
- History of Butte County, California
- Historic American Engineering Record in California
- National Register of Historic Places in Butte County, California
- Pedestrian bridges in California
- Road bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in California
- Tourist attractions in Butte County, California
- Wooden bridges in California
- Sacramento Valley Registered Historic Place stubs
- Butte County, California, geography stubs
- Western United States bridge (structure) stubs
- California building and structure stubs
- California transportation stubs