All Over The Map: Work begins to reconnect Beverly Bridge to past and future
Mar 12, 2021, 5:01 AM | Updated: Apr 8, 2022, 8:30 am
Work has just gotten underway to make a historic railroad bridge across the Columbia River safe for hikers, bikers, and people on horseback.
Once the improvements are finished later this year, safe access to the Beverly Bridge will eliminate a pretty serious missing link in the , according to Adam Fulton, project engineer for Washington State Parks.
鈥淏asically, the only crossing of the river that’s nearby and relatively along the trail is actually about seven miles north and it’s I-90,鈥 Fulton told 成人X站 Radio. 鈥淎nd, sadly, I-90 has neither a sidewalk nor bike lanes and, to my knowledge, barely a shoulder, and so crossing the Columbia in that vicinity is pretty dicey.鈥
The Beverly Bridge is about 20 miles east of another historic railroad structure known as the Renslow Trestle, which 成人X站 listeners learned about earlier this year. This historic (and very visible) structure spans I-90 east of Ellensburg and is also part of the Palouse to Cascades Trail. Renslow Trestle is almost ready to open to pedestrians, equestrians, and bikers after work there was delayed somewhat by winter weather.
Both Renslow Trestle and Beverly Bridge are left over pieces of infrastructure built by the Milwaukee Road 鈥 full name: the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad 鈥 a rail line that connected Seattle to the Midwest from about 1910 to 1980.
The Beverly Bridge is 3,000 feet long and crosses the Columbia River about seven miles south of Vantage 鈥 that鈥檚 the well-known spot where I-90 crosses the mighty river of the west. The railroad span at Beverly was built between 1906 and 1909.
Beverly, the former railroad town on the east side of the river, was named for the town of Beverly, Massachusetts by Milwaukee Road official H.R. Williams, who, according to Edmond Meany, 鈥渋ntroduced many eastern names along the western line.鈥 Beverly, Massachusetts (which also inspired Beverly Hills, California) is named for the differently-spelled “Beverley” in the United Kingdom. The UK name may mean 鈥渂eaver-clearing鈥 or 鈥渂eaver-lake.鈥
Fulton says that work is expected to take through the summer, and involves the placement of 336 precast concrete panels, measuring about 10 by 13 feet, to form the surface of the trail, where once wooden railroad ties and steel rails carried long passenger and freight trains over the water. The project also includes installation of a safety railing on each side of the trail designed to accommodate bikers and pedestrians, as well as equestrians.
Many groups who use the Palouse to Cascades Trail 鈥 such as the , an organization whose name reflects the trail鈥檚 former name 鈥 were critical in helping secure state funding of $5.75 million for the bridge improvements, according to Adam Fulton.
Some of those same groups, Fulton says, will work to add interpretive panels along the bridge at the seven 鈥渧iew platforms鈥 where the path widens slightly.
鈥淭he Columbia River is a collection of waters and this bridge is a collection of stories,鈥 said an obviously excited Fulton. 鈥淎nd the stories range from the local tribal history, to the geology, to the railroad, to the economics of the dams.鈥
鈥淚 mean, it’s just this fascinating epicenter, if you will, of historic interest,鈥 Fulton said. 鈥淚 tell you what, I am working on the eighth wonder of the world, and I feel entirely blessed to be [doing so].鈥
If you can鈥檛 wait until the end of summer, or even if you don鈥檛 ever plan to cross the Beverly Bridge yourself, Fulton says there is a terrific view of the structure 鈥 and the landscape beyond — from the east side of the river looking to the southwest.
鈥淲hen you come at it from the east side [of the Columbia River] and you’re looking south and west” toward a geologic feature known as Sentinel Gap — “you’re looking at, I think, something close to the ,鈥 Fulton said, 鈥渨hich 12,000 years ago when Lake Missoula flooded and created the scablands of Eastern Washington, this is one of the spots where that all that deluge of water gushed through and created these fantastic landscapes not unlike .鈥
Next on the horizon for Fulton and Washington State Parks in improving the Palouse to Cascades Trail is replacement of the Crab Creek Trestle, a structure 10 miles east of Beverly that burned a few years ago in a wildfire. Depending on funding and other unpredictable events, that work could be done as early as 2023.
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