There has been a railroad bridge
over Sandusky Bay, connecting Bay Bridge in Margaretta Township, Erie County
to Danbury Township, Ottawa County since 1854.
You can see pictured above a representation of the bridge on the left side of an 1898 birds-eye map of the Sandusky
area, published by the Alvord- Peters Company.
Samuel Catherman received the contract for the
construction of this bridge, and employed
three hundred men during this project. The May 30, 1854 issue of the Sandusky
Daily Commercial Register reported that once the railroad bridge was
completed across Sandusky Bay, there would be continuous rail service from
Sandusky to Chicago, a total of 271 miles. According to Dean K. Fick’s book The Lakeside and Marblehead Railroad,
the bridge was commissioned by the Port Clinton Railroad and the Junction Railroad in
1854, but it was abandoned in 1858. It was reopened in 1872 by
the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway. Later owners of this bridge
were: the New York Central Railroad, Penn Central Railroad and Conrail, and
most recently the Norfolk & Southern Railway.
In the 1850s, Sardis
Birchard, uncle of Rutherford B. Hayes,
tried to stop the development of a railroad bridge across Sandusky Bay ,
because he feared the bridge would interfere with ship traffic. Ultimately, it
was impossible to stop development of the railroad bridge across the bay.
Trains going across Sandusky Bay carried mail
for the United States Post Office. These photographs of “fast mail” trains,
from the early twentieth century, show the trains traveling on the railroad
bridge across Sandusky
Bay .
In 1929, the opening of
the Sandusky Bay Bridge allowed for
automobile traffic across the Sandusky
Bay .
In the 1960s, the four lane Thomas
A. Edison
Memorial Bridge ,
a part of State Route 2, was constructed parallel to the Sandusky Bay
Bridge .
The portion of State Route 2 commencing at the
approach of the Thomas A. Edison Memorial Bridge and extending through Erie
County is known as
the Jackie Mayer Miss
America Highway . Jackie Mayer is a former Sandusky
resident who served as Miss America
in 1963. Both the Sandusky Bay Bridge
and the Thomas A.
Edison Memorial
Bridge were in use from 1965 until the
mid-1980s when the State of Ohio
removed the steel center of the old bridge because of the high cost of
maintenance. Traveling over Sandusky Bay has been a key concern of local
residents and officials for well over one hundred years. Visit the Sandusky
Library Archives Research Center to learn more about the history of Sandusky
and Erie County.
1 comment:
At what point were the street lights on the center span of the Edison bridge moved from the outer edges (as in the picture) to the center median? What was the reason for moving them? I noticed this on my last visit to Ohio.
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