List of covered bridges in West Virginia

Summary

This is a list of West Virginia covered bridges. There are 17 historic wooden covered bridges in the U.S. state of West Virginia. Only three of these bridges were built before 1870 and they are the three longest in the state. Each uses a standard truss design, braced with the Burr Arch. No one-truss design dominates in the state. The bridges are located in three general areas. In the south in Monroe and Greenbrier counties there are about a half dozen bridges within an easy drive of one another. To the north around Philippi is another group of bridges, including the historic Philippi Covered Bridge which is the longest (285 feet (87 m)) and an important part of state history for its associations with the American Civil War.[1]

Barrackville Covered Bridge

Existing bridges edit

The following is a list of the 17 extant West Virginia covered bridges.

Name[1] Image Location
[1][A]
Year Built[1] Length Crosses Design Historical Notes
Barrackville Covered Bridge   Barrackville, Marion County 1853 146 feet (45 m) Buffalo Creek Multiple king post, Burr arch Built by Lemuel Chenoweth
Carrollton Covered Bridge   Carrollton, Barbour County 1856 141 feet (43 m) Buckhannon River Multiple king post, Burr arch
Center Point Covered Bridge   Center Point, Doddridge County 1888 42 feet (13 m) Pike Fork of McElroy Creek Long truss
Dents Run Covered Bridge   Laurel Point, Monongalia County 1889 40 feet (12 m) Dents Run King post
Fish Creek Covered Bridge aka "Hundred Covered Bridge"   Hundred, Wetzel County 1881, 2001[2] 30 feet (9.1 m) Fish Creek King post
Fletcher Covered Bridge aka "Ten Mile Creek Covered Bridge" Cutler, Harrison County 1891 58 feet (18 m) Tenmile Creek Multiple king post
Herns Mill Covered Bridge aka "Milligan Creek Covered Bridge"   Asbury, Greenbrier County 1884 54 feet (16 m) Milligans Creek Queen post
Hokes Mill Covered Bridge aka "Second Creek Covered Bridge"   Hokes Mill, Greenbrier County 1899 82 feet (25 m) Second Creek Long truss
Indian Creek Covered Bridge   Union, Monroe County 1903 48 feet (15 m) Indian Creek Long truss
Laurel Creek Covered Bridge aka "Lily Dale Covered Bridge"   Lillydale, Monroe County 1911 22 feet (6.7 m) Laurel Creek Howe truss
Locust Creek Covered Bridge   Hillsboro, Pocahontas County 1870 113 feet (34 m) Monroe Creek Warren truss
Mud River Covered Bridge   Milton, Cabell County 1875 108 feet (33 m) Mud River Howe truss
Philippi Covered Bridge   Philippi, Barbour County 1852 285 feet (87 m) Tygart Valley River Long truss with Burr arch Built by Chenoweth
Sarvis Fork Covered Bridge aka "Sandy Creek Covered Bridge" and "New Era Covered Bridge"   Sandyville, Jackson County 1889, 2000[2] 101 feet (31 m) Left Fork Sandy Creek Long truss
Simpson Creek Covered Bridge aka "Hollens Mill Covered Bridge" Bridgeport, Harrison County 1881 74 feet (23 m) Simpson Creek Multiple king post
Staats Mill Covered Bridge   Ripley, Jackson County 1887 97 feet (30 m) Pond[2] Long truss Originally over Tug Fork, Big Mill Creek
Walkersville Covered Bridge   Walkersville, Lewis County 1908 54 feet (16 m) Right Fork of West Fork River Queen post

Former bridges edit

The following is a list of no longer extant West Virginia covered bridges. A complete list of covered bridges that have existed at one time or another in the state would exceed 100.[3]

Barbour County
  • Audra Covered Bridge, 18??, Audra (Burnt, 1940s)
  • Moatsville Covered Bridge, 18??, across the Tygart Valley River at Moatsville (Destroyed, 19??s)
Braxton County
  • Bulltown Covered Bridge, 1854[4]
Doddridge County
Greenbrier County
Harrison County
  • Maulsby Covered Bridge, 1848, across West Fork River (part of Weston and Fairmont Turnpike Company)[5]
Lewis County
  • Weston Covered Bridge, 18??, across Stonecoal Creek, (Chenoweth; destroyed).
Marion County
  • Paw Paw Creek Covered Bridge, 18??, Grant Town (Destroyed in flood, August 1980)
Monongalia County
Preston County
  • Cheat River Covered Bridge (aka Northwestern Turnpike, or Tygart Valley, Bridge), 1835, across Cheat River near Rowlesburg (Burnt, 1964)
Randolph County
Randolph/Upshur Counties
  • Middle Fork Covered Bridge, 18??, across Middle Fork River spanning county border (Chenoweth; destroyed).
Taylor County
Upshur County
  • Buckhannon Covered Bridge, 18?? (Chenoweth; destroyed).

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d West Virginia Atlas & Gazetteer, DeLorme Publishing; 3rd edition (2003), pg 13
  2. ^ a b c Caswell, William S. World Guide to Covered Bridges (2021 ed.). Concord, New Hampshire: National Society for the Preservation of Covered Bridges. pp. 157–161. ISBN 978-0-578-30263-8.
  3. ^ Shaluta, Jr., Stephen J. (2004), Covered Bridges in West Virginia, Charleston, West Virginia: Quarrier Press.
  4. ^ Cook, Roy Bird: "The Battle of Bulltown" "The West Virginia Review: June 1933:254-56 found in WV Archives and History at wvculture.org, Replaced with steel bridge (my personal witness we drove over it from Burnsville to Bulltown) which was destroyed by Army Engineers when the Burnsville Dam was built between summer of 1972-September 1976. See Wikipedia: Burnsville Lake with source given as Department of Army.
  5. ^ The longest covered bridge ever existing in Harrison County (300 feet).
  6. ^ After the Battle of Greenbrier River (3 October 1861), Union troops used the bridge when they built extensive military defenses at nearby Cheat Summit. Over 40 years later, celebrated satirist and short story writer Ambrose Bierce revisited the site of his youthful service. He found that “…the old wooden covered bridge across the Cheat River looks hardly a day older, and is still elaborately decorated with soldiers’ names carven with jack-knives.” (Letter, Ambrose Bierce to Alexander Whitehall, 30 September 1904. Published in Ninth Indiana Veteran Volunteer Infantry Association: Proceedings of the 18th Annual Reunion (N.p., 1904), pp 13-18. Reprinted as “Battlefields and Ghosts” (Palo Alto, California: Harvest Press, 1931) and in Joshi, S.T. and David E. Schultz, eds. (1998), Ambrose Bierce, A Sole Survivor: Bits of Autobiography; Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, pp 3-6.)
  7. ^ Snider, Joseph Franklin (1945), "The Early History of Grafton", Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports. 7362. (Master's thesis for West Virginia University), pp 2-3.

Further reading edit

  • Auvil, Myrtle (1973), Covered Bridges of West Virginia Past & Present
  • Maxwell, Hu (1899), The History of Barbour County, West Virginia; page 277, The Philippi Bridge

Notes edit

  • A Sorting this column will result in bridges being listed in order by county.

External links edit

  • Covered Spans of Yesteryear project
  • West Virginia Tourism article about the state's covered bridges