Cry Baby Bridge! Traditional Cache
Pinewood: I'm archiving some of my caches
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This use to be a covered bridge.The Lockington covered bridge over the Miami River, built in 1851, remains on the National Register of Historic Places nearly 9 years after it was destroyed by fire. A listing of historic places plus the dates the properties were placed on the register, and their register reference number appear on the National Register web site.
The bridge had been closed in 1985 because of rotting wooden flooring, crumbling abutments and other problems, according to an October 18, 1989, Sidney Daily News account of the fire. The bridge had cost $1,500, according to Shelby County engineer Steve Hubbell. "The bridge was 170 feet long in two about equal spans," according to the news account. "The Lockington Covered Bridge was the oldest bridge in the county and was the longest." A colored drawing of the bridge by artist Ray Warren appeared in the July 1, 1976, U.S. Bicentennial issue of the Sidney Daily News.
Hubbell’s office notified the Ohio Historical Society that the bridge had been destroyed. "We had plans to build a park around the bridge and we had an agreement with the Ohio Historical Society as part of those plans," assistant county engineer Bob Geuy recently told Historical Highlights. "Then we notified OHS that the plans were cancelled because the bridge had been destroyed." The Ohio Historical Society’s Historic Preservation Office assists in nominating Ohio sites to the National Register. "I guess the reverse process, getting the bridge off the register, didn’t work," Geuy said, noting that OHS is the county engineer’s liaison with the National Register.
The Lockington bridge will likely remain on the register, Nancy Johnson of the Ohio Historic Preservation Office in Columbus said in late June. "Our office plans to update the register for Ohio and we will try to include photographs of property even though it may no longer exist," she said. "We think people will want to see what it looked like even though the property was destroyed." The Ohio group furnishes the listing information to the National Register maintained by the National Park Service. Johnson said the listing will also appear on the Ohio Historic Preservation Office web site.
I remember one night going over the bridge late at night with a couple of my friends. When we got to the middle of the bridge, something jumped down from the bridge and landed on the roof of my car. We flew out of that bridge so fast, that whatever it was, flew off the roof of my car. Trust me, we didn't go back and see what it was!
Additional Hints
(Decrypt)
Gehfg zr guvf bar jvyy or uneq gb svaq! Cyrnfr chg vg onpx jurer lbh sbhaq vg.
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