Suspension Bridges Crossing Rubicon River

This is a list of the only bridge from the suspension bridge inventory crossing Rubicon River. Please note that different rivers with the same name will be grouped together. For example, selecting 'Bear Creek' shows bridges across several different Bear Creeks. Also, similarly named rivers are grouped separately. For example, 'River Dee' (UK) bridges are grouped separately from 'Dee River' (Australia) bridges. Wherever you see a Bridgemeister ID number click it to isolate the bridge on its own page.

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1932: (suspension bridge)

Placer County and El Dorado County, California, USA - Rubicon River
Bridgemeister ID:5595 (added 2020-12-23)
Year Completed:1932
Name:(suspension bridge)
Location:Placer County and El Dorado County, California, USA
Crossing:Rubicon River
Coordinates:38.984847 N 120.694431 W
Maps:Acme, GeoHack, Google, OpenStreetMap
Principals:John Lawrence, US Forest Service
Use:Vehicular (one-lane)
Status:Derelict, since 1965 (last checked: 2020)
Main Cables:Wire (steel)
Suspended Spans:1
Main Span:1 x 48.8 meters (160 feet)

Notes:

  • Damaged by flood resulting from Hell Hole Dam failure in 1965. Never repaired.
  • The September 30, 1932 edition of The Mountain Democrat (of Placerville, California) describes how a high line cable hanging 240 feet above the bridge site to transport people and material to the bridge site since the road (a now abandoned section of the Rubicon Road) had not been built yet: "They have a cable (Mr. Lawrence calls it a high-line") stretched across the Rubicon canyon a distance of more than 1100 feet. The cable has a "sag" of 165 feet, and some 240 feet straight down from the middle of the cable is the site of the 160-foot suspension bridge. And so, when a bridge worker goes to work, he climbs into a wooden cage, which travels out on the high-line until it is directly over the bridge site, and then the cage descends to the bottom of the canyon." About the bridge: "And that was no easy job, for the bridge is of the suspension type, has a 160-foot span, has one traffic lane and is designed to support a fifteen ton load."

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Do you have any information or photos for these bridges that you would like to share? Please email david.denenberg@bridgemeister.com.


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