ALASKA RAILROAD BRIDGE DOCUMENTATON PROJECT 2003
Documentation
to determine the eligibility of bridges on the Alaska Railroad provided
graduate student Larry Mishkar with six months of fieldwork and report
writing from his base in Anchorage, Alaska during the autumn of 2003.
As the railroad seeks to modernize and maintain their 169 bridges using
mostly federal funds, they must perform determinations of eligibility
to meet the guidelines of Section 106 of the National Register of Historic
Places. Instead of doing reviews each bridge at the time of its alteration,
the decision was made to do an all inclusive historic review.
Documentation of each bridge included photography using digital and film
cameras, with black and white photographs serving as the railroads latest
photographic bridge inventory since the mid 1960s. A pedestrian survey
was made of each bridge to allow for the writing of a complete history
and physical description as part of the 106 process. Hi-rail vehicles
were used to access most of the right-of-way, extending from North Pole,
near Fairbanks, to the ports of Whittier and Seward in the south.
The railroad uses of variety of structures to cross rivers, swamps, and
lakes. About half of the bridges are timber trestle bridges of various
lengths, while the remaining are various steel designs, including I beam,
through truss, deck truss, through girder, or deck girder types. Concrete
ballast deck bridges are slowly replacing timber trestles along the system.
Milepost
370.7
Through truss and through girder bridge over Nenana River: 482
feet in length
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Milepost
239.0
Bulkhead and piles of timber trestle bridge: 42 feet
in length
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Milepost
148.3
Mixed bridge over the Matanuska River: 538 feet in length
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Milepost
64.7
Military-surplus deck truss bridge over Twentymile River: 490
feet in length
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Milepost
100.13
Military-surplus I beam bridge over Potter Creek: 27 feet in
length
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Photographs
by Larry Mishkar - Select on photograph to enlarge
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Archives maintained
at the railroads headquarters near downtown Anchorage contained a wealth
of information about the history of each bridge. Bridge inspection books,
original drawings, and maps combined with the individual bridge histories
and photographic database were the basis for the 700-page historic documentation
report.
Larry Mishkar-Photographer
Graduate Program in Industrial Archaeology
Michigan Technological University
1400 Townsend Drive
Houghton, Michigan 49931
Department of Social Sciences,
Michigan Technological University Houghton, MI
49931
Email | Phone: (906) 487-2113
| Fax: (906) 487-2468
|