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Kankakee Bridge Of Illinois Central R. R. An interesting project completed during the year was a wide bridge for the Illinois Central Railroad at Kankakee, Ill., built as two bridges without interval by the use of the same equipment twice and two separate set-ups of the same centres. This was a 4-track, 6-arch railway bridge, with five 90-foot and one 60-foot barrel arch spans, with spandrel walls and a deck of precast slabs. It is 64 feet wide, face to face at arch rings, and including the piers the structure required about 16,000 cubic yards of concrete. It took the place of a single-track, three-span steel truss bridge, and construction of the new bridge was undertaken without interfering with the old. After the first half of the bridge was completed, tracks were shifted from the steel bridge to it, the older structure was removed, and the remainder of the new bridge was then built.--The New International Year Book: A Compendium of the World's Progress for the Year 1919, Frank Moore Colby, editor. Published by Dodd, Mead and Company, New York, 1920.[/li][/list]
I used to see that bridge all the time back in my Illinois days. It sounds like a great discovery.I have been researching my namesake Rossford Yard for years and I am still coming up with new, eh, old photos that I figured didn't exist. How much have you used the internet to search for info? Or the big library at University of Illinois in Champaign? My guess is that for you, the floodgate of info is just starting and you will be having lots of fun with that bridge from here on out. Congrats!