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Sweet Home, Oregon

1874 establishments in OregonCities in Linn County, OregonCities in OregonPopulated places established in 1874Sweet Home, Oregon
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Weddle Bridge in Sweet Home, Oregon
Weddle Bridge in Sweet Home, Oregon

Sweet Home is a city in Linn County, Oregon, United States, with a population of 8,925 at the 2010 census. Built near the site of a prehistoric petrified forest, Sweet Home experienced substantial growth during the construction of the Green Peter and Foster dams in the 1940s. The town's main attraction nowadays is the Cascade mountains through Santiam Pass.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sweet Home, Oregon (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sweet Home, Oregon
Nandina Street,

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Wikipedia: Sweet Home, OregonContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.401388888889 ° E -122.72 °
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Address

Nandina Street

Nandina Street
97386
Oregon, United States
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Weddle Bridge in Sweet Home, Oregon
Weddle Bridge in Sweet Home, Oregon
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Weddle Bridge
Weddle Bridge

The Weddle Bridge is a 120-foot (37 m) long wooden covered bridge in Sweet Home, Oregon, United States. The bridge originally spanned Thomas Creek near Scio but was replaced by a concrete bridge in 1980 and was scheduled to be destroyed in 1987. To save the bridge, local activists staged protests and persuaded former Oregon Senator Mae Yih to help save the bridge. The Oregon Legislative Assembly soon approved the Oregon Covered Bridge Program, which helped pay for covered bridge rehabilitation projects statewide. The Weddle Bridge was the first to receive grants from the program.In 1989, using grant funds as well as funds from local residents, a Sweet Home group called the Cascade Forest Resource Center rebuilt the Weddle Bridge across Ames Creek in Sankey Park. Also assisting in the project were the Covered Bridge Society of Oregon, which raised additional funds, and the Jordan Bridge Company, which had built the Jordan Bridge in Stayton.The bridge was temporarily closed in 2005 after an engineering inspection determined that repairs were necessary. Proceeds from the Oregon Jamboree country music festival and donations of cash or building materials from several businesses and individuals made the repairs possible. The bridge has been used for public events such as fundraisers for breast-cancer detection and related services or for private events such as weddings.The original bridge over Thomas Creek was named for a farmer who lived nearby, but it was also known as the Devaney Bridge for another early resident. Similar in design to other covered bridges along Thomas Creek, the Weddle Bridge featured a Howe truss, segmented portal arches, large side openings, and white board-and-batten siding.