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St. Catherine of Sienna Church (Riverside, Connecticut)

1913 establishments in Connecticut20th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in the United StatesChristian organizations established in 1913Churches in Fairfield County, ConnecticutColonial Revival architecture in Connecticut
Connecticut church stubsGustave E. Steinback church buildingsRoman Catholic churches completed in 1959Roman Catholic churches in Greenwich, ConnecticutUnited States Roman Catholic church stubs
Catherine Siena RCC Greenwich jeh
Catherine Siena RCC Greenwich jeh

St. Catherine of Siena is a Roman Catholic church in the Riverside section of Greenwich, Connecticut. It is now part of the Parish of St. Catherine of Siena and St. Agnes within the Diocese of Bridgeport. St. Catherine´s has an annual carnival for one week in June or July.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. Catherine of Sienna Church (Riverside, Connecticut) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. Catherine of Sienna Church (Riverside, Connecticut)
Riverside Avenue,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.040833333333 ° E -73.586666666667 °
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Address

Riverside Avenue 4
06878
Connecticut, United States
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Catherine Siena RCC Greenwich jeh
Catherine Siena RCC Greenwich jeh
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Mianus River Railroad Bridge
Mianus River Railroad Bridge

The Mianus River Railroad Bridge, also known as the Cos Cob Bridge, is a bascule drawbridge built in 1904 over the Mianus River, in Greenwich, Connecticut. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1987. The bridge carries the Northeast Corridor, the busiest rail line in the United States, both in terms of ridership and service frequency. It is operated by the Metro-North Railroad, successor to Conrail, Penn Central, and the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, which erected it, and is owned by the Connecticut Department of Transportation. It is a rolling lift type moveable bridge, and was prefabricated by the American Bridge Company, to replace a previous unsafe bridge on the site. It has a total length of 1,059 feet (323 m), divided into 11 spans. Seven of these are deck truss spans, while the others are deck girder spans, all set on stone abutments. The main movable span is 107 feet (33 m) long; four of the truss spans are 120 feet (37 m) in length. It is one of eight moveable bridges on the Northeast Corridor through Connecticut surveyed in one multiple property study in 1986. The eight bridges from west to east are: this Mianus River Railroad Bridge, at Cos Cob, built in 1904; Norwalk River Railroad Bridge at South Norwalk, 1896; Saugatuck River Railroad Bridge at Westport, 1905; Pequonnock River Railroad Bridge at Bridgeport, 1902; Housatonic River Railroad Bridge, at Devon, 1905; Connecticut River Railroad Bridge, Old Saybrook-Old Lyme, 1907; Niantic River Bridge, East Lyme-Waterford, 1907; and Thames River Bridge (Amtrak), Groton, built in 1919. The Pequonnock River bridge—also on Metro-North's New Haven Line, as are the Norwalk, Westport, and Devon bridges—has since been replaced.