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County Bridge No. 36

1907 establishments in PennsylvaniaArch bridges in the United StatesBridges completed in 1907Bridges in Northampton County, PennsylvaniaConcrete bridges in the United States
National Register of Historic Places in Northampton County, PennsylvaniaRoad bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania
County Bridge No. 36
County Bridge No. 36

County Bridge No. 36 is a historic concrete arch bridge spanning Jacoby Creek in Portland, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1907, and is a small, single arched bridge with a span measuring 28 feet. It features an incised keystone and a simply ornamented, continuous concrete parapet.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article County Bridge No. 36 (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

County Bridge No. 36
North Delaware Drive,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.92136 ° E -75.0958 °
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Address

North Delaware Drive
18351
Pennsylvania, United States
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County Bridge No. 36
County Bridge No. 36
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Darlington's Bridge at Delaware Station

The Darlington's Bridge at Delaware Station was a highway bridge that spanned the Delaware River in the community of Delaware, New Jersey (known locally as Delaware Station). A railroad bridge built by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad in 1871 to replace an earlier 1855 timber span, this bridge was sold off when a new bridge was erected upstream. Henry V. Darlington, an Episcopal minister in Delaware and nearby Belvidere offered to buy the second-hand bridge for $5,000 (1914 USD, equal to $146,080 today). Darlington converted it into a highway bridge, using two fired members of the nearby Meyer's Ferry to be toll collectors. The use of this bridge subsequently increased; as a result, it became part of State Highway Route 6 in 1927 and U.S. Route 46 in 1936. In 1932, during the massive state takeover of bridges by the Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission, Darlington refused buyout offers, bargaining his way up to $275,000 (1932 USD, equal to $5,898,415 today) before accepting the sale. This amount was far less than the sale prices of the nearby Belvidere-Riverton and Portland-Columbia Covered Bridge, which were accepted for $60,000 (equal to $1,286,927 today) and $50,000 (equal to $1,072,439 today) respectively. Around that same time, tolls on this bridge and Route 6 were eliminated, and the bridge continued to operate toll-free for twenty-one years, until the Portland-Columbia Toll Bridge was erected upstream at Columbia. The Commission finally ceased operations on the Darlington Bridge on April 3, 1954, and the bridge was immediately demolished.