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Hawthorne Bridge

1910 establishments in OregonBridges completed in 1910Bridges in Portland, OregonBridges over the Willamette RiverBuckman, Portland, Oregon
Drawbridges on the National Register of Historic PlacesHistoric American Engineering Record in OregonHosford-Abernethy, Portland, OregonNational Register of Historic Places in Portland, OregonParker truss bridges in the United StatesPortland Historic LandmarksRoad bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in OregonSouthwest Portland, OregonSteel bridges in the United StatesTom McCall Waterfront ParkVertical lift bridges in Oregon
Hawthorne Bridge (Portland, Oregon) from southwest, 2012
Hawthorne Bridge (Portland, Oregon) from southwest, 2012

The Hawthorne Bridge is a truss bridge with a vertical lift that spans the Willamette River in Portland, Oregon, joining Hawthorne Boulevard and Madison Street. It is the oldest vertical-lift bridge in operation in the United States and the oldest highway bridge in Portland. It is also the busiest bicycle and transit bridge in Oregon, with over 8,000 cyclists and 800 TriMet buses (carrying about 17,400 riders) daily. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in November 2012.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hawthorne Bridge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hawthorne Bridge
Hawthorne Bridge, Portland Downtown

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Wikipedia: Hawthorne BridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 45.513204 ° E -122.670937 °
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Hawthorne Bridge

Hawthorne Bridge
97258 Portland, Downtown
Oregon, United States
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Hawthorne Bridge (Portland, Oregon) from southwest, 2012
Hawthorne Bridge (Portland, Oregon) from southwest, 2012
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Hands Across Hawthorne
Hands Across Hawthorne

Hands Across Hawthorne was a rally held at the Hawthorne Bridge in the American West Coast city of Portland, Oregon, on May 29, 2011. The demonstration was in response to an attack, one week earlier, on Brad Forkner and Christopher Rosevear, a gay male couple who had been holding hands while walking across the bridge. According to the couple and the Portland Police Bureau, a group of five men followed Forkner and Rosevear along the bridge before physically assaulting them. The assault was condemned by Portland's mayor, Sam Adams, and its police chief, Mike Reese, and news of the attack spread throughout the Pacific Northwest and the United States. The attack prompted volunteers from the Q Center, a nonprofit organization that supports the LGBT community, to form street patrols as a means of monitoring Portland's downtown area. Several LGBT and human rights organizations sponsored Hands Across Hawthorne in response to the attack, with the purpose of linking hands across the entire span of the Hawthorne Bridge to show solidarity. More than 4,000 people attended the rally, which had been publicized on a single Facebook page 72 hours previously. Forkner, Rosevear, Mayor Adams, and other community leaders spoke at the rally. The event received attention throughout the United States. On June 5, residents of Spokane, Washington, held a similar hand-holding rally called "Hands Across Monroe", crossing the Monroe Street Bridge in Riverfront Park.