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Mohegan–Pequot Bridge

Bridges in New London County, ConnecticutBridges over the Thames River (Connecticut)Former toll bridges in ConnecticutRoad bridges in Connecticut
Mohegan Pequot Bridge from Stoddards Wharf State Park, December 2018
Mohegan Pequot Bridge from Stoddards Wharf State Park, December 2018

The Mohegan–Pequot Bridge is a steel girder bridge in Montville and Preston, Connecticut that carries Route 2A over the Thames River. It was built in 1967 as a toll bridge, but the tolls were removed in 1980. The bridge is the northernmost crossing of the Thames River.

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

Mohegan–Pequot Bridge
CT 2A,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.4818 ° E -72.0748 °
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Mohegan–Pequot Bridge

CT 2A
06365
Connecticut, United States
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Mohegan Pequot Bridge from Stoddards Wharf State Park, December 2018
Mohegan Pequot Bridge from Stoddards Wharf State Park, December 2018
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Mohegan Tribe
Mohegan Tribe

The Mohegan Tribe is a federally recognized tribe and sovereign tribal nation of Mohegan people (pronounced ). Their reservation is the Mohegan Indian Reservation, located on the Thames River in Uncasville, Connecticut. Mohegan's independence as a sovereign nation has been documented by treaties and laws for over 350 years, such as the Treaty of Hartford secured by their Sachem (Chief) Uncas after his cooperation and victory with the English in the Pequot War (1637–1638). Although the Treaty of Hartford established English recognition of the tribe's sovereignty in 1638, after the colonial period and loss of lands, the tribe struggled to maintain recognition of its identity. For centuries its people were assumed by whites to have assimilated to majority culture. The tribe reorganized in the late 20th century and filed a federal land claims suit, seeking to regain land that the state of Connecticut had illegally sold. As part of the settlement, the Mohegan Nation gained federal recognition by the United States government in 1994. That year the US Congress passed the Mohegan Nation (Connecticut) Land Claim Settlement Act. The US authorized the cleaned-up United Nuclear site for use as Mohegan reservation lands, and the property was transferred to the United States in trust for the tribe.Gaining a sovereign reservation enabled the Mohegan to establish gaming operations on their lands to generate revenue for welfare and economic development of their tribe. They opened the Mohegan Sun casino on October 12, 1996, near the former Fort Shantok site above the Thames River.