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Saturday, October 3, 2020

Header image.... Grand Trunk Pacific's Duhamel Tressel

 

 I couldn't find much information about this wooden trestle bridge other than this:

 

 The Duhamel wooden trestle bridge was completed in 1910 over the Battle River 20 km southwest of Camrose. At almost 4,000 ft. long and 120 ft. high, it was the longest and one of the largest wooden bridges ever built in the world. The bridge was dismantled in 1924 after the Grand Trunk Pacific become part of Canadian National Railways and the new railway decided to use the Canadian Northern crossing of the Battle River further east.

 

 

 

Text from the plaque:
"The Duhamel Trestle Bridge
Railway fever was a common ailment in Alberta in the first part of the twentieth century. The only cure for the fevers and chills brought on by rumours that a railway line was soon to be built through your community was if one actually was!

For the inhabitants of the tiny hamlet of Duhamel, their cure came in 1909 when the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway announced it would build a bridge across the Battle River near here. When it became clear the bridge was scheduled to meet the south side of the river bank right on the site of the hamlet, the inhabitants happily established a new town further south.

In the fall of 1909, a magnificent wooden trestle bridge began to creep across the valley. Almost 4000 feet long and 120 feet high, it arced in a great sweep from river bank to river bank. At times, 120 men were working on the bridge. Others, some of them farmers using their horses and wagons, hauled the raw timbers from where the railway deposited them in Camrose to the bridge site to be cut to size. Still others hauled the cut timbers out into the valley to the construction site.

The bridge stood only 14 years before it fell victim to railway consolidation. The great structure was dismantled, its huge timbers salvaged for building and repairing other bridges. The river valley near Duhamel again stood quiet, no longer a host to the thundering racket of the iron horse."

 

 

More info in this 2015 article below from HERE<<

 

7 comments:

  1. Alberta has a couple of big trestles.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabyan_Trestle_Bridge

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lethbridge_Viaduct

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  2. Really Great articles on what our forefathers built. What will this new generation do for mankind? Tear it all Down? We shall see.

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  3. Wow. Remarkable. Btw, always liked Calgary. Redmonton? Not so much.

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  4. My civil engineering heart blesses you! The Brits did great civil engineering once, fully equal to the Romans.

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  5. I think there still may be one left up by Sangudo. It caught fire a couple years back, and I haven’t been up that way since.

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