This is a partial list of wooden covered bridges in the U.S. state of Maine.
Name | Image | Location (in Maine) | Built | Length | Truss | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Babb's Bridge | South Windham | 1864, 1976 | 79 feet (24 m) | Queen | Original bridge was burned by vandals in 1973. An exact replica was constructed and opened to traffic in 1976. | |
Hemlock Bridge | Fryeburg | 1857 | 109 feet (33 m) | Paddleford truss with arch | Is remote, far down on Hemlock Bridge Road at the end of Frog Alley Road (a seasonal road gated in winter), off Route 5 North. Car and foot traffic. | |
Lowes Bridge | Guilford-Sangerville | 1857, 1990 | 146 feet (45 m) | Long | Washed away by the flood of April 1, 1987. A modern covered bridge, patterned after the original, was built on the original abutments in 1990. | |
Robyville Bridge | Corinth | 1876 | 73 feet (22 m) | Long | Only completely shingled covered bridge in the State. | |
Bennett Bridge | Lincoln Plantation | 1901 | 93 feet (28 m) | Paddleford truss | Spans the Magalloway River. | |
Lovejoy Bridge | Andover | 1868 | 70 feet (21 m) | Paddleford truss | Spans the Ellis River and is Maine's shortest covered bridge. | |
Porter-Parsonfield Bridge | Porter | 1859 | 160 feet (49 m) | Paddleford truss | Built by the towns of Porter and Parsonfield as a joint project over the Ossipee River and was refurbished in 1999. It runs parallel to Route 160 just below Porter. Foot traffic only. | |
Sunday River Bridge | Newry | 1872 | 99 feet (30 m) | Paddleford truss | Named the Artist's Bridge because of its reputation as being the most photographed and painted of the venerable covered bridges in Maine. | |
Trout Brook Bridge | Alna | 2018 | 47 feet (14 m) | Boxed pony Howe | After a New Hampshire covered bridge was burned by vandals, a covered bridge preservation group acquired the remains of the bridge and used them to erect the Trout Brook Bridge [1] |
Name | Image | Location (in Maine) | Built | Length | Truss | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Union Falls Bridge | Dayton | 1860 | 112 feet (34 m) | Unknown | A covered bridge built at Union Falls, a village that used to be in Dayton. It was blown up in 1921. [2] | |
Watson Settlement Bridge | Littleton | 1911 | 170 feet (52 m) | Howe | Farthest north and the youngest of Maine's original covered bridges. Destroyed by fire on July 19, 2021. [3] |
The Cox Ford Covered Bridge is a covered bridge that crosses Sugar Creek along the western edge of Turkey Run State Park, in Parke County, in the U.S. state of Indiana.
The Contoocook Railroad Bridge is a covered bridge on the former Contoocook Valley Railroad line spanning the Contoocook River in the center of the village of Contoocook, New Hampshire, United States. It is referred to in the National Register of Historic Places as the Hopkinton Railroad Covered Bridge, for the town of Hopkinton, New Hampshire, in which the village of Contoocook is located.