This article needs to be updated.(May 2019) |
Virginia Street Bridge | |
| The Virginia Street Bridge | |
| Location | Reno, Nevada, U.S. |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 39°31′30″N119°48′45″W / 39.52500°N 119.81250°W |
| Area | 0.5 |
| Built | 1905 |
| Architect | John B. Leonard |
| Demolished | June 8, 2015 |
| NRHP reference No. | 80002471 [1] |
| Added to NRHP | December 10, 1980 |
The Virginia Street Bridge was a historic concrete double arch bridge in downtown Reno, Nevada, US, carrying Virginia Street across the Truckee River. [2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [3] The bridge is sometimes referred to as the "Wedding Ring Bridge" or the "Bridge of Sighs". [2]
In both 2002 and 2006, the bridge was listed as one of the "Eleven Most Endangered Historic Places in Nevada" by Preserve Nevada, a historic preservation organization partnered with the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). [4]
Due to structural and flood control concerns, the bridge was replaced in 2016. [5] [6]
Built in 1905, the current Virginia Street Bridge is the fifth in a series of bridges to have been built in downtown Reno. The first was a wooden bridge built in 1860 by Charles W. Fuller and was hence called Fuller's Crossing. [3] [7] After it was destroyed by a flood, a second bridge, a toll bridge, was built and sold to Myron Lake in 1861, although in 1867 it was also destroyed by a flood. [7] Even though it was replaced by yet another bridge, it became unneeded after the arrival of the Transcontinental Railroad. [7] In 1877, the Washoe County authorized the creation of a new tied-arch bridge made of iron. [3] In 1905, the iron bridge was moved and the most long-lived bridge, designed by San Francisco architect John B. Leonard, was built by Cotton Brothers and Company of Oakland, California. [8]
Legend has it that newly divorced women would, after exiting the Washoe County Courthouse, stand on the Virginia Street Bridge and cast their wedding rings into the Truckee River below. [3] Hence, the bridge became known as the main symbol of Reno, which was called the "Divorce Capital of the World" beginning in 1906. [2] Over the years, salvage divers have found actual rings, according to archivist Guy Rocha. [3]
A scene depicting this takes place in the 1939 film Reno . In the 1961 film The Misfits , Marilyn Monroe considers tossing her wedding ring from the Virginia Street Bridge, but decides against it. [3]