Misplaced Pages

Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Bridge in Livingston, Alabama
Alamuchee-Bellamy CB
The Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge (1861) moved to the campus of the University of West Alabama in Livingston, Alabama
Coordinates32°35′37″N 88°11′09″W / 32.59374°N 88.18585°W / 32.59374; -88.18585
Carriespedestrian traffic
CrossesDuck Pond (UWA)
LocaleLivingston, Alabama
Maintained bySumter County Historical Society
ID number01-60-01 (WGCB)
Characteristics
DesignTown lattice truss
Total length88 ft (27 m)
History
Construction end1861
Location

The Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge is a county-owned wooden covered bridge that spans the northeast corner of Duck Pond in Sumter County, Alabama, United States. It is located on the campus of the University of West Alabama behind Reed Hall, which is off Student Union Drive in the city of Livingston.

Built in 1861, the 88-foot (27-meter) bridge is a Town's lattice truss construction over a single span. Its World Guide to Covered Bridges number is 01-60-01. The Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge is currently eligible for addition to the National Register of Historic Places. It is one of the oldest covered bridges still existing in Alabama; it is maintained by the Sumter County Historical Society.

History

The bridge was originally designed and constructed over the Sucarnoochee River by Confederate Army Captain William Alexander Campbell Jones on the main state road leading from Livingston to York, now U.S. Route 11 just south of Livingston. It was built using hand-hewn yellow pine timbers joined together with large wooden pegs. During the American Civil War, the bridge was used as an access route to Mississippi by Confederate forces led by General Nathan Bedford Forrest.

A concrete bridge replaced the Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge in 1924, and it was moved 5 miles (8 km) south to the old Bellamy-Livingston Road (now Bennett 13 Road, CR 13) over Alamuchee Creek (coordinates 32°31′19.75″N 88°11′12.22″W / 32.5221528°N 88.1867278°W / 32.5221528; -88.1867278, or 32.522153, -88.186728), soon given the name "Alamuchee Covered Bridge". The bridge remained in service to motor traffic until 1958, when it was once again replaced by a concrete bridge. During that time, a logging truck being used to haul timbers from the construction site accidentally crashed into the bottom of the covered bridge. As a result, the Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge was permanently closed and left unmaintained.

In 1971, the Sumter County Historical Society came to the rescue and fully restored the damaged bridge. It was moved from Alamuchee Creek back into Livingston and placed over Duck Pond at what is now the University of West Alabama. The bridge now serves as a campus access route for college students and also attracts visitors from various places to a longstanding piece of history in Sumter County. It has been made wheelchair accessible, and also has lights inside the bridge for nighttime illumination.

The covered bridge underwent restoration in early 2017.

Famous Alabama hanging

Stephen S. Renfroe, known as "Alabama's Outlaw Sheriff", was hanged near the Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge outside Livingston by locals in July 1886. During that time, the bridge was still located over the Sucarnoochee River and not Alamuchee Creek as some sources state.

See also

References

  1. The Black Belt Connection, Covered bridge receives facelift, The Division of Economic Development and Outreach at The University of West Alabama, February 2017, Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  2. Stephen S. Renfroe - Sumter County, Alabama's Outlaw Sheriff by William Warren Rogers & Ruth Pruitt, Brad Campbell's Pages of Genealogy & History, Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  3. https://www.angelfire.com/al2/bcampbell/bridge.html, Brad Campbell's Pages of Genealogy & History, Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  4. AL.com, Preserving the romance of Alabama's historical covered bridges by Kelly Kazek, July 18, 2013, Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  5. Bridges to the Past by Max Shores, June 2, 2013, Retrieved May 3, 2017.

Further reading

External links

Categories: