Stone Arch Bridge Video Homepage

 

 

Click arrow twice to start video

 

 
Visitors as of 9-01-2006

Hit Counter

 

 

The History of James J. Hill’s Stone Arch Bridge…

 

         

 

 

 

     One of the most recognizable architectural landmarks of Minneapolis is the Stone Arch Bridge.  Built by Railroad Baron James J. Hill back in 1883, the Stone Arch Bridge is the only bridge of its kind spanning the Mississippi River.  Built of 100,000 tons of granite and limestone, this 2,100 foot long structure, composed of twenty-three gracefully curving arches, helped usher the railroad age into the city of Minneapolis.

 

    In its heyday, forty-eight passenger trains crossed the Stone Arch Bridge each and every day bringing thousands of travelers into and out of the central business district of Minneapolis.  But as air travel replaced passenger train travel, the bridge went into decline.  By 1980 it had become little more than a fenced off, derelict structure surrounded by crumbling, abandoned flour mills.

 

     In 1994 a partnership of public agencies rehabilitated the bridge for pedestrian use.  Today the Stone Arch Bridge is the jewel of the brilliantly redeveloped Minneapolis Riverfront.  Thanks primarily to the Minneapolis Park Board, our grandchildren, as well as our grandchildren’s grandchildren, will one day be able to stroll across the Mississippi River on James J. Hill’s monument to the railroad age.

 

 

 

    

    This video was woven together using thousands of vintage photographs, newspaper reports, personal letters and business documents.  In order to place this video on the internet, it was necessary to compress it.  As a result, there has been a significant loss of quality.  If you would like a professional quality DVD of this program, please access the e-mail link at the bottom of this page.

 

 

Related Links:

Minnesota Historical Society

Great Northern Historical Society

GN Goat

Railserve network

Wikipedia

                 

Contact webmaster

 

 

 

                                                                E-mail log-in