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THEN
& NOW
The Black Covered
Bridge (PughÕs Mill) #35-09-03 is
located in Oxford,
Ohio in Butler County. Built between 1868 - 1869 by Bandon, Buttlin
& Bowman at the the cost of $6,465.00. Spans 4 Mile Creek
at a length of 220 feet, width of 24 feet, and height of 25 feet.
4 Mile Creek accepts spill over from Acton Lake at Houston Woods
State Park, three miles north.The bridge rests on one stone pier
and cut stone abutments. The exterior is naturally weathered.
There is an 18 inch tall horizontal
ventilation panel extending the length of
the
bridge on both sides A variation of the Long truss, called a
Child-Long
truss. This truss has three members forming an Ò X Ò
panel and two members forming the vertical that divides the panels.
The only remaining covered bridge
in Butler County still located on its
original abutments, the Black was built to carry traffic from
the merging
Morning Sun and Sommerville Roads into Oxford. The bridge attracted
a
sawmill, a distillery, and a trading post to create a settlement
from which flat boats
in spring headed down the 4 Mile Creek for the rivers and New
Orleans. When state route 732 bypassed the bridge in 1953, the
control of the Black Covered bridge was reverted the the county
commissioners who turned it over to the Oxford Museum Association
for maintenance and preservation.
The Black covered Bridge has been
restored. Renovation was done by
William Brode of Newcomerstown, Ohio and Amish carpenters. Monies
were raised from a $226,000.00 grant, $100,000.00 from local contributions,
and $330,000.00 from the Butler County Engineers Department,
a total cost of $656,000.00. The exterior now has a new cedar
shake roof and the sides have been painted.
Interestingly enough, this photographer
finds that my article for October
2000 on the George Hutchins Covered Bridge now located in Charles
F.Alley
Memorial Park in Lancaster, and the Black covered Bridge in Oxford
both had
their renovation opening day ceremony on Sunday, 8 October 2000
at 2:00 p.m. The Alley Park Officials and the Oxford Museum Association
did not know that each was having an opening ceremony on the
same day.
I spoke
with William King, the Director of the Oxford Museum Association
and he told me that donations are always appreciated but that
if a person wanted to be part of the Save Our Span (S.O.S.),
you may purchase a brick as in the photograph for $250.00. The
Black covered Bridge is listed in the National Register of Historic
Places.
DIRECTIONS: From
Oxford, one half mile, north on State Route 732. a left hand
turn just before 4 Mile Creek.
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