301 7 16MB
English Pages [96] Year 1963
LEWIS iH
•
"I'D
A.
HAR LOW
M
LIKE
64 PICTURES
^
,
1
1
hmI
TO MOVE OUT TO SOME SUBURB."
with
COMMENTS
by the BRIDGES
Covered Bridges rSi
Can Talk LEWIS In
HARLOW
A.
January 1963,
YANKEE
published a
Lewis Harlow's photographs of covered bridges, with captions which he
clutch of
said the subjects provided in
moments of
confidence while "posing". Readers of the magazine all over the country responded with gleeful chuckles and guffaws. They
demanded more. Harlow, and Wake-Brook House, have obliged with COVERED BRIDGES CAN TALK. It contains 64 of his excellent pictures of
covered bridges
to a page,
the bit in
in large size,
and Harlow has let its teeth and gallop
one
his wit take
pur-
in his
and relaxed bridges. It is a very funny book. Anyone who has met a covered bridge, by accident or design, must have COVERED BRIDGES CAN TALK. If you like covered bridges, you will enjoy the pithy ported
conversations with talkative
comments of the bridges on
politics, the
winter in covered bridge territory, human eccentricities, and a dozen other matters of mutual
interest.
If,
on the other hand,
you cannot abide covered bridges, you'll still find yourself laughing at each page you turn Whether you laugh in sympathy .
or
exasperation, makes no difference
The bridges could not care less. But you will have a lot of fun with
COVERED
BRIDGES
CAN
TALK.
cP
o'-s'i-
STATE OF VERMONT DEPARTfwSENT OF LIBK.'^IES fiSGiONAL LiERAi^' RO 2 BOX 2^ ST.
J0HNS8UP4-tr 03813
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2016 with funding from
Kahle/Austin Foundation
https://archive.org/details/lccn_63019907_0
if
V
1 ••
IV.
if*
S.
i
)
V
COVERED BRIDGES CAN TALK
"Quiet, please! There's
a
poet
Inside.
II
(g®
LEWI
S
A.
HAR
LOW
WAKE-BROOK HOUSE
COVERED BRIDGES CAN TALK by LEWIS A.
HARLOW
© COPYRIGHT
WAKE-BROOK HOUSE
1963 by
No
book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the All
rights reserved.
part of this
case of brief excerpts included in critical re-
views. For information write Wake-Brook House, Coral Gables 34,
LIBRARY
Florida.
OF CONGRESS
All of the pictures
Catalog Card Number 63-19907
and captions
new and published here
book are time, ex-
in this
for the first
cepting those on pages 4, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 25, 30, 36, 58, 59, 61,70 and 73, which were published in YANKEE magazine for
January 1963. Printed in the United States of
First
Edition
Designed by This
America
is
Helene Geauque
a Handmade Book
Wake-Brook House,
Publisher: Coral
Gables 34, Florida
Covered Mridges Can
^
Zalk
occasion when you find your first covered bridge by accident or diligent search you are likely
n the
O—
—
compulsion to do something more than just look at it. You cannot take it home with you, and your next opportunity to visit it may be a year in the future. So you photograph it or sketch it. This happens to feel
a strong
again with the second
and
so a
hobby
is
covered
bridge and the third
—
born.
Other people look on
us
covered bridge hobbyists with
may even include tsk-tsking and head-shaking. Perhaps we have managed to communicate to them a good measure of what we have seen, but a degree of indulgence that
this
is
only a small part of The Environment. There are
the sounds and the silences
with-the-world
kind of
— and
to the
lift
the all's-pretty-good
morale
that you
get
—
and
the happy reminders of youth spent or misspent. There
may
from
associating with old people and old things
have been no covered bridge
7
in
your
own childhood,
but
you can at least dream wistfully about the kind of childhood in which there could have been one.
America's wooden
bridges were
covered in the time of the earlier Adams and Jefferson. They were wooden because wood was the cheap and available building material in a rapidly expanding and not too prosperous country. They were provided with roofs for the same reasons you find roofs on
first
wooden houses.
New
covered bridges have continued to be built well into the present century, though competition from mild steel appeared in 1880, and for city bridges, this material soon proved cheaper. The WPA built the last sizable group in California, though of covered bridges in the 1930's even today an occasional aroused populace will throw its civic weight around and succeed in the replacement of an old covered bridge with a new one. In this year of 1963, just such an event is taking place in Pepperell, Massachusetts at great expense and with equally great
—
—
satisfaction
Covered bridges rarely wear out. Worn parts can be replaced and are. Floods floated away many of the earlier bridges, and these were replaced first by higher-set covered bridges and later, as economy dictated, by steel or concrete. Fire, too, has taken est
enemy
of all
its
toll, but the
great-
has been traffic volume and speed. The
covered bridge cannot be widened, and if it is not wide enough for the modern highway, (1) the highway must be relocated and sometimes is, or (2) the old bridge must be sacrificed. Condition Two usually prevails, though a few of these sound old masterpieces have been dismantled and reassembled in man-made parks and reservations.
8
where they stand
stiffly
and disconsolately like buffalos
zoo.
in a
The ones that remain on their original sites are there because their world has not changed. They are in the very small towns which are content to stay very small, and they are In the very back country which the fast high-
ways have not yet found and desecrated. If you are so minded, either of these settings is a nice refuge from the frenzy of normal living, and in addition, there Is the matter of the water that
is
likely to
accompany
the bridge.
Water, too, can be restful, idyllic and stimulating of general good feeling. The bridge itself is often hardly more than an excuse to visit a very pleasant place.
I
am
not a painter, so in
brush and palette has a
much
my
opinion, the wielder of
easier time with a covered
bridge than does a photographer. The painter can sketch
on site and then finish in the comfort and leisure of his or for truth home. He can recompose for beauty or for both together. He can shift his sun from quadrant to quadrant of the sky. He can move his BIrnam Wood to DunsInane or away from DunsInane. (And if his perception is not the equal of his technique, he can endup
—
—
—
with the stylized formality of a Christmas card.
The photographer, though, must take things when and which is not always In their best mood. as he finds them
—
Let's say that
you
start
out at six In the morning in the
golden glory of a summer sunrise. You drive about two hundred miles, which in the bridge country can take six hours. And then you arrive at your bridge in the pouring rain. The bridge
is
huddled unhappily
In
the very middle
of a dripping jungle of alders, trying to keep as dry as
9
by becoming small and dark and hidden. You park. You sit in the car and think. You prepare. Then you make a dash for it. Twenty frames later you are ready to dry off, pack up possible
and leave. The following day you discover with surprise that your film has captured a portrait worthy of Rembrandt a study of the true feelings of a damp and disgruntled bridge. You have had a fight and won it, and your satisfaction far outweighs the discomfort of your experience.
—
More often than not, though, the sun is still shining when you reach the bridge. You park. You prepare. You dawdle. The bridge
strongest character in
west of south
little
east and west and expresses
sits its
—
western face. The sun
exactly where
is
just
Its
a
belongs.
It
With the project completed, you put all the stuff away, and then you sit down somewhere preferably on an old stump. This is the time to enjoy The Environment. Since your arrival, there have been no passers-by. You and the bridge and The Environment are alone. It is very
—
quiet.
The birds are out for Intermission.
A
pair of lo-
and alto, sings a duet, and a frog drums a lazy, unschooled accompaniment. The refrain repeats itself endlessly. It Is very quiet but suddenly you hear
custs, soprano
—
a voice.
The bridge
Not
all
speaking.
is
bridges will
should
carefully
people
In
avoid
numbers.
A
talk with all
people, and you
overwhelming your bridge with
sedan-load of
tourists, for Instance,
lower the rapport level to absolute zero. A bridge that used to know quite well once told me that he con-
will
I
sidered
even three
conversation. There
people is
too
many
for
a
stimulating
the other kind, of course, the gabby
bridge, and gabby bridges will talk to almost any people
10
any numbers. In the book, have included samplings of the gabby type in about the proportion you are likely to find them. in
I
To the technically curious photographer: (1)
All of the pictures are 35's, shot mostly with
mestic cameras. The few of them that were
with imports
from
do-
made
Germany and Japan seem no
better or worse than the others. (2)
The one frustrating technical problem in bridge photography is the long brightness range that you will
want
to include
in
much
of your composition.
B&W film cannot. My own
This frequently rules out color entirely.
can hold
B&W
paper often alternative, perhaps cowardly, is to sitions (3)
it,
but
like this into
split
compo-
two pictures.
While you are there, shoot plenty of film; it is the least costly element in your hobby. You are probably a long way from home and you may never come again. And even if you do return, the bridge
may no longer be
there.
Thanks are here rendered to YANKEE magazine for the pre-publication of some of the subject matter to follow and for the establishment of contact between publish-
—
er
and author which has since
brought
this
book
into
being.
LEWIS A. Boston, Massachusetts
1963
11
HARLOW
frt
I
u'^ f:
V
A
V
"Sometimes
it's
13
exciting.
'In
1908,
i
t
was woodpeckers
14
II
"What's
so
new about stereo?
15
"
"It's
politics!
That's
what
16
it
is!
Politics!
II
When
I
heard the second whistle,
17
I
blew my top
II
"Adds inches
to
my height. you know.
18
"Something
in
19
a
stripe?"
20
"I'm
staying right here. 2]
just
LOOK
eager.
"It
feels
like
a
22
slipped disk
II
sF.nv J)"JILUEns
It
isn't
'/
THAT
Ke
II
I'm
just
filling
in
24
for
a
friend
"Look, mo! No cross bracing
25
II
"And then the wind shifted
27
M
vyy;? rVVV»V^j\i
"Before we had so much flood used to begin back here."
28
control
,
the
river
29
“Ouch!"
30
"Right this way, folks. roof,
new floor
Back
new siding,
31
service with new paint."
in
new
K-
"Care
to
try
32
for
two?"
"Swallows, sometimes, but never pigeons. Mostly it's
for
the
party
line."
33
hope that thomebody will do thomething thoon about the retht of my upperth."
"I
mm
tr.» * t
i
34
\
"We don
have many pedestrians, but mighty good fishing hole." 't
35
it's
over
a
'
'
There
just
36
aren't
s’
f*
any trains."
I
used
to
hate
steam
locomotives. They tickled
37
II
I**,
may hear, but three cannot take
part
in
a
con-
versation of the most sincere and searching sort."
38
"And
I
said
to
her: Dorothy,
39
I
said
Johnson, Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Arthur Cleveland and Harrison. " .
.
.
40
1
>
"Fellow Republicans
41
.
:
"Uncle! 42
"
"It's
not
one-way, mister. Just one way
43
at
a
time
"You'll
have
to
ask
someone else.
45
I
m
newcomer
"
"Whichever way you turn, THERE .
46
you're
not
going
to
get
"On what preach
a
seen and heard around here, pretty good sermon. And fifthly,
I've
47
could
I
.
.
48
now, we haven't needed foot passage."
"Up
to
49
to
build
the
second
II I
miss
them terribly
50
II
II
Individually, we
happen
52
to
like
white paint
II
»
53
"Surprise?
54
"
"Be careful! I'm the the other end."
one with the small
55
opening
at
"Stoop,
then enterl
56
D'ya get it?"
“As a farm bridge, I'm now entitled to depreciate on 1040F. It doesn't seem to have made much difference."
57
"They say
It‘s
about 25 miles.
58
"The
first
one slows them up
59
a
little."
'nf^-
"Th e
i'-' V***:-
same
iiy .ii\?.
to
you and
60
a
\*
*^
•
i
•
'
^..ki it'.-. •'
Happy New Year."
.
_?
61
62
M*
E
*
f
1
LI
,9
1 1
\j
'
1
TTp^^ '
1
/
"
S pr ng Tra - a I
the air again; tra-la, tra-la."
s
i
,
in
63
1
;r\
"The visibility is better now, somehow it seems immodest
64
but
it's
drofty
and
called a knee brace, and It's an afterthought to cut down on the side sway. First you attach a cross member to the under side of the stringers, letting it stick out beyond the sides. From this, you brace to the top chord of the truss. Then you cover the whole addition n th is case w ith sheet metal It's a mess isn't it?"
"It's
—
66
"I'd
rather
you didn't ask."
67
"My mother and father both have
68
roofs."
"
Bessemer-schmessemer
1
It
won't
69
last a
hundred years.
"And what
is
funny about
70
a
pent
house?
"
"The committee didn't catalog."
like
71
any of the designs
in
the
"This
is
NOT
a
prairie
and
72
I
am
NOT
a
schooner."
"
Ho
ne
s t
1
am
a
covered bridge
73
II
"In
a
book. did you say? Not just another calendar?”
74
"Come back! You've forgotten your
75
t r
i
pod
It
1
*
t »
^ $
0
Frontispiece: in
the
t e
s
OH
COOMBS
the
BRIDGE
(1837) over the Ashuelot River
the northeast corner of Winchester,
name
of the builder,
bridges
N.H.
whose descendants
This bridge bears
still
live in town.
page 13
WATERLOO BRIDGE
over the Warner River at the Waterloo
Station west of Warner, in
14
N.H.
This lattice bridge
1857 to serve the nearby suburb of Mink
was
built
Hills.
SHORT FALLS BRIDGE over the Suncook River in the township of Epsom, N.H. The later-added arches are solid rather than laminated, suggesting a repair job of
many
years
ago. 15
RAMP CREEK BRIDGE now
retired to Salt
Creek
in
Brown
County State Park near Nashville, Indiana. Built at Fincastle in 1838, the bridge was dismantled, moved here and reassembled in 1932. 16
BARTLETT BRIDGE over
the Saco River east of Bartlett to-
Now
used to store snow fences, bridge
ward Glen, N.H.
formerly carried the Crawford Notch scenic highway.
17
&
M
RAILROAD BRIDGE over the Warner River between Warner and Waterloo, N.H. A standard Boston and Maine B
lattice bridge of
18
1895 which once had a roof.
WEST CORNWALL BRIDGE
over the Housatonic River, a
two-span lattice which joins the village of West Cornwall , Connecticut, to US Route 7 running along the west bank of the river. 19
SLAUGHTER HOUSE BRIDGE
77
over the Dog
River at the
.
south end of the village of Northfield Falls, Vt
Northfield bridges, the paint job here
20
GREENBANK HOLLOW BRIDGE back road
is
.
Like other
red and white.
over Joe's Brook on the
Barnet out of Danville, Vt. The roof
to
quently a later
is
fre-
addition to the simple queenpost bridges
of this region.
21
POMPANOOSUC VILLAGE
BRIDGE over
the
Ompompa-
noosuc River north of Norwich, Vt. The trusses are lattice
and the 22
site
is
an abandoned location of US Route 5.
THE BLUE BRIDGE over the Second Branch
of the
White
was built in 1903-4. Trusses are queenpost and kingpost, and the paint job is River south of East Randolph, Vt.,
tip-cart blue.
23
SHELHORN BRIDGE
located since 1933 over a dry gully
Lake County Fairground at Crown Point, Indiana. Built in 1878 near Milroy, Indiana, by the Kennedy family.
in the
24
VILLAGE BRIDGE
over the
Mad
River at the
center
of
1879-80 by Walter Bagley. The east portal is flush, the west portal overhangs, and there are good fishing windows. 25
Warren, Vt ., was built
in
TURKEY JIM'S BRIDGE
over West Branch Brook east of the
village of West Compton, for
N.H.
Built
Jim Cummings who started the
first
1874, and named turkey farm in these
in
parts.
26
MERRIAM SCHOOL BRIDGE
over the Lamoille River a half mile west of the village of Wolcott, Vt. There seems to be no explanation for the asymmetrical design of the south portal
27
SABIN BRIDGE
(1850) over Saxton's River in Westminster,
Vt. Build ing cost was divided: Rockingham $674. 74; Grafton, $162.85; Westminster, $1162.41. Westminster didn't |
.
.
.
need the bridge and paid under protest. 28
the White River
two miles west of Seymour, Indiana, on the Cortland road. The "Post" trusses are a variant on the almost-as-rare Pratt suspension
29
FORD BRIDGE
BELL'S
(1869) over
.
NORTH SCHOOL BRIDGE
over the
erly end of Waitsfield, Vt. In the
Mad
River in the north-
heyday
of the covered
bridge, there were eight in Waitsfield.
30
QUINCY BRIDGE
over the Baker River near the town line
between Plymouth and Rumney, N.H. tic
Howe
(rare in these parts), with
later. Also
31
as Smith
laminated arches added
Bridge.
POST MILLS BRIDGE
over the Ompompanoosuc River east of Post Mills Village in Thetford, Vt. Herman Powerr built this
one
care of
32
known
Trusses are authen-
in
1867, and the State of Vermont has taken good
it.
TWIN BRIDGES
over the Clyde River south of the village
of East Charleston, Vt.
A
bridgeless road was here before
the river decided to jog west and
make necessary
the two
crossings
33
SHEFFIELD UPPER BRIDGE over the Housatonic River
a
mile north of Sheffield, Mass. Built in 1835 with federal funds from the administration of
34
Andrew Jackson
THE HIGH BRIDGE over Clay Brook half a mile east of Waitsfield, Vt. Built in 1855 by James S Newcomb The classic queenpost trusses show the influence of the Howe .
.
patents
35
HAVERHI LL-BATH BRIDGE over Woodsville, N.H. Built in 1829, salt-box roof
is
278 feet long.
79
the this
Ammonoosuc
River at
two-span lattice with
.
36
JUNCTION BRIDGE ster
37
N.H.
Place (Franklin),
Boston and
1890 and typical of
Built in
Maine Railroad bridges.
McCALLEN'S BRIDGE was of the
Web-
over the Merrimack River near
1906 over the tracks
built in
Boston and Maine freight yards at East Deerfield,
Mass. Covered bridges over railroads were never common.
38
BULL'S BRIDGE over the Housatonic River four miles south of Kent, Conn. Built in 1842, the bridge was used durin the Civil
War
for transportation of military supplies.
39
THE TWIN BRIDGES over East Creek in Rutland Township, Vt. Nick Powers built them in 1849 and 1850, the second because the river had changed its course in the mean time.
40
MOSCOW
VILLAGE BRIDGE
the township of Stowe, Vt.
timbers and arches
—
A
over the Waterbury River in real oldie with hand-hewn
and a wedge system to take up the
slack.
41
PRIVATE BRIDGE over Otter Creek
in
nects two parts of a large farm. There the bridge and the abutments are
42
Brandon, Vt. is
,
con-
a cattle gate in
Vermont marble.
STATION BRIDGE
over Otter Creek a half mile west of
the Salisbury, Vt.
Railroad
toward
upstream, and
Station.
was caused
The
bridge's
by wind
rather
list
is
than
water
43
MILL BRIDGE over Plainfield,
N.H.
Blood's Brook near Meriden Village in
Built
by James F.
Tasker in the 1860's
$300, this bridge was repaired after Hurricane Carol for $3000. Also known as Meriden Bridge. for
44
TOLL BRIDGE over
a slough of the Mississippi
River be-
tween Hamilton, III., and Keokuk, Iowa. Built in 1869 as a main span on the Mississippi, the bridge was moved here in 1883. h
80
.
45
COUNTY
BRIDGE over
Contoocook River between
the
Hancock and Greenfield, N.H. bridge
this
ment 46
is
New
is
1937 for $77,000, Hampshire's newest. The truss arrangeBuilt
in
"Teco".
COBURN'S BRIDGE
over the Winooski River between East Plainfield, Vt. Built by Mr. Coburn in
Montpelier and
1851. Traffic, mostly from the gravel
47
BRIDGE AT THE GREEN over
48
its
Built
HALPIN BRIDGE
the Batten Kill
very heavy. at
West Ar-
in
Muddy Branch
over
River between Middlebury and in
is
1851-2, this lattice structure still crown which was designed to sag to level.
lington, Vt. retains
pit,
the 1850's, this
one
41
is
of the
New Haven
New Haven
Mills, Vt. Built
above the stream, the
feet
"highest" in the state.
OLD CENTER BRIDGE
49
over the Passumpsic River between Lyndonville and Lyndon Center, Vt. The trusses are Paddleford, and the paint job is red with white trim.
50
MOUNT ORNE tween in
Lunenburg, Vt. and
the Connecticut River be-
South
Lancaster,
an earlier span, New England.
1911, replacing
Howe, 51
BRIDGE over
rare in
VILLAGE BRIDGE
over Mill
Brook
this
at
is
N.H.
Built
an authentic
Fairfax,
Vt.
unbraced lattice suggesting great age probably about 1825 but the bridge isn't saying. trusses are early
52
The
—
STARK BRIDGE over the Upper Ammonoosuc River at Stark, N.H. One_ flood took the entire bridge down river. Another flood removed
its
upstream sidewalk, whereupon Mrs.
Thompson, of West Virginia and Stark, was so distressed at the sight of the "bird with one wing" that she paid the entire cost of the replacement. Mrs. Thompson's house is the
large one, white of course, abutting the bridge on the
north bank
81
"
53
BLAIR
FARM BRIDGE
over Blood's Brook
near the Plainfield town line.
Lebanon, N.H.
lattice bridge
in
enemy
one has frequently served as calendar
territory, this
54
A
in
art.
CORNISH-WINDSOR BRIDGE over the Connecticut River between New Hampshire and Vermont. This 468-foot bridge was framed on the meadows and moved into place over the ice. Tolls are
55
no longer collected.
WEST UNION BRIDGE of
over Sugar Creek a half mile north
West Union, Indiana.
rializes
its
builder, J
.
I
Built
in
1876, this bridge
memo-
Daniels, and later generations of
.
town fathers. 56
PETERS BRIDGE over the Blackwater River in West Salisbury, N.H. Built in 1883 by Plina A. Fellows for $584.39 using local help who were working out taxes.
—
57
RUSH sor,
MEADOWS The
Vt.
Felchville nothi ng
58
BRIDGE over
bridge
road,
and
be seen
to
is
the
truss
Brook in West
Mill
Wind-
from the Brownsville-
suspension
is
"arch-and-
.
TURKEY HILL BRIDGE
over the Souhegan River about three
miles upstream on the back road between Merrimack and
Pomonah, N.H. One of the 59
BAGLEY BRIDGE
cross
trusses suggests that the
SWIFTWATER BRIDGE
bracing
a
common
known Long and 61
THE
LONG
between the
lattice
bridge was built in the 1820's.
(1849) over the
River at Swiftwater Village (Bath),
Paddleford,
and best hidden.
over the Warner River east of Warner,
N.H. The inadequate
60
state's oldest
Wild Ammonoosuc
N.H. The
variant hereabouts
trusses
are
on the better-
Burr types.
BRIDGE over
the Deerfield River from the vil-
lage of Charlemont, Mass.,
to the
railroad station.
This
three-span 324-foot lattice was built in 1833 and covered
82
.
in
62
1834.
HAYWARD & NOBLE BRIDGE
over the
Branch of the
First
White River at Tunbridge, Vt. Posting is a generous ten tons, adequate access to the annual World's Fair at Tunbridge
63
.
FLINT BRIDGE (1845) over
the First Branch of the White
River at the Tunbridge-Chelsea (Vermont) town line. Note-
worthy truss
64
is
the "Je Vous
Aime" hand-carved
in a
diagonal
member.
SHEDD'S BRIDGE over
the
Walloomsac
at the state line
beyond
North Bennington, Vt. Bennington Battlefield is nearby, and General Stark's troops crossed here on an earl ier bridge, or by wading.
65
NARROWS BRIDGE
THE
over Sugar Creek
the
at
east
boundary of Turkey Run State Park near Marshall, Indiana. This Burr-type bridge, one of the most visited in the state, was built in 1882.
66
DINGMAN'S BRIDGE
over Vermont's more southerly Black
River near the Grout Cemetery a mile east of Perkinsville.
1870 by Artemus Wheeler, 45 feet
Built in
ling
67
1
COMSTOCK'S BRIDGE
over
it
has two spans total-
the Salmon
River
Colchester and East Hampton, Conn. Retired bridge tal
68
now includes such unorthodox
in
features as
between
1936,
ornamen-
gates.
FARM BRIDGE
over the
Mohawk
River east of Colebrook,
N.H.This enclosed-truss construction preceded the covered bridge. The log-crib abutment
69
this
is
totally
also traditional.
THE TWIN BRIDGE over the Contoocook
River
between
Penacook and Boscawen, N.H, Built in 1850. The present second "twin" replaced a covered bridge in 1899.
83
.
70
.
over the Lamoille River east of Hardbuilt in 1909. The smoke duct is char-
RAILROAD BRIDGE wick, Vt., was acteristic
of
St.
the several
Lake Cham-
Johnsbury and
plain Railroad bridges.
71
ASCUTNEYVILLE BRIDGE
over Mill
Brook in Weathers-
members are numbered at their joints, and Tasker bridge was probably moved here from another
field, Vt. Truss this
location
72
COOLEY BRIDGE
over Furnace Brook a mile south of Pitts-
ford, Vt., on a country road to
Proctor. Built in
1849 by
Nick Powers, and the abutments are, of course, Proctor marble
73
ORTON FARM US Route
BRIDGE over
the Winooski River alongside
2 in Marshfield, Vt.
Townsend. The interior of
this
Built
in
1890 by Herman
private bridge
includes a
cattle gate.
74
OLD SEVENTY-SIX BRIDGE land (Vt.) Country Club. (not
over East Creek at the Rut-
This
bridge was
built
in
1876
1776!) and saw no part of the wars against the In-
dians and the British.
75
BRIDGE AT THE
SCHOOLHOUSE
Clyde River near Charleston Center, Vt. Trusses are waist-high queenpost, and the bridge can be seen, with alertness, from Vt. -105 to Island Pond.
Publishers'
over
Reminder: As the author suggests,
the
it
is
a good idea
check with local authorities before journeying considerable distance to make the acquaintance of a particular bridge. It might just happen to have taken off in a high wind or a fast to
floodo
84
c
^
*
r’rf
/
\
ftfT
U 9
’V«
•
I
j-
8
COVERED BRIDGES CAN TALK is
another
unique Wake-Brook House edition. The books are handmade, bound in contempo-
enhance the text. Because each book is the work of an individual pair of hands, produced in a very personal environment, no two books will be identical They are genuine handicraft items, and there are no other books like Wake -Brook House books anywhere else rary fabrics selected to
OF VERMONT ^ department of libraries REGIONAL UBRART RD2 BOX244 SX JOHNSBURy, Vr (K81 STATE
'
.
in the world.
OTHER WAKE-BROOK HOUSE BOOKS
NEW
HAMPSHIRE'S COVERED BRIDGES Thedia Cox Kenyon. Well-known travel writer provides historical and descriptive
background of towns where the remaining covered bridges are located. Drawings of all bridges still in existence by the late Stan Snow. Arranged in itinerary format. Map endpaper. 56 pictures. 144 pp. $5.00 LIFE
WITH CAESAR An
Larry Thompson.
hilarious account of
adjustment to living with a tyrannical Si-
amese cat, by the humorist-columnist who has been favorably compared to the late Will Rogers. 21 large and witty cat portraits by June Amoroso, second only to
Harlow, L Covered bridges ca talk
a
portrayer of Siamese
Foujita
as
A
for cat
book
for cat
haters
quite as
cats.
much
as
3.00
lovers.
TWIRLY HURLY,THE HELICOPTER RABBIT Ardinelle Duncan. Adventures of a
G6
9*i0l
rabbit
who could
twirl
his ears
and
little
fly.
Praised by the Hartford Courant, Pittsburgh Press,
Miami News and
others.
Delight-
fully illustrated. Calico-bound, soap-and
water spongeable
for years of use.
2.50
Available Through Your Bookseller
"
.
LEWIS A.
HARLOW
and shortly thereafter musician
due time
"In
I
was born in a suburb of Boston, was to become a great was decided that
says of himself: it
"I
I
became an accredited by-product
emy and Harvard. While
at
Cambridge,
I
absorbed
of Milton
all
I
Acad-
could hold from
the university's excellent music department, but had to forego the tratrek to Paris, with genuine regret.
ditional
"Next came a few frustrating and profitless years in retail trade, a career was only able to support and prolong by moonlighting as a I
working musician.
"Then there was the WAR. fought my war in Chicago for fifteen years as an advertising man, and my areas of communication were electronics, thermodynamics and others of the physical sciences. "Now am back in Boston with the arts. I
I
"A
me
stark
list
of the
many and varied hobbies which
as a hopeless eccentric - perhaps unjustly.
fessionalism in any form have all I
find
am
I
way
ride could stamp
My
experiences with probeen unpleasant, but as a bystander,
curious about almost any subject. The
not be treated In such a
I
as to destroy the
new experience must
kind of amateur status
which permits profound wonder at - and enjoyment of - simple phenomena. Within these limitations, almost any discovery can become the start of a hobby, and so It has been with covered bridges. And like any good hobby, this one must be shared with someone or It will wither and die .