Thorpe Ford - 1912
The Thorpe Ford Covered Bridge, northeast of Rosedale, Parke County, Indiana is a single-span Burr Arch Truss covered bridge structure built by Joseph A. Britton in 1912.
The area of nearby Rosedale was first settled by John M. Doty in 1811 on a 160-acre land grant. During the War of 1812 and the Tecumseh Indian Expedition, he served in Ohio, Ft. Harrison, and Vincennes, and returned in 1814. From his first two-story log house he expanded his farm to 1280 acres. The town was called Dotyville until after John Doty’s death. Chauncey Rose paid for the cost of incorporation in exchange for changing the name to Rosedale. Rosedale was not thought of as a significant town until 1860 when the E&C Railroad was built. Later, coal mines opened and a second railroad was built through the town. Willis Beauchamp was the first merchant. Other communities in the area included Daisyville, east of the B&O Railroad, and Blocks, a Martin Coal Company-owned town, west of the Vandalia Railroad.
The Thorpe Ford Bridge was named for the earlier ford and the Thorpe family. In 1920, Mrs. Sarah E. Thorpe owned 92 acres next to the bridge. In 1948, her son Dan Thorpe lived near the bridge. Early Parke County road maps show that the Thorpe Ford area is a location where the Big Raccoon Creek bed is still in motion. They show two crossings, two roads, and a road intersection about where the bridge is now. The creek bed has moved as much as 1/4 mile from the west during the last 100 years. Previously, the present road continued north to connect to the Greencastle Road which also crossed Big Raccoon before continuing to Coxville. The intersecting road, now gone, continued up the steep hill as a straight-line extension of the Snow Road. Thorpe Ford was probably the north creek crossing rather than the south crossing now near the creek bend and intersection with the Rosedale drainage ditch.
The building of the bridge is attributed to County Commissioner J.M. May. Soon after his election, he attempted to travel from Rosedale to Rockville. Rather than traveling thru Coxville, he obtained directions for a shorter route. After following the convoluted directions and periods of being lost, he promised a new bridge would be built. After the construction of the Thorpe Ford Bridge in 1912, it was located on the major route from Terre Haute to Crawfordsville, called the Ben Hur highway. General Lew Wallace was a famous Crawfordsville resident and the author of the novel Ben Hur. Through the years, many have remarked on the modern-day "chariot races" being conducted along this road. Many elephants and other circus animals crossed here on the way to winter camp in Peru, Indiana. Some residents remember this road as little more than a dirt path.
The WPA constructed a concrete pavement in the 1930s. Most traffic was diverted to Highway 41 after its construction in the 1920s. Heavy agricultural traffic continued on the road. When the bridge was condemned and bypassed, it was due to the continued heavy loads using the route and the availability of federal funds to maintain roads meeting upgraded standards.
Dimensions: Total length: 181 ft.; deck width: 16 ft.; vertical clearance above deck: 13 ft.
Posted to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.
Located at: N39 38.225 W87 15.967 - WGCB #14-61-07
Photographed in May 2022