West Union - 1876
The West Union Covered Bridge formerly carried Tow Path Road over Sugar Creek north-northeast of Montezuma, Indiana. The two-span Burr Arch Truss-covered bridge structure was built by Joseph J. Daniels in 1876 and bypassed in 1964. It is notable for being the longest-standing covered bridge in Parke County, and one of the nation's best-preserved examples of the Burr truss.
West Union Bridge is one of the most visually impressive and structurally intact of approximately 180 surviving Burr truss-covered bridges in the United States.
The West Union Covered Bridge is the third bridge to stand at this location. The Star Mill Covered Bridge was the first and then the Harrison Covered Bridge replaced it but was damaged in 1876 prompting the West Union Covered Bridge to be built. The bridge was finished in September 1876. The road was originally part of the "Indiana State Highway", established with the Legislature in 1827, which connected Fort Wayne with Terre Haute. Along with the Armiesburg Covered Bridge it hosted stage coach traffic to Lafayette.
Not much is left of West Union today, only a handful of houses. Gone are the school, post office, and the railroad. The Wabash Erie Canal ran just west of town with a feeder canal running south of Sugar Creek and connecting to the west of the bridge. The Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad crossed Sugar Creek to the east of the bridge and past West Union on the west side. Little is left of evidence of the railroad or the canal today. Farmers reclaimed the land and farm most of it today.
Dimensions: Total length: 315 ft.; deck width: 17 ft.; vertical clearance above deck: 14.5 ft.
Posted to the National Register of Historic Places on December 22, 1978, and was named a National Historic Landmark in 2016.
Located at: N39 51.298 W87 20.148 - WGCB #14-61-27
Photographed in May 2022