Bogert - 1841
The Bogert Covered Bridge is a historic wooden covered bridge located in Allentown, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. It is a 145-foot-long, Burr Truss bridge, constructed in 1841.
Bogert Bridge has vertical plank siding and a gable roof. It was restored by the Allentown Parks Department. It takes its name from the Bogert family. Peter Bogert purchased the land on which the bridge is located in 1744 as part of his farm. Settlers are said to have put stones in the Little Lehigh at that place and used it as a crossing. In the 1760s, a crude log bridge, later replaced by a wooden plank bridge, was built on the site. When American Indians complained that this bridge blocked their canoes, Bogert was called on to settle the dispute. The American Indians believed he treated them fairly, afterward calling Bogert "the Peacemaker."
Bogert's Bridge is a Burr truss, named after a design created by Theodore Burr of Connecticut in the early 19th century. Its most distinctive feature is two long arch trusses resting on abutments at either end. It was built by local men. John Waltman of Allentown worked on the bridge as a carpenter's apprentice at the age of 16.
The Pennsylvania Department of Highways took responsibility for the bridge from Lehigh County in 1945 because it carried S. 24th Street and linked two state roads. The bridge served its role well for many years into the late 1950s. But at 3:15 a.m. on 19 February 1956, a speeding truck pulling a trailer smashed into the bridge, splintering seven of the bridge's 12-by-12-inch crossbeams. Its roof sagged in the middle. Initially, Lehigh County wanted to tear down the bridge, believing it had become a traffic hazard. However, that didn't stop more damage from being done to the bridge. On 30 May 30, 1957, a second accident involving a truck carrying an earthmover crashed into the bridge, smashing the roof and causing extensive damage.
Although many thought Bogert's Bridge was doomed, a letter-writing campaign in 1957 by the "Save the Bogert's Bridge Committee" obtained state approval to move S. 24th Street to a new bridge adjacent a few hundred feet from the structure. The covered bridge was reconstructed by the Commonwealth and given to Allentown in 1964. Today, Bogert's is the oldest covered bridge in Lehigh County and among the oldest in the country and is open to pedestrian and bicycle traffic only.
Of the 1,500 covered bridges that once stood in the state of Pennsylvania, as of 2019, approximately 200 remain.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
Located at: N40 34.150 W75 29.917 - WGCB #38-39-01
Photographed in July of 2019.