A River Turnstile

AlanLichty

Moderator
There is an antique railroad turnstile along the Lewis River in SW Washington that is an interesting specimen:

LRRRBridge.jpg


The turnstile mechanism is mostly intact although lacking maintenance and a motor:

LRRRBTurnstile.jpg


For those who might wish to explore the old structure more closely be forewarned that the tracks on the bridge are actually still active:

LRRRBTalgo.jpg


In this case the Amtrak Talgo trains slow down to about 45mph for the bridge before heading back up to cruising speeds once over the span. There are two sets of tracks on the bridge and I have seen trains going both directions across the bridge at once. Sadly about once every two or three years someone gets killed while out on the bridge when a train comes through in spite of a lot of warning signs and No Trespassing signs all over both ends of the bridge.

C&C always welcome.
 

Ben Egbert

Forum Helper
Staff member
That's a neat old bridge Alan, can you imagine hand cranking it? These bridges were built to allow boat traffic through I think, now that the bridge is no longer operable, what do tall boats do?

Nice job capturing it.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
That's a neat old bridge Alan, can you imagine hand cranking it? These bridges were built to allow boat traffic through I think, now that the bridge is no longer operable, what do tall boats do?
There are no longer docking facilities upstream for things that don't fit under the bridge. There used to be sawmills upstream from here and the river was navigated by flat bottom boats for transporting lumber. At low tide the river probably isn't more than 15-20' deep under the bridge. I have paddled this area and quite a ways upstream from here (both forks) in a canoe. The Lewis River dumps into the Columbia River about a mile downstream from here.
 

Ben Egbert

Forum Helper
Staff member
I have stayed at the Lewis River Inn in Woodland a couple times while visiting the Wildlife Refuge nearby. It can't be far from this bridge.
 

Ben Egbert

Forum Helper
Staff member
Yes Ridgefield NWR, I had forgotten the name. I have a bunch of great blue heron shots from there.,
 
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