The St. Cloud Rail Bridge is a pin-connected truss bridge that spans the Mississippi River in St. Cloud, Minnesota, United States. It was built in 1892 by Great Northern Railway and was probably designed by the railroad. Two of the piers are stone, while a third pier is newer and made of concrete. The bridge has an extra set of bracing that hangs about ten feet below the bottom trusses, appearing to hang like a hammock. This was added to increase the capacity of the bridge.

St. Cloud Rail Bridge
The St. Cloud Rail Bridge from the Veterans Bridge just downstream
Coordinates45°33′50″N 94°09′27″W / 45.56389°N 94.15750°W / 45.56389; -94.15750
CarriesOne track of the BNSF Railway
CrossesMississippi River
LocaleSt. Cloud, Minnesota
Maintained byBNSF Railway
ID number74.2
Characteristics
DesignFour-span high deck pin-connected truss bridge
Total length587 feet
WidthOne track
Longest span170 feet
Clearance below20 feet
History
Opened1892
Location
Map

The Bridge is owned by Burlington Northern Santa Fe and used by BNSF and Northern Lines Railway to access the truncated rail lines that once extended to the northwest and southwest, west of the Mississippi River. The active rail lines currently extend through St. Cloud and Waite Park, MN with branches extending to St. Joseph, MN and Rockville, MN.

See also

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References

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  • Costello, Mary Charlotte (2002). Climbing the Mississippi River Bridge by Bridge, Volume Two: Minnesota. Cambridge, MN: Adventure Publications. ISBN 0-9644518-2-4.