
This bridge over the CSX rail line was built in 1989 on Water Works Road. There are several such bridges in Hancock County in various states of repair.


This bridge over the CSX rail line was built in 1989 on Water Works Road. There are several such bridges in Hancock County in various states of repair.


Cylindrical water towers like this historic example in Jesup are also known as standpipes.

One of just 13 functional covered bridges remaining in Georgia, the Elder Mill bridge is all the more exceptional when you discover that it’s actually been moved and has remained in use.

Historic Marker Text: Built in 1897 by Nathaniel Richardson, this 99-foot-long bridge originally carried the Watkinsville-Athens Road over Calls Creek. It was moved here to Rose Creek in 1924 and the road was relocated to its present site. The nearby grist mill ceased operations in 1941. Constructed in the Town lattice design, the bridge’s web of planks crisscrossing at 45- to 60-degree angles are fastened with wooden pegs, or trunnels, at each intersection. It is one of the few covered bridges in Georgia continuing to carry traffic without underlying steel beams.

If you visit the bridge, make sure you drive across, pull over and walk down to beautiful Rose Creek. Views like this one are almost guaranteed, and it’s all free.
National Register of Historic Places

Built by Seaboard Air Line, this bridge has been abandoned for years. It’s located between Omaha, Georgia, and Cottonton, Alabama, and is visible from the Georgia Highway 39 Spur. Jackie Purdy writes that there is another vertical-lift bridge operated by CSX on the Savannah River.

This historic concrete arch bridge, begun in 1915, delayed by World War I, and completed in 1920 as a memorial to its veterans, was a symbol of Albany throughout most of the twentieth century. Though a commendable effort by local preservationists stalled its fate, it was demolished in 2012.


This Pratt/through-truss swing bridge was constructed, likely in the 1930s, by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad.

The bridge was abandoned by the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad in the 1980s.

In the heyday of passenger trains, it carried the Orange Blossom Special and other legendary passenger cars over the Altamaha River.

It’s a popular landmark for boaters traveling down the Altamaha to the coast.


Some sources have listed the date of construction for this railway bridge as 1916; 1928 is the accepted year per the construction records of the Virginia Bridge & Iron Company, and this is confirmed by a photograph I made of a broken but legible date plate on one of the trusses. The style is known as “through-truss” and this is one of just a handful of surviving rotating bridges in Georgia. The idea of such a bridge was to allow large river-going vessels passage, though by the time the bridge was built, most riverboat traffic had long since been made obsolete by the railroad.
The bridge is well-known landmark to travelers along US Highway 341. I drive past it about twice a month and have photographed it numerous times.
Tina Clay recalls: My grandparents lived on the Jeff Davis side of that river until the road was widened in the 80’s. They owned the land up to the river. My grandmother actually watched that bridge being built. It was prior to the bridge for auto travel when there was still a ferry in operation. I also lived there until I was 8 (when the road was widened). The train trestle was actually made to turn and rotate to allow larger ships passage down the river. That was one of the main reason to have someone on lookout. They also kept carrier pigeons up there and used them to communicate up and down the river.

Built by J. W. Baughman in 1891, this 121-foot span over McDonald’s Ford was restored by John Cherry in 1984. It is the southernmost covered bridge in the United States. Baughman’s grandson, J. W. Baughman III, writes that he was born in 1861 in Lexington, South Carolina, and died in 1923 in Dothan. Iron gates have now been placed at both ends of the bridge due to graffiti and other damage to the bridge.

National Register of Historic Places

This type of water tower is technically known as a stand pipe.