15th Street Bridge at Blue Ridge
Image
Title |
Title
Title
15th Street Bridge at Blue Ridge
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Content type |
Content type
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Description |
Description
Postcard of the 15th Street Bridge at Blue Ridge Boulevard.
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Barcode |
Barcode
20000313
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Creator Name |
Creator Name
Creator: Ray, Mrs. Sam (Mildred Kitrell)
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Item Type |
Item Type
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Subject (local) |
Subject (local)
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Digital Collection(s) |
Digital Collection(s)
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Related Item |
Related Item
Mrs. Sam Ray Postcard Collection (SC58)
URL
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Note(s) |
Note(s)
Note Type
biographical/historical
The Fifteenth Street bridge at Blue Ridge was built in 1906 and 1907 by the Swenson Construction Company at a cost of $15,000. The bridge is 150 feet long, 80 feet wide and 80 feet above the street level at the highest point in the arch. It is a keystone arch built by stone artisans from native dimensional and rubble stone, and was, at the time of its construction, the largest single arch stone bridge west of Ohio. The structure occupies one of the highest elevations in Jackson County, providing a panoramic view of the metropolitan area to the east and west. Fifteenth Street (now Truman Road) passes under the arch, while Blue Ridge Boulevard traffic moves across it. A Kansas City Star news story of July 24, 1910, told of a group of park board members from Jersey City, N. J., who were touring the country looking for ideas. Standing at this high point on the newly constructed Blue Ridge Boulevard and looking westward across the valley of the Blue River, one of the men remarked In all the country there will be nothing like it. When Blue Ridge Boulevard is completed it will be the most beautiful drive west of the Hudson. Kansas City Star, January 25, 1975.
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Shelf Locator |
Shelf Locator
SC58
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Use and Reproduction |
Use and Reproduction
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