Here is a place left abandoned by humans for more than half a century...
I'm going to tell you a story, but I'll start at the end. The long drive took us to a windy dirt road that wove under the I-55 bridge connecting Arkansas and Tennessee. Alongside the modern bridge are two antiques: The Frisco bridge, an 1892 railway corridor, and the 1916 Harahan bridge, pictured above. We walked underneath them, and one of my traveling companions immediately mouthed, "dystopia."
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More of the Harahan Bridge. |
And a taste of dystopia it was. I came to this place specifically for its fascinating and beautiful modern ruins. All three bridges are still in use today, but the Harahan keeps a secret. See, back before the modern roadway, it carried both trains and cars.
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The Frisco Bridge's trestles from a distance. |
Between 1917 and 1949, the Harahan was the main way to cross the Mississippi south of Memphis' downtown area. Cars took a ramp onto a divided roadway built right onto the Harahan. The car part of the bridge was wood panels mounted on metal frames.
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Under the Frisco Bridge. |
But by 1949 the roadway was elderly and the wood had burned once in the 1920s, causing a huge problem for the city. So another bridge was built for cars, and the Harahan was once again delegated to trains only.
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Frisco Bridge span. |
However.
The original car parts are still on the bridge, and the original concrete ramp leading to the roadway is still there. I spotted the crumbling, vine-grown concrete road from the car as we drove back from Atlanta a few months ago, and made it my mission to find out what it was.
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Abandoned roadway from below. |
The roadway itself is just one part of the rusting grandeur that make up the dual bridges. Even though it's right underneath a major interstate, the junction feels like a lost world. There's just about a quarter mile of the road left. It ends abruptly at the top of a weedy hill, and a beaten path leads up onto the road. We were not deterred by the "No Trespassing" signs hung by the BNSF Railroad.
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On the abandoned roadway. |
It's eerie standing on a stretch of road that, years ago, was probably one of the busiest intersections in the region. Teenagers obviously enjoy the place, judging by the prevalent cryptic, spray painted messages.
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"Memories are movies that you direct" |
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"If you lie you have to remember what you say" |
I would add, "When there's nothing left to burn, you have to set yourself on fire."
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Cryptic message conquered by kudzu. |
The eastbound-westbound road divider is still there, but it's buried underneath layers of kudzu. There's also a bit of the old wood road, but it quickly disappears as it leads towards the bridge. The roadway looks like a roller coaster track when you look down it:
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You're in for a ride. |
We wandered around on the ramp as the sun went down, and greeted a Union Pacific freight engine heading into Memphis.
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The engineer waved at us. |
We scurried back down the hill and jumped into the car, a bit eager to get back into civilization after our brief taste of dystopia. Let me tell you: It's an unsettling place, even if the vestiges of society are continuing on their merry way all around you.
I also have explored that area. Th eerie feeling you experienced is justified. On my last outing, there was yellow crime scene tape around an area underneath the I-55 bridge.
ReplyDeleteCheck it out now. Part of an ambitious Memphis-to-Little Rock trail plan. Google street will take you over the river on the north roadbed.
ReplyDelete(BTW, this piece of history has held me spellbound for decades.)