The Tecate border crossing originally opened in 1932.
This ditch, originally crossed via a drawbridge, was filled in when the castle was slighted, and not re-excavated until the 1960s.
Another theory suggests that the name is a contraction of "town of bridges", due to the large number of streams the High Street originally crossed.
This bridge is of a type identical to those originally crossing the Bulbourne and the canal at Boxmoor.
The highway originally crossed the Columbia River on an earlier bridge built in 1908.
It originally crossed the North River near Bevington, Iowa.
It originally crossed the North Branch of Roaring Creek.
This originally crossed it on a bridge, but an embankment soon replaced it.
The bridge originally crossed the Feather River and is the only one of several suspension bridges built in the area in the 1850s that still remains.
U.S. 59 originally crossed into North Dakota at Pembina until the early 1950s.