Rhode Island History
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
This month in Rhode Island history - May
May 1650 - William Dyre is elected Attorney-General and Hugh Burt is elected Solicitor-General.Friday, October 14, 2005
Origin of the Shoreline/Northeast Corridor Through Rhode Island
The stretch of railroad which runs through East Greenwich was originally known as the Providence & Stonington Railroad. Construction began at Providence at Fields Point (its northern terminus) in 1832 and was completed to Stonington (its southern terminus) in 1837.A ferry took passengers from Fields Point to Fox Point where the Boston-bound passengers and freight transferred to the Boston & Providence Railroad, crossed the Seekonk River at India Point (originally over a covered railroad bridge) to the Seekonk shore (East Providence didn't exist as such yet), then to Boston.
Of interesting note is that some of the bridges along this line, including the stone railroad bridge at King Street were designed by West Point's George Washington Whistler, husband to Anna Matilda Whistler (aka Whistler's Mother). George died of cholera in 1849 while working as chief engineer for Tsar Nicolas I, supervising the construction of the railroad between Moscow and St Petersburg.
Tuesday, October 04, 2005
Removal of the Old Jamestown Bridge
image courtesy of www.HistoryThroughPhotos.com
The RIDOT has awarded the demolition contract to Cashman Equipment Corporation for a bid price of $19,450,000. The old bridge, designed by Parsons, Klapp, Brinckerhoff and Douglas of New York was built at a total cost of $3,002,218.02.
- Chronology of the old Jamestown Bridge:
- 1933-1938 Funding & approval for the bridge
- 1938-1940 Construction
- July 27, 1940 Christening
- August 2-4, 1940 Dedication
- 1940-1969 Operation of the bridge by the Jamestown Bridge Commission
- 1969-1990 Operation of the bridge by the State of Rhode Island
Thursday, August 11, 2005
Welcome!
Welcome the the Rhode Island History Blog. I chose to start this weblog because I had heard about people and places of Rhode Island but could not find out that much about them. The toughest question I have gotten so far is, "what is Duby's Grove and where is it?"
About the only thing I could find about it was that it was an amusement park along the Pawtuxet River, in Warwick and that it had a train station (see http://www.historythroughphotos.com/RR_Depots/Railroad_Depots_D.html ).