Canadian National Railroad Bridge
Canadian National Railroad Mississippi River Crossing At Dubuque
Dubuque, Iowa

Canadian National Railroad Bridge

• Structure ID:
• Location: River Mile 579.9.
• River Elevation: 592 Feet.
• Railroad: Canadian National.
• Daily Traffic Count: 6 Trains Per Day (Estimated).
• Bridge Type: Steel Deck Through Truss.
• Length: 1,260 Feet Overall, 360 Foot Swing Span.
• Width: 1 Track.
• Navigation Channel Width: 147 Feet (2 Channels).
• Height Above Water: 20 Feet.
• Date Built: Opened 1899.
The first bridge at this location was built by Andrew Carnigie and opened in January 1, 1869, a scant 4 years after the end of the Civil War. This bridge has been upgraded and renovated several times, but was totally rebuilt in 1899.

The Dubuque Railroad Bridge is interesting in that the east end of the bridge connects to a railroad tunnel. There isn't enough room between the river and the bluff for the rail line, so the railroad heads into the bluff, and makes a sweeping turn to the south, where it meets up with BNSF mainline.

This bridge has had a long ownership history. It began life hosting trains from the Illinois Central Railroad. The Illinois Central became the Illinois Central Gulf in 1972. This line was sold to the Chicago, Central, and Pacfic in 1985, but returned to the Illinois Central in 1996. The IC merged with the Canadian National in 1999. Other railroads had trackage rights over this bridge, including the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy and the Chicago Great Western. The CGW merged into the Chicago and North Western in 1968, but the C&NW abandoned its usage of this bridge in 1981.

Canadian National Railroad Bridge
Canadian National Railroad Bridge
Canadian National Railroad Bridge

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Photo and text by John A. Weeks III, Copyright © 2006, all rights reserved.
For further information, contact: john@johnweeks.com