Lynx Creek Bridge
Prescott

Marker:  
Lynx Creek Bridge

Location:
Old Black Canyon Highway,
0.9 mile northeast of Junction Arizona State Route 69 
Prescott, Yavapai County, Arizona
34.552028, -112.373361

Historical Significance:
Arizona Highway Department bridge engineer Merrill Butler designed a filled spandrel concrete arch. Each poured concrete arch was built and taken to the site. The Lynx Creek Bridge extended 90 feet between the abutments and had a 16‑foot‑wide roadway. 

With “considerable architectural beauty,” according to the Prescott Courier, the Lynx Creek Bridge was opened to traffic with great ceremony in October 1922. Although the Black Canyon Highway was never made a state route, the Lynx Creek Bridge carried vehicular traffic on this secondary route until a parallel structure was built immediately adjacent to the original arch in 2000. The bridge is now open for pedestrian use. This information provided by the State of Arizona Historic Bridge Inventory.

Lynx Creek Bridge is on the National and Arizona State Register of Historic Places.

Dedicated:
2010

Sponsors:
General George Crook Chapter, NSDARYavapai Chapter, NSDAR, and the Sons of the American Revolution, Prescott Chapter.

A snapshot of the marker that reads, “Lynx Creek Bridge is on the National and Arizona State Register of Historic Places” with details of the groups that sponsored this marker.
Marker, Lynx Creek Bridge, undated image.

  

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Unless otherwise noted, images are courtesy of Arizona State Society, DAR, Daughters.

 

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