Staff Staff

Green Bridge dedictable 102 years ago

Photos: 86-30-78 The Green Bridge under construction in July 1922
86-31-32 A horse and buggy cross the Green Bridge
1961. 91-87-254 The first car across the Pasco-Kennewick (Green) Bridge. L/R Senator Jones, Senator stinson of Pasco, D.W. Owen of Kennewick, unkown.
98-14-8 Old Kennewick-Pasco bridge alongside the New Cable bridge over the Columbia River
86-31-23 Completed Green bridge with Rail bridge in the background.

By Gale Metcalf formaly printed in the Tri-Cities Area Journal of Business

A century ago, the automobile had not yet completely replaced the horse and buggy as the main way of getting around in the United States.

But, it was getting there.

But, getting to where you wanted to be – even with an automobile and the many more horses of power it had in its engine compared to the four-legged working machine out in the pasture – was another matter.

Good roads were limited., and many inherited natural obstacles.

If you wanted to drive your automobile from Massachusetts to Puget Sound on the Yellowstone Trail highway you had better be prepared to hop on a ferry between Pasco and Kennewick to complete your journey by car.

Until 1922.

The last road link on the Yellowstone Trail connecting the eastern seaboard of the United States with Washington state was completed with the opening of a 3,300-foot long, 185-foot high steel cantilever truss bridge across the Columbia River between Pasco and Kennewick.

It opened on October 21, 1922.

Right at this moment 100 years ago, building the bridge was underway. It would take one year to construct from beginning to end before opening the Yellowstone Trail to automobile surface traffic from its beginning to its end.

The Yellowstone Trail was the “first transcontinental automobile highway through the upper tier of the United States.”

It was established on May 23, 1912, some 10 years before the Pasco-Kennewick bridge was built. Running from the Atlantic Ocean at Plymouth, Massachusetts to Seattle and the Pacific Ocean, it passed through Yellowstone National Park.

A slogan of the day identified the Yellowstone Trail as “A good road from Plymouth Rock to Puget Sound.”

Plans for an automobile bridge linking Pasco and Kennewick were in the minds of some even before considerations of a Yellowstone Trail link.

A young Pasco attorney who had arrived in the tiny community in 1904, B.B. Horrigan, had thoughts as early as 1913. Horrigan, who served in elective and appointed positions in Pasco, who was a state legislator, and who became a superior court judge for the Benton-Franklin-Adams County Judicial District by appointment from Washington Governor Mons C. Wallgren in 1945, did not have funding at his disposal.

It came in 1919 when a representative of the Union Bridge Company, Charles G. Huber, sold $49,000 worth of stock to finance building the bridge, the first of its size paid  entirely by stock sales.

Its dedication brought dignitaries and visitors from throughout the state, and brought significant optimism to what the new span might mean to the state’s economy to the two towns that now truly became the “Twin Cities.”

The Kennewick Courier-Reporter wrote then: “The day the bridge was opened to traffic, a new era dawned for each community.”

On its first day tolls were 75 cents a car, 20 cents for bicycles, and drivers of trucks weighing less than 1-ton paid $2. Tolls were removed in 1931 after initial construction costs were paid and travel was toll free between Pasco and Kennewick for the next 47 years until the span was replaced by today’s cable bridge, with its much-need four lanes. 

The old narrow 2-lane bridge was straining to accommodate up to 18,000 cars a day.

Three cantilever bridges were built over the Columbia River in the 1920s. The Pasco-Kennewick span was the first.

In 1931, the bridge was purchased by the state of Washington, and two years later in 1933 was added to the state highway system. Two decades later, in 1954, Benton and Franklin counties became owners, and in 1968 the bridge was sold by the counties to Pasco and Kennewick. The cities paid just $1.

In 1926, the bridge became part of the newly formed US 410 highway, and when Highway 410 was decommissioned in 1967 the bridge carried traffic on US 12.

The bridge had formal and informal names through the years, like the Pasco-Kennewick Bridge, and the Benton-Franklin Inter-County Bridge, but its lime-green luster seemed to forever mark it in local language as the “Old Green Bridge.”

The morning of September 16, 1978, the old green bridge was still used by traffic 

But closed to motor traffic forever when the new cable bridge was dedicated that day by Washington state Gov. Dixie Lee Ray.

Local bridge preservationists, led by Virginia Devine as chairwoman of the Save Our Bridge Committee, sought for years to prevent its removal for historical reasons and for uses other than traffic.

In the end, those favoring its removal prevailed and it was demolished in 1990, some 68 years after its birth. A single bridge support extending from the water was left near the Kennewick shoreline, leading to creation of a pier for scenic viewing.

The old Pasco-Kennewick green bridge was placed in the National Registry of Historic Places on July 16, 1982.


Read More