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West Virginia’s intent
to capitalize on what it had learned by
putting to further use the skills perfected during Philippi
restoration efforts was evidenced in mid-1990 when the governor
announced an ambitious program, estimated at $3.5 million, to
restore the state’s remaining covered bridges. At a November
1990 public meeting in Barrackville, Dr. Emory Kemp, WVU
presented preliminary plans for restoring the
turn-of-the-century look of the remaining structures, beginning
with the Marion County span built by Lemuel and Eli Chenoweth in
1853 as part of the Fairmont-Wheeling Turnpike.
In 1991 an Acrow
panel-type bridge had to be installed inside the 20-foot-wide,
146-foot-long multiple-kingpost Burr arch truss because of its
deteriorating condition, and a $1.3 million upstream replacement
began carrying Marion County 21 traffic over Buffalo Creek in
1992. Finally, in late 1997, Governor Cecil Underwood announced
that design of a project for the bridge, which had suffered many
delays, was back on track, with restoration to “get started
before there is any more deterioration of this historic
structure.”
At the beginning of
1998, Orders Construction Company, Inc. of St. Albans was
awarded a nearly $1.5 million contract to restore the
Barrackville Covered Bridge by replacing rotted truss members
with wood to match the original, installing a new wooden floor
system and repairing the roof, all work aimed at returning the
structure to its appearance in the original time period of its
construction. Restoration also included siding, which had been
added after the structure’s original time period, but did not
include a previous sidewalk, since the bridge now serves
pedestrians only. An autumn 1999 ribbon-cutting ceremony
officially reopened the restored structure.
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