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The bridge over the Neches River connecting
Port Arthur and Orange County was dedicated on September 8,
1938, as the Port Arthur-Orange Bridge and replaced the Dryden
Ferry as a part of the "Hug-the-Coast Highway" on State Highway
87. As a result of a contest in 1957 it became known as the
"Rainbow Bridge." Ferry service had proved unreliable, and on
November 30, 1934, after a seven-year campaign, Governor Miriam
A. Fergusonqv signed the bill
permitting Jefferson County to participate in the cost of the
structure. The bridge was financed by the county, state, and
federal governments under the Public Works Administration at a
cost of $2,750,000. Before the bridge was built a dispute over
it arose between Port Arthur and Beaumont. From the point of
view from Beaumont, which had its dock upstream, the proposed
bridge would be a menace to navigation, would be little used,
and would cost the county too much money. Beaumont citizens
argued that a ferry or a drawbridge would suffice. Port Arthur
citizens argued that the bridge would allow motor traffic to
operate uninhibited at all times. The two factions sent
delegations to Austin to argue their respective cases before the
State Highway Commission, but they finally reached an agreement
by October 1934. Beaumont representatives offered to end the
controversy if the Port Arthur faction would approve a vertical
clearance of 185 feet for the bridge. The matter ended with a
compromise of 176 feet. The bridge was built with a vertical
clearance of 176+ feet, a main span of 680 feet between main
piers, and 600 feet between fenders. The clearance was to allow
the tallest ship afloat at the time (the Navy dirigible tender
USS Patoka) to pass. This made the bridge the most
elevated highway bridge over tidal waters in the world and the
largest bridge built by the Texas Highway Department. The
cantilever bridge was designed to withstand the force of a
130-mile hurricane wind and a wind pressure of seventy-five
pounds per square foot. A special driving rig was designed. The
eight pairs of reinforced concrete piers were to extend from
ninety-five feet to 102 feet below the surface of the water and
rise eleven feet to twenty feet above. The sixty-eight smaller
piers were to be supported to an average depth of seventy-five
feet. The total length of the bridge and approaches would be
7,752 feet. The roadway was to be 252 feet wide between railings
and 222 feet wide between curbs, providing an eighteen-inch
walkway. The incline of the bridge was to be 5 percent, a rise
vertically five feet for each 100 feet of climb. The project
plans revealed there are 1,428 feet of cantilever spans, 1,200
feet of continuous truss spans, 2,560 feet of deck truss spans,
1,802 feet of deck girder spans, and 762 feet of concrete girder
spans. Construction began in May 1936 and was completed in
September 1938. In 1988 construction began on a new multilane
bridge, the Veterans' Memorial Bridge, which ran parallel to the
old Rainbow Bridge. It was completed in 1991. In 1993 the
Rainbow Bridge began renovations to bring the roadway to federal
standards; in 1995 construction was still underway. The
rehabilitated Rainbow Bridge was to provide two lanes for
southbound traffic. Northbound traffic was to use the Veterans'
Memorial Bridge, dedicated on September 8, 1990. The navy tender
never traveled the Neches River, and no other ship has ever come
close to hitting the bottom of the bridge.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Lorecia East, History and
Progress of Jefferson County (Dallas: Royal, 1961). Texas
Highways, November 1988. Ben Woodhead, Beaumont at Large
(1968). WPA Federal Writers' Project, Port Arthur
(Houston: Anson Jones Press, 1940).
Mildred S. Wright
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Handbook of Texas
Online, s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/RR/err3.html
(accessed March 3, 2008).
(NOTE: "s.v." stands for sub verbo, "under the word.")
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