Maryland Country Roads - The Jug Bridge Demijohn Close, Sepia - Frederick, Maryland
by Michael Mazaika
Title
Maryland Country Roads - The Jug Bridge Demijohn Close, Sepia - Frederick, Maryland
Artist
Michael Mazaika
Medium
Photograph
Description
One of the landmarks of our Nation's continued westward expansion in the early 1800's, the Jug Bridge demijohn (a very large-scale version of a popular decanter for spirits) was originally placed at the east end of the four-arched stone bridge crossing the Monocacy River just east of Frederick, Maryland. The bridge was built around 1808 for the Baltimore-Frederick Turnpike Company by a renowned stone mason of the day, Leonard Harbaugh. Legend has it that, on completion, some of the builders placed a jug of whiskey in the monument. The mode of traffic carried by the Jug Bridge began with horses, horse-drawn carts and wagons up through the automobiles of the mid-1940's when one of its spans collapsed. The bridge was temporarily repaired and remained in service but was eventually replaced by the modern-day spans that carry U.S. 40 / Interstate 70 across the river. The Old Jug was relocated to a small park, just east of town, where it currently resides, next to a stone marker placed to commemorate an 1824 visit to Frederick by the Marquis de LaFayette. Image = MD Country Roads - Frederick Jug Bridge-3S Close 111017 016-020 E-D M C1 PSP.jpg.
COPYRIGHT NOTICE: All of the photographs on this web site and my gallery are fully protected by U.S. and international copyright laws. All rights are reserved. These images may not be downloaded, copied, reproduced, printed, manipulated, or used in any way, without the express written permission of Michael D. Mazaika. Unauthorized use will be prosecuted to the full extent of U.S. Copyright Law.
Uploaded
August 4th, 2018
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