Country
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Link to list for province/state
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Notes
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Canada
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New Brunswick
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Fifty-eight covered bridges exist; the vast majority have a single span.
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Canada
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Quebec
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As of 2012[update], there were 82 covered bridges.
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U.S.
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Alabama
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Eleven historic covered bridges remaining with six at their original locations.
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U.S.
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California
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Eleven covered bridges reported as of 2002[update].[1]
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U.S.
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Connecticut
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Six authentic covered bridges exist of which three are historic.
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U.S.
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Delaware
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Three authentic covered bridges of which two are historic.
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U.S.
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Florida
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There is a historic covered bridge in Coral Springs.
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U.S.
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Georgia
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Sixteen existing covered bridges.
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U.S.
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Illinois
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Nine authentic covered bridges of which five are historic.
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U.S.
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Indiana
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Ninety-eight historic covered bridges of which fourteen were built before 1870 and represent the most common truss style (Burr Arch) in the state.
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U.S.
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Iowa
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Nineteen covered bridges were built in Iowa between 1855 and 1885; nine remain, five of which are in Madison County around Winterset.
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U.S.
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Kentucky
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As many as 700 covered bridges existed in the past, though only 12 are known to still exist. 11 are open to the public, and one exists on private property; all are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2]
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U.S.
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Maine
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Nine covered bridges of which seven are historic.
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U.S.
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Maryland
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Six remain as of 2015[update].[3]
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U.S.
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Massachusetts
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Twelve authentic covered bridges of which seven are historic as of 2003[update].
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U.S.
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Michigan
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There is a covered bridge in Frankenmuth, Michigan. There are at least 7 others throughout the state.
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U.S.
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Minnesota
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Twenty-three covered bridges including one on the National Register of Historic Places.
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U.S.
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Missouri
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Four historic covered bridges, all now listed as State Historic Sites.
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U.S.
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New Hampshire
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At one time there were about 400 covered bridges in New Hampshire.[4] It was reported that "at the end of twentieth century there were still nearly seventy covered bridges in New Hampshire."[5] In 2006, it was reported that there are 54 surviving bridges administered by the New Hampshire Department of Transportation, the most famous being the Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge (1866), spanning the Connecticut River from Cornish, New Hampshire to Windsor, Vermont; this bridge was formerly the longest wooden covered bridge in the United States.[4]
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U.S.
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New Jersey
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New Jersey had up to 35 covered bridges at its peak; many that were destroyed or damaged in various major floods are rebuilt as metal truss bridges.[6] Today, two covered bridges remain: Green Sergeant's Covered Bridge (19th century) and Scarborough Bridge (1959).[6]
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U.S.
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New York
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Twenty-four historic covered bridges identified by New York Society of Covered Bridges.
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U.S.
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North Carolina
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Two remain, the Pisgah and Bunker Hill.[7]
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U.S.
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Ohio
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Forty-two remain,[disputed – discuss] the second-highest of any state, down from over 4,000 at peak.[8]
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U.S.
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Oregon
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Fifty historic covered bridges remain in the state.
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U.S.
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Pennsylvania
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About 219 remain, the most of any state.[8]
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U.S.
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Rhode Island
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Only the Swamp Meadow Covered Bridge.[9]
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U.S.
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South Carolina
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The only remaining covered bridge in South Carolina is Campbell's Covered Bridge in Greenville County.[10]
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U.S.
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South Dakota
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Only the Edgemont City Park Covered Bridge.[11]
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U.S.
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Tennessee
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Four remain as of 1980[update].[12]
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U.S.
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Vermont
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No other state has built and still possesses so many of the old timbered crossings in so small an area."[13] In 1996, 106 covered bridges were reported in Vermont.[14]
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U.S.
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Virginia
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Six historic covered bridges remain, all still at their original locations.
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U.S.
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Washington
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Only a few traditional covered bridges remain in Washington,[15] and not all are publicly accessible.
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U.S.
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West Virginia
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Seventeen historic covered bridges; the three oldest ones are also the longest.
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U.S.
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Wisconsin
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The only remaining historic covered bridge in Wisconsin is the covered bridge in Cedarburg.[16][17] There are also the Smith Rapids Covered Bridge in Park Falls built in 1991,[18] and the Springwater Volunteer Covered Bridge built in 1997.[19]
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