Jerusalem Mill Village
Group sitting at table
Jericho Covered Bridge at Jerusalem Mill Village

The overseers of the roads, one of whom was mill owner David Lee, were appointed in 1784. They provided a ford on this site south of the mill so that the towns of Franklinville, Jerusalem, and Jericho were connected, and that grain and flour might be shipped to the port town of Joppa. Although Jericho Road was officially laid out by the county in 1809, the 1860 land plat of the Lee property still shows the site as being a ford in that year. The present covered bridge was built in December 1865.

Jericho Covered Bridge

Jericho Covered Bridge


Although the Jerusalem Road was the major turnpike route (Baltimore and Jerusalem Turnpike, authorized in 1791 and built through Kingsville in 1815), the ford and later the bridge on Jericho Road provided an alternative crossing of the Little Gunpowder Falls since the Turnpike ford was often subject to closure due to high waters.

The bridge itself is composed of sawn and hewn large timbers supporting the roadway, and smaller timbers supporting the roof, which overhangs the plank flooring by several feet at both ends. Vertical siding was used to complete the structure. All of the wood for the original bridge was probably produced by Lee's sawmill. The bridge itself was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in September of 1978 and then included in the overall listing for Jerusalem Mill Village in 1987.

Jericho Bridge Interior 1936

Jericho Bridge Interior 1936



 

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