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The Lyme–East Thetford Bridge is a historic bridge over the Connecticut River between Lyme, New Hampshire, and East Thetford, Vermont. From the New Hampshire side it carries East Thetford Road, which becomes Vermont Route 113 as it enters Vermont. A Parker truss bridge completed in 1937, it is 471 feet (144 m) long. The bridge was added to ...
Lyme: 53: Lyme–East Thetford Bridge: Lyme–East Thetford Bridge: March 27, 2020 : VT 113 / East Thetford Rd. over the Connecticut R. Lyme: Extends into Orange County, Vermont: 54: Minot–Sleeper Library: Minot–Sleeper Library
Vermont – New Hampshire; Rail bridge (demolished) ... Lyme–East Thetford Bridge: VT 113 ... Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap.
Carleton Bridge: 1869 June 10, 1975: East Swanzey ... Lyme–East Thetford Bridge: 1937 ... List of covered bridges in New Hampshire;
US 5 north – North Thetford, Fairlee: Western end of concurrency with US 5: 22.579: 36.337: US 5 south – Pompanoosuc, Norwich, White River Junction: Eastern end of concurrency with US 5: 22.847: 36.769: East Thetford Road – Lyme NH: Continuation into New Hampshire via Lyme–East Thetford Bridge: 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
The Lyme Common occupies the center of the village of Lyme, located about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) east of the Connecticut River. Lyme is a rural town. Most human development is in the western half of the town along the Connecticut River and New Hampshire Route 10, known as the Dartmouth College Highway. The eastern half of the town is mostly forest.
The centerpiece of the 80-acre (32 ha) district is the oblong town common, a flat, grassy expanse extending east-west just south of a bend in Main Street (New Hampshire Route 10), whose visual anchor, the First Congregational Church, stands at the eastern end. The district extends along NH 10 north as far as High Street, and south a short ...
Lyme Center was one of two village centers established in the town's early years, with Lyme Common taking a leading role as the site of its civic and religious buildings. Lyme Center was in the early years known as Cook Village, after James Cook, who first settled the area in 1783, and whose family dominated its population into the 1820s.