Fuller Covered Bridge, Montgomery Vermont

Date added: May 21, 2024
East elevation (1974)

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The Fuller Covered Bridge crosses Black Falls Brook in Montgomery village. Five other covered wood bridges remain in the town of Montgomery, giving it the highest concentration of covered bridges by town in Vermont. Two brothers, Sheldon and Savannah Jewett of Montgomery, built all six of the bridges; they completed the Fuller Bridge in 1890, probably the last of their bridge projects. The Jewetts used Town lattice trusses in all of the bridges, which also share a common architectural design and similar dimensions (except for length).

Together with another bridge constructed by the Jewett brothers in the adjoining town of Enosburg, the Montgomery bridges constitute the most extensive surviving record of the work of any individual covered bridge builders who practiced their trade in Vermont. The complete inventory of bridges built by the Jewett is unknown; Richard Sanders Allen writes that they built bridges "for more than thirty years." The brothers prepared the timber for their bridges at their own mill, which stood in the West Hill district of Montgomery near one of the remaining bridges.

The covered bridges of Vermont are among its most cherished and Symbolic historic resources. About one hundred of the bridges still stand in the state, the highest concentration by area of covered bridges in the United States.

Bridge Description

The Fuller Covered Bridge consists of a single span supported by two flanking timber Town lattice trusses. Two longitudinal segmented stringers have been added to the underside of the deck beams for reinforcement; each stringer comprises several shorter timbers tie-bolted together.

The Fuller Bridge is 49.5 feet long overall and 19.5 feet wide; it has a 16-foot roadway. The wood floor consists of planks laid on edge and parallel to the trusses. The structure rests on abutments built of irregular stone slabs mortared together; the south abutment has been mostly faced with concrete.

On the exterior, the heavy planks pegged together diagonally to form the trusses (and side walls) of the bridge are sheathed with unpainted flush boards hung vertically. Similar siding protects the ends of the trusses immediately inside the portals. The siding stops short of the eaves to leave strip openings along the tops of the walls. There are two large rectangular windows spaced asymmetrically on the east wall.

The gable ends are sheathed with flush boards hung vertically and painted white. The portal openings are rectangular except for short diagonal upper corners. The shallow-pitch gable roof is covered with standing seam metal sheeting.

Fuller Covered Bridge, Montgomery Vermont East elevation (1974)
East elevation (1974)

Fuller Covered Bridge, Montgomery Vermont South portal (1974)
South portal (1974)