Despite the different names of the Rochambeau, Mason and Williams bridges, and the fact that they were all built separately, the three are often called "The 14th Street Bridge" together.
Current Long Bridge train on plate girder portion of Long Bridge (April 2013) The current railroad bridge opened on August 28, 1904, about 150 feet (45 m) upriver from the old bridge. In the early years, the bridge was often referred to as the "Railroad Bridge" to distinguish it from "Highway Bridge". It was also sometimes known as the "14th Street Railroad Bridge". It wasn't until the 1980s, during planning of the
Virginia Railway Express (VRE) system, that the railroad bridge again began to be called by the old
"Long Bridge" name. VRE began using the bridge in 1992. The bridge was substantially reconstructed starting in mid-1942, with 11 new supplemental piers between the original truss spans and steel
plate girders replacing the iron and steel truss spans. Work completed on November 9, 1943. When the Mason Bridge was completed in 1962, it put an end to almost all use of the Long Bridge's draw span. The last time it was opened was March 1969 to allow barges used in the removal of the old Highway Bridge to pass through. The tender's control house, or shanty, on top of the draw remained - often used as a billboard for Georgetown crew races until it was removed in late 1982 or early 1983. The bridge was rehabilitated in 2016 and CSX determined that it was sufficient to meet their freight needs, but in 2019 DDOT and FRA reported that a second bridge was needed to serve increased passenger rail needs. A third bridge was also proposed to create a new bicycle/pedestrian crossing. In 2019, Virginia announced that they would pay to build a new rail bridge over the Potomac River north of the Long Bridge.
Arland D. Williams, Jr. Memorial Bridge train on the
Washington Metro (Charles R. Fenwick Bridge). Planning for a replacement of the Highway Bridge started in the 1940s to deal with expanded traffic in the automobile age. Work on a new single-span, northbound-only
14th Street Bridge began on August 21, 1947, and the new bridge opened on May 9, 1950, with the ribbon cut by Miss D.C.,
Mary Jane Hayes. The Highway Bridge then became southbound-only, but a 2nd bridge was planned to replace it. The new bridge span incorporated
draw spans with a
control houses that was designed to complement those on the
Arlington Memorial Bridge upstream and on the railroad bridge's swing span downstream. In 1956, while planning the
Jones Point Bridge Congress began to debate what to name it. While one of the first suggestions was to name it after Woodrow Wilson, which eventually it was, Rep.
Joel Broyhill (R-VA) suggested naming it for George Mason, or failing that naming the new Highway Bridge for him. This prompted a letter to the editor of the Washington Post suggested it be named for revolutionary war hero
Lafayette, since it was near where he led soldiers across the river on the way to Yorktown. A few days later, Charles Parmer a Rochambeau enthusiast and head of Virginia's short-lived Rochambeau Commission, suggested the bridge instead be named for
Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau. Another letter followed that suggested attaching the name Rochambeau instead to the 14th Street Bridge and that letter caught the attention of Congress member
Harry F. Byrd of Virginia who submitted it to the Congressional Record. Broyhill submitted a bill naming the bridge for Mason and Byrd submitted one naming it for Rochambeau, and by the middle of summer a compromise had been worked out naming one span for each. Broyhill resubmitted the compromise bill in 1957 and it passed. The new bridge was dedicated as the
Rochambeau Bridge on October 19, 1958, at 2 p.m., at time and date meant to correspond with the time and date that Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown in 1781. The last time this bridge was opened was on March 3, 1969, to remove barge and crane equipment that had been floated upriver in 1967 to remove the old Highway Bridge piers and install new center bridge piers. The bridge underwent extensive repair in 1975–1976 which resulted in a closure of more than a year. Workers gave the bridge a new deck, removed the bascule draw span and replaced the sidewalks with shoulders. The control house remained. On January 13, 1982, the bridge was damaged by the crash of
Air Florida Flight 90. The
Boeing 737-222, which had accumulated ice while idling on the runway at National Airport, stalled soon after takeoff, fell on the bridge, and slammed into the iced-over
Potomac River. The crash killed 74 passengers and crew, plus four people in cars on the bridge. The repaired span was renamed the
Arland D. Williams, Jr. Memorial Bridge on March 13, 1985—following a December 4, 1984 vote—after
one of the passengers, who passed a lifeline to five survivors before permitting himself to be rescued. He succumbed to
hypothermia and
drowned while first responders worked to rescue the last of the survivors. The name Rochambeau Bridge was then shifted to the Center Highway Bridge. After a series of inspections from 2005 to 2009, the District of Columbia's
District Department of Transportation (DDOT) began a $27 million rehabilitation of the northbound main span in 2010. Construction, scheduled to last only a few months, was finally completed in 2011. A 2014 inspection found more problems. Citing the expense and the need to replace or repair several deficient bridges elsewhere in the District, DDOT pushed the date for fixing these problems to 2020. On April 13, 2023, DDOT announced the US Department of Transportation had provided $72 million to help fund the rehabilitation project. The $90 million project, which will also be funded in part by the D.C. government, would start with preliminary engineering and the environmental review for the project later that spring, with the preliminary design expected to be completed that fall. Construction is estimated to take two years.
George Mason Memorial Bridge The new
George Mason Memorial Bridge opened upstream on January 26, 1962, replacing the old Highway Bridge (then southbound only). The Mason Bridge, unlike the bridges upstream and downstream, could not open for river traffic, thus Potomac River traffic by sea-going vessels traveling above the Long Bridge ceased in 1961. During the late 1960s, new ramps were constructed between the westbound Shirley Highway and the southbound George Washington Parkway and these eliminated the path between the bridge and the Pentagon. In 1969, the path was connected to the
Arlington Memorial Bridge via the Lady Bird Trail and on April 15, 1972 it was connected to Alexandria via the
Mount Vernon Trail, of which the Lady Bird Trail became part. In 1984, the Mason Bridge was closed for several months for a $5.9 million overhaul. The bridge was resurfaced and widened to provide shoulders. The sidewalk was widened and new safety railings were installed between the walkway and the roadway. On July 25, 1989, the George Mason Bridge gained national notoriety as the scene of the
1989 DC Prostitute Expulsion. In late 2018, the National Park Service rebuilt and improved the trail ramp between the George Mason Bridge path and East Basin Drive.
Rochambeau Bridge On April 5, 1971, a third bridge opened immediately downstream of the Mason Bridge, carrying two
express lanes in each direction. Work began in March 1967, but wasn't entirely completed until 1972. The express lanes lead directly to the
high-occupancy vehicle lanes on Virginia's section of I-395, though these lanes are only HOV during rush hour. When it opened, the bridge was known as the
Center Highway Bridge. At the time it opened it was only open for bus traffic, making it the longest exclusive busway in the country, but over the years the express lane rules have gradually been reduced. In late 1973, carpoolers were allowed to use the bus lanes during rush hour if the car had at least four passengers. In 1975, cars with four passengers were allowed to use the express lanes at all hours. In 1983, Congress passed a law to open the express lanes to all vehicles except during rush hour, when they were restricted to buses, car pools and emergency vehicles and that went into effect in 1985. In 1987, due to increased congestion, the Virginia Department of Transportation extended the HOV end time from 6 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., but later that year it was rolled back after
Rep. Stan Parris passed a federal law that would deny Virginia $2.4 million if the rush hour extension remained. In the same year, the VDOT opened the northbound HOV lanes on the bridge to all users to alleviate congestion caused by reconstruction of the SE-SW Freeway. In early 1989, Virginia, in a deal with Rep. Parris, lowered the HOV restrictions from four people per vehicle to three in order to regain control over the management of the HOV lanes. In late 2019, the HOV lanes on 395 changed to High-Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes, and as a result the northbound lane on the Rochambeau Bridge became a HOT lane as well. On March 13, 1985, following the 1982
Air Florida Flight 90 crash, the downstream bridge was renamed the Arland D. Williams, Jr. Memorial Bridge to honor one of the passengers who died saving the lives of other survivors during the crash. The name
Rochambeau Bridge was simultaneously transferred to the Center Highway Bridge. However, the bronze marker naming the bridge was not shifted with the name. Based on the recommendation of Washington Post reporter Jack Eisen, the bridge was named for Fenwick by the Metro Board on September 22, 1983. Fenwick was a Virginia state legislator from the Washington suburbs who sponsored legislation to create Metro. He died in 1968. ==See also==