Proposals and ferries It is possible that studies may have been conducted as early as the 1880s into the possibility of a bridge across the Chesapeake Bay. However, the first known proposal came about in 1907 and called for a crossing between
Baltimore and
Tolchester Beach. In 1927, local businesspeople were authorized to finance the construction of a Baltimore to Tolchester Beach crossing. Plans for the new bridge were made, but construction was canceled following the
Wall Street Crash of 1929 with the collapse of the American economy and resulting
Great Depression of the 1930s. In 1919, the
Claiborne–Annapolis Ferry Company began running ferries between
Annapolis and
Claiborne, a community near
St. Michaels. In July 1930, the
Claiborne–Annapolis Ferry Company added a new route, one running from Annapolis to
Matapeake, a significantly shorter distance. The auto and passenger ferries were taken over by the
State Roads Commission in 1941 (reorganized into today's State Highway Administration of the
Maryland Department of Transportation in 1973). Two years later, the commission moved the western terminus of the old
Annapolis–Matapeake ferry to Sandy Point (later adjacent to
Sandy Point State Park), shortening the cross-bay trip. Before the opening, a parade of vehicles made the first official crossing, led by then current Governor
Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin, (1900–1974), and other state officials in a distinctive white Cadillac convertible flying huge American and Maryland flags. On November 9, 1967, the bridge was dedicated to Governor Lane, who had died earlier that year, and officially renamed the "William Preston Lane Jr. Memorial Bridge". These included one further north near
Baltimore, one in
southern Maryland, and an additional span to be added to the existing bridge from Kent Island to Sandy Point; ultimately, the third option was chosen. Construction of the new parallel span began in 1969 to the north of the original bridge, and it was completed on June 28, 1973. From 2006 to 2010, the westbound Chesapeake Bay Bridge had its deck replaced. especially by drivers of
tractor-trailer trucks. The bridge has been closed four times by high winds: on September 18, 2003 (
Hurricane Isabel); August 27, 2011 (
Hurricane Irene; (then-Governor
Martin O'Malley ordered the bridge closed when sustained winds exceeded ); October 29, 2012 (
Hurricane Sandy); and March 6, 2013 (the
March 2013 nor'easter). On August 10, 2008, a tractor trailer involved in a head-on collision near the west end fell from the bridge; the driver died in the crash. The incident highlighted concern that the bridge may not be structurally safe, but the
Maryland Transportation Authority (MDTA) discounted any structural or engineering problems with it. Inspections of the wall in the weeks following the accident revealed that there was deterioration in the form of corrosion of the steel reinforcements inside barriers; this prompted immediate repairs to the wall. On June 24, 2024, traffic on both spans was suspended for nearly 30 minutes in late morning as the cargo ship
MV Dali passed under, escorted by
tugboats, on its journey from the
Port of Baltimore to
Virginia International Gateway in
Norfolk, VA. The
Dali had collided with
Baltimore's
Francis Scott Key Bridge on March 26, leading to
that bridge's collapse. ==Specifications and operations==