The
Bulkeley Bridge was the only bridge crossing on the
Connecticut River for miles in the early 20th century. Then it was proposed in the 1930s to build two more road bridges on the river for the
Wilbur Cross Highway. In 1955 the new
Charter Oak Bridge, built 10 years earlier, was not helping to ease traffic on the Bulkeley Bridge. The
Greater Hartford Bridge Authority was created to build this bridge and the
Putnam Bridge in
Glastonbury. An Interstate bypass was also planned to be built in the
Hartford Area, eventually becoming
I-291. The bridge and bypass opened on December 16, 1957, from
I-91 to
US 5. The bridge was originally called Wolcott Bridge, because of the name of the road formerly carried on it. It was renamed in 1960 to its current name. A toll was charged on the bridge until a tollbooth accident in 1983, which was one of the toll accidents that resulted in statewide removal of tollbooths in the 1980s. ==See also==