This week's edition of Throwback Thursday takes us within the depths of New York City. While you may not find a good producer of picante sauce in New York City, you were able to find a plethora of old signs around the five boroughs at one time (and still may be able to find a few stragglers), such as this button copy sign for the Throgs Neck (I-295) and the Whitestone (I-678) on the Bruckner (I-278) eastbound in the Bronx. Photo taken December 2004.
The Crescent City Connection is a massive dual-span steel truss bridge that spans the lower Mississippi River at downtown New Orleans, about 95 river miles upstream from the mouth of the great river at the Head of Passes Light. If counted as a single bi-directional highway bridge, the parallel spans combine to form the single busiest bridge on the Mississippi River and its importance as a linchpin in the region’s transportation network cannot be overstated. While there have been various schemes over the years to construct bridges downriver from Algiers Point, this bridge has been the southernmost bridge on the Mississippi River since its initial construction in the 1950s. The years immediately following the end of World War II were a transformational period in the history of New Orleans. Already one of the great economic and cultural centers of the American Deep South, it was recognized at this time that major changes and improvements to the city’s transportation infrastructure would b...
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