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Chitwood BridgeA Lincoln County Covered BridgeIn the year 1926, the first covered bridge was constructed which stood in place until it's reconstruction in 1984. This bridge was named after the small community of Chitwood, as in Joshua Chitwood, namesake of the railway town. Today, Chitwood is a ghost town, far from resembling the bustling railroad village it once was. About Chitwood Covered Bridge
[click image for larger view]
The Town of ChitwoodChitwood is the product of Oregon's history at work. It began as a railway stop along the Corvallis-Yaquina railway which ended in the town of Toledo. Chitwood was the end of the line for several pioneers in Oregon. Chitwood was founded by it's namesake, Joshua Chitwood the first postmaster and store owner of the town. Chitwood was a bustling railway town that grew as supplies, logging products, and passengers traveled along the railway life-line, and stopped at Chitwood's depot. Some of the items that came to, and left from Chitwood were, fur pelts and hides, carloads of baled moss, chittam bark, lumber, groceries, clothing, cream, and medicine. With the onset of World War One, hard times hit many small towns in Oregon. Inhabitants of Chitwood and surrounding areas went off to war, and towns became much smaller. Today it is a quaint residential, pastoral town in which the railcars no longer stop. All information on these pages are from the Oregon Coast History Center, and documented information from the Lincoln County Road Department. Please ask permission from the Historical Society, and the Road Department before using any of the pictures from this site.
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