Congress Street Bridge (Boston)


The Congress Street Bridge is a bascule bridge in Boston, Massachusetts. It carries Congress Street across the Fort Point Channel, from the city's Financial District to South Boston. The bridge is well-known to tourists due to the Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum being located near the mid-point of the crossing, accessible via a sidewalk.

History

Boston's Congress Street was extended across Fort Point Channel in 1874 by way of a swing bridge. That bridge was removed in 1929, and replaced in 1930 by the current bascule bridge. The bridge was deemed complete on January 6, 1931, with a reported cost of $765,041.
The lifting section of the bridge has been welded shut since the 1970s.
Notable attractions in the area include Boston Children's Museum and the Hood Milk Bottle, located at the east end of the bridge, and the Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum, located near the center of the bridge. The Tea Party museum, which first opened in 1973, originally occupied what had been the bridge tender's house. The museum's gift shop burned in a fire on August 3, 2001, which was late attributed to a lightning strike. The facility remained closed, and another fire on August 27, 2007, consumed the main building. That fire was accidentally ignited by sparks from welders working on the Congress Street Bridge. A new structure was subsequently built for the Tea Party museum, which opened in June 2012.