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Great
Salt Lake
PI-39 Commonly Asked Questions
About Utah's Great Salt Lake and Ancient Lake Bonneville
Modern rock-fill causeway
located
parallel to, and 1,500 feet north of,
the old trestle; view is westward
across the lake toward Lakeside.
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When
and why was a railroad built across the Great Salt Lake?
Great Salt Lake is divided into two parts by the Southern Pacific
Transportation Co. (SPTC) causeway. That part north of the
causeway and west of Promontory Mountains is called the north arm,
and that to the south of the causeway is called the south arm.
Bear River Bay, although north of the railroad, is considered part
of the south arm of the lake. The south arm and Bear River
Bay are connected by an opening in the railroad causeway about four
miles east of Promontory Point.
Original wooden trestle
railroad that crossed Great Salt Lake, constructed about 1903. Photo
by June Cannon, Cannon Structures, Inc.. A salvage operation for
the wood started in 1993; some is used in the lobby of the Department
of Natural Resources.
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In about 1903, the railroad was constructed across the lake as
a wooden-trestle structure. The open structure of the trestle
allowed for the mixing of water between the north and south arms
of the lake. It was built to lessen the distance, degrees
of curvature, and time required for trains to travel the previous
route around the north end of the lake.
By the early 1950s, maintenance costs had become high, and the
structure had become unstable under normal operating speeds.
Construction of a stable, permanent structure across the lake was
needed.
By 1953, the SPTC had decided to replace the wooden trestle with
a rock-fill causeway to be built parallel to, and about 1,500 feet
to the north of, the old trestle. The structure was completed
in 1959 at a cost of roughly $50 million (in 1960 dollars).
In 1993, the Trestlewood Division of Cannon Structures, Inc. began
to dismantle and salvage the timbers and planking of the old wooden
trestle. Salvage operations are still active as of 1995.

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