NE of Ceylon, Indiana·bridge The Ceylon Covered Bridge spans one hundred thirty-five feet across the Wabash River, representing a remarkable feat of nineteenth-century bridge engineering and craftsmanship that has endured for more than a century and a half. Constructed in 1879 by the Bridge Smith Company of Toledo, Ohio, the bridge utilized a Howe Truss design, an innovative engineering approach that combined wood components in the diagonal structural members with iron and later steel in the vertical supporting elements. This architectural synthesis of materials provided both strength and adaptability, allowing the structure to withstand decades of environmental stress, natural weather patterns, and the cumulative effects of time and use. The bridge was originally designed to carry County Road Nine Hundred South across the Wabash River at a location that is now part of Limberlost County Park in Adams County, Indiana. The Ceylon Covered Bridge represents the last remaining covered bridge structure spanning the Wabash River, making it a unique historical artifact in a region that once supported twenty-three covered bridges crossing the waterway and serving as vital links in the regional transportation network. The structure was officially listed on the National Registry of Historic Places in 2007, recognizing its significance as a preserved example of nineteenth-century infrastructure and bridge engineering techniques.
Operational use of the Ceylon Covered Bridge for vehicular traffic ceased in 1974 when the bridge was closed to vehicles and County Road Nine Hundred South was rerouted around the structure to utilize modern crossing facilities. This decision enabled the preservation of the historical bridge in a largely unmodified state, maintaining its original appearance and construction while removing the stresses of contemporary traffic patterns. The bridge necessitated the first comprehensive repairs in 1963 and underwent a complete structural overhaul completed by United Surveying, Incorporated in July of 2012, with restoration efforts designed to preserve original materials and construction techniques whenever possible. Following the restoration project, the bridge was reopened to public access limited to pedestrian and bicycle traffic, establishing it as a community gathering location and heritage site rather than an active transportation link. The bridge continues to draw visitors interested in historical preservation, engineering heritage, and rural history.
Local legend attributes paranormal phenomena at the Ceylon Covered Bridge to a séance allegedly conducted by a group of teenagers on the bridge structure itself, though the specific date of this alleged event remains unclear. According to the folklore account, following this ritual ceremony intended to contact spirits, a human body mysteriously fell through the roof of the bridge, leaving behind a bloodstain that local tradition claims persists to the present day and remains visible as evidence of the tragedy. This legend further asserts that the séance activity opened a supernatural portal from which unexplained phenomena and strange entities continually emerge. No factual historical documentation exists to verify the specifics of this account in newspaper archives, courthouse records, or other primary historical sources. Paranormal investigators and curious visitors report experiencing unexplained sounds emanating from within and around the bridge structure, poltergeist-type activity involving object movement without apparent causation, and sensations interpreted as portal phenomena and supernatural presence. The location continues to attract paranormal researchers and folklore enthusiasts despite the unverifiable nature of the foundational legend underlying current paranormal beliefs associated with the site.
Poltergeists
Unexplained Sounds