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Title: The Bridge That Defied the Odds
In the spring of 1973, Ringold County, Iowa, experienced a deluge that transformed the landscape. Rain fell steadily, saturating the ground that had already soaked up a wet March. In just six hours, four inches of rain turned the gentle creeks into raging rivers, uprooting trees, carrying away livestock, and, in the case of Skunk Creek on County Road G61, demolishing a bridge.
The Skunk Creek Bridge was a single-lane timber structure built in 1941. It was nothing fancy—just a basic way to cross the creek, serving only one farm: Glenn Weber’s 280 acres on the west side. For Glenn, the bridge was a lifeline, connecting him to everything essential: the grain elevator, the school, the church, and the co-op, all located on the east side. Without it, he faced a grueling 22-mile detour on gravel roads that turned to mud in the rain and dust in the summer.

On the morning of April 14, 1973, Glenn drove to the creek, only to find the bridge completely gone—ripped from its foundations by the floodwaters. All that remained were four concrete footings and a gaping 42-foot chasm where the road used to be. Standing at the edge of the creek, Glenn felt the weight of despair. Behind him lay his farm, his cattle, his equipment, and his livelihood; ahead was nothing but broken ground and rushing water.
Determined to find a solution, Glenn drove the long detour to the Ringold County Courthouse, arriving at a board of supervisors meeting already in session. The room was filled with local farmers and officials, and Glenn, still wearing his muddy work jacket and boots, stepped forward during the public comment period.
“The bridge on G61 at Skunk Creek is gone. The flood took it last night,” he stated flatly. The supervisors nodded, acknowledging the flooding but offering little hope. When Glenn inquired about rebuilding, Dale Heightamp, the county engineer, opened a folder and consulted a list of projects prioritized by funding.
“The G61 bridge serves one property,” Dale said, reading from his notes. “Estimated replacement cost: $45,000 for a new concrete and steel structure. Based on our current project queue and available funding, it’ll be five years if we’re lucky.”
“Five years?” Glenn echoed, incredulous. “That’s a death sentence for my operation! My cattle need feed, my grain needs to get to the elevator, my kids need to get to school. I can’t drive 22 miles every time I need a gallon of milk.”
“I understand it’s an inconvenience,” Dale replied, his tone professional but detached.
Glenn took a deep breath, the frustration boiling beneath the surface. “I’m not asking for permission, Dale. I’m telling you what I’m going to do. I’ll build it myself.”
The room fell silent. Dale’s expression shifted from surprise to disbelief. “You can’t build a bridge, Glenn. A bridge requires engineering design, load calculations, soil analysis, material specifications, and compliance with state and federal standards. You’re a farmer, not an engineer.”
“My grandfather built the bridge that just washed out,” Glenn countered, recalling the sturdy structure that had served him well for decades. “No engineering degree, no load calculations. That bridge lasted 32 years. The only thing that killed it was a 100-year flood.”
Dale shook his head. “That was a different era.”
Glenn stood firm. “I’m not waiting five years. The bridge is on a county road, but the creek bank on both sides is my property. I’ll build on my land, connect to the road, and when I’m done, you can come inspect it. If it doesn’t meet your standards, I’ll take it down.”
With that, Glenn walked out, leaving the supervisors in stunned silence.
Now, let me tell you about Glenn Weber. At 45, he had farmed the 280 acres on Skunk Creek since 1952, when he took over from his father. He was a man of practical skills, possessing a confidence that came from years of hard work and the belief that any problem could be solved with enough welding rod. Glenn had learned to weld at 14, and the army had taught him advanced techniques. Over the years, he had repaired everything on the farm—from broken plow frames to cracked loader buckets.
But building a bridge was a different challenge altogether. It had to support heavy loads: grain trucks, cattle trailers, and combines. It needed to span 42 feet without support in the middle, as Skunk Creek flooded every spring.
After the meeting, Glenn spent three days conducting research, driving 120 miles to Iowa State University’s library. He pored over engineering manuals, seeking dimensions and specifications for bridge design. He discovered an Army Corps of Engineers field manual titled Expedient Military Bridge Construction, which outlined how to build bridges quickly using salvaged materials. That’s when inspiration struck.
Glenn remembered that the Rock Island Railroad had removed a branch line in Ringold County in 1968, leaving behind stacks of old railroad rail. He contacted a salvage company and negotiated a price of $15 per section. For $300, he secured the main structural members of his bridge.
On April 21, 1973, just a week after the flood, Glenn began construction. He worked alone for the first two weeks, then enlisted the help of his neighbor, Art Lindsay, for the final four weeks. The total construction time was 42 days.
The first step was to assess the old concrete footings, which were still solid. Glenn decided to reuse them, saving time and effort. He poured new bearing pads on top of each footing, mixing the concrete himself.
Next came the beams. Glenn laid eight railroad rails side by side across the 42-foot span, securing them with welds that transformed them into a rigid grid. He spent two weeks cutting, grinding, and welding, often working in uncomfortable positions. Art helped with the heavy lifting, but Glenn made all the structural decisions.
The final step was the deck. Glenn purchased used oak planks from a sawmill, laying them across the grid and bolting them down. He added guardrails made from bent railroad rail and painted everything with rust-inhibiting primer. The total cost of materials was $870—less than 2% of the county’s estimate for a new bridge.
On June 2, 1973, Glenn finished the bridge. He tested it himself, driving his Farmall 560 across, then a loaded grain truck, and finally a cattle trailer. Satisfied with its performance, he called Dale Heightamp for an inspection.
Dale arrived, expecting to find a disaster. Instead, he saw the bridge standing solidly, albeit unceremoniously. It was gray and rough, a stark contrast to the engineered structures he was accustomed to. But as he walked across it, testing each step, he realized it was not budging. He inspected the welds, noting their quality, and saw the cross bracing and bearing pads were well done.
“This isn’t how you build a bridge,” Dale admitted.
“And yet here it is,” Glenn replied, pride swelling within him.
Dale hesitated, torn between his professional obligations and the undeniable truth before him. “I can’t approve this as a county structure,” he said finally. “It doesn’t meet state design standards.”
“I didn’t ask you to approve it,” Glenn replied. “I asked you to inspect it. Tell me if it’s safe.”
After a long pause, Dale conceded, “Off the record, it’s overbuilt. You’ve got three times the steel you need for a single-lane farm bridge. The welds are solid. If I had to guess, I’d say this bridge will carry anything you drive across it and last 30 years without significant maintenance.”
Glenn nodded. “That’s all I needed to hear.”
Dale wrote up his inspection report, officially stating that the Skunk Creek Bridge was a private structure on private land adjacent to a county right-of-way. The county neither approved nor disapproved its use, effectively looking the other way.
The bridge served Glenn’s farm for the next 15 years, enduring multiple floods without issue. In 1973, Skunk Creek flooded again, but Glenn’s design allowed the water to flow through without pushing against the structure. In 1978, another flood tested the bridge further, but it held firm. By 1981, Glenn performed maintenance, replacing a few deck planks and repainting the steel.
In 1984, a new county engineer named Tom Pratt inspected the bridge. Expecting a mess, he found the opposite. The bridge was still structurally sound, and its performance exceeded expectations. Tom recommended the county formally accept it as a county structure, and in January 1985, the supervisors voted unanimously to do so, 12 years after Glenn built it.
Glenn attended the meeting, wearing the same work jacket he had on in 1973. When the vote passed, Harold Strickler, one of the supervisors, exchanged a nod with Glenn. That simple acknowledgment marked a profound moment of respect for the man who had defied the odds.
Dale Heightamp retired in 1982, but in 1983, he visited Skunk Creek to see the bridge again. He parked on the east bank, walked across, and marveled at the structure Glenn had built. Later, when he found Glenn in the barn, he expressed his admiration. “That bridge is good work. It’s honest work,” Dale admitted, acknowledging the mistake he had made a decade earlier.
Glenn smiled, understanding that Dale had to uphold standards, but he had also proven that sometimes those standards could be limiting. “You didn’t cause me trouble,” Glenn said. “You caused me motivation.”
Dale continued to visit the bridge annually, a ritual of sorts, until his passing in 1994. Glenn continued to farm until 2001, passing the legacy of the bridge to his son, Mark. The bridge, now 28 years old, had stood the test of time, enduring floods and heavy loads.
In 2008, Ringold County faced devastating floods that damaged 11 bridges, but Glenn’s bridge remained intact. Mark reported its condition to the county engineer, who dismissed it as “the least of my worries.”
Today, the Skunk Creek Bridge stands as a testament to ingenuity, determination, and the spirit of a farmer who refused to accept the limitations imposed by bureaucracy. It has carried grain trucks, cattle trailers, and even a county snowplow weighing 44 tons—far more than Glenn had designed for.
Mark’s daughter, Hannah, is now studying civil engineering at Iowa State, inspired by her grandfather’s legacy. Her senior thesis explores rural bridge design using salvaged materials, beginning with the story of Glenn’s bridge. “In 1973, my grandfather built a bridge from railroad rail because the county told him to wait five years. That bridge is still standing,” she writes.
Her professor, impressed by the story, visited the bridge and confirmed its structural integrity. He remarked, “Your grandfather didn’t need an engineering degree. He needed a creek to cross and a welder to cross it with. Sometimes that’s enough.”
Glenn Weber built a bridge because nobody else would. He did it with $300 of railroad rail, a welding torch, and the stubborn belief that crossing a creek shouldn’t take five years and $45,000. In a world that often prioritizes rules and regulations over practical solutions, Glenn’s bridge remains a symbol of resilience, proving that sometimes the simplest solutions are the most effective.