Stone Bridge

Stone Bridge may refer to:

Bridges by that name:

  • Stone Bridge (Adana), the bridge across the Seyhan River in Adana, Turkey.
  • Stone Bridge (Saint Petersburg), the bridge across Griboedov Canal in Saint Petersburg, Russia.
  • Stone Bridge (Skopje), the bridge across the Vardar River in Skopje, Macedonia.
  • Stone Bridge (Manassas), the historic American Civil War landmark in Manassas National Battlefield Park.
  • Stone Bridge (Regensburg), one of the bridges across the Danube in Regensburg, Germany
  • Stone Bridge (Rhode Island), the bridge across the Sakonnet River in Rhode Island.
  • Stone Bridge (Riga), the bridge across Daugava in Riga, Latvia.
  • Stone Bridge (Verona), the Roman bridge across the Adige in Verona, Italy.
  • Stone Bridge (Johnstown, Pennsylvania), the historic railroad bridge across the Conemaugh River in Johnstown, Pennsylvania.
  • Charles Bridge in Prague, once sometimes known as the stone bridge
  • Stone Bridge (Zaragoza), the historic bridge across the Ebro River in Zaragoza, Spain

Other objects:

  • Stonebridge (Ascap), Ascap.
  • Stone Bridge Press (United Kingdom), a U.K. publishing company.
  • Stone Bridge Press (United States), a U.S. publishing company.
  • Stone Bridge High School, a high school in Ashburn, Virginia, United States.
  • Zidani Most, a town and an important railway junction in Slovenia, located near a stone bridge of the same name.

Read more about Stone Bridge:  Fiction, See Also

Famous quotes containing the words stone and/or bridge:

    The gods had condemned Sisyphus to ceaselessly rolling a rock to the top of a mountain, whence the stone would fall back of its own weight. They had thought with some reason that there is no more dreadful punishment than futile and hopeless labor.
    Albert Camus (1913–1960)

    Home! Yes! she would see Trafalgar Square, again; and Nelson on his plinth; and Chelsea Bridge as it dissolved into the Thames at twilight ... and St. Paul’s, the single Amazon breast of her beloved native city.
    Angela Carter (1940–1992)