Finding no route into Manhattan, he had walked across the Broadway Bridge, then taken another car to 168th Street.
In 1934, they began buying property along a creek at the Broadway Bridge two blocks from the ocean and opened a little hamburger stand.
The bridge was simply referred to as the concrete bridge for many years, until it started to be called the Broadway Bridge.
The location is now known as five corners at the south or top of the Broadway Bridge.
The arena was destroyed in 1932 so the Broadway Bridge could be built.
In 2001, a new high-span Broadway Bridge was dedicated to replace the old drawbridge.
Trolley buses also used the Broadway Bridge, from 1937 to 1958.
This connection created a five-point intersection, and it became an access point to downtown with the completion of the Broadway Bridge in 1932.
The Broadway Bridge had been carrying about 11 million cars a year.
The Broadway Bridge, which carries US 83 across the river, was completed in 1962.