The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

New bridge honors Pottstown surgeon

Crowd gathers to celebrate opening of a bridge over Route 724 and the late doctor who inspired the donation that made it possible

- By Lisa Scheid lscheid@readingeag­le.com

When the speeches at the Schuylkill River Trail ended on Monday, Peggy Whittaker took a walk that she had been looking forward to for five years.

Holding a piece of the ribbon she had just cut, Whittaker strode across the pedestrian bridge named for her late husband, Dr. Richard P. Whittaker, a beloved Pottstown Hospital orthopedic surgeon.

The crowd of cyclists, trail ambassador­s, dignitarie­s cheered.

The opening of the pedestrian bridge over Route 724 in Union Township marks the fruition of a decades-long collaborat­ion of state and local government­s with nonprofits, businesses and private donors like Whittaker. The $1.15 million bridge will make the trail safer and more accessible. It eliminates the steep inclines and dangerous road crossing that made many trailer users turn back.

The spot known as Monocacy Crossing, between Shed Road and North Main Street, has long been a concern of trail users. Decades ago there was a railroad bridge over the road, but trail users now cross the road. The steep descent from the trail to the heavily traveled road makes it dangerous.

During excavation for the project, remnants of the stone wall foundation that old railroad bridge were discovered and incorporat­ed into the structure. Signs will be erected to explain its significan­ce.

The opening of the bridge anticipate­s a new effort to fill in gaps in the trail, according to Elaine Paul Schaeffer, executive director of Schuylkill River Greenways. The Schuylkill River Trail is planned to be 120 miles stretching from Philadelph­ia to Frackville, Schuylkill County. About 75 miles are built. The remaining pieces of the trail to be built are in Berks and Schuylkill.

“We’ll celebrate today and tomorrow we’ll get right back at it,” Paul said. “We have many other projects in the works. In Auburn (Schuylkill County) we are finishing a bridge and a trail. Up in St. Clair we’ll build 6 more miles. We’re improving the trail on (Route) 61, and as of next week we’ll be starting with the alignment of the gap between Reading and Hamburg. So we’re very, very busy.”

There are 22 miles of trail to be built between Reading and Hamburg.

Noting increased use of parks during the pandemic, Berks County Commission­er Kevin Barnhardt told the gathered crowd of about 30 that the county’s leaders are committed to supporting the trail completion project.

“We have committed to not only be part of the planning but part of the completion of the trail without any interrupti­ons from here all the way up to Schuylkill County, ” Barnhardt said. “We’re a part of that. We’re committed. On behalf of my fellow commission­ers, we want to see this happen in our tenure.”

The bridge had been planned to be completed in 2019, but the organizati­on encountere­d a shortfall of funds due to increased prices for steel. Then it was set back by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Whittaker donated an undisclose­d amount to the project. The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Conservati­on and Natural Resources awarded $516,501 for the project.

The Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission provided $325,636.

Bob Folwell, former Schuylkill River Greenway trails project manager, said the trail and pedestrian bridge was not born of luck but the work of consistent policy and thorough preparatio­n. It involved many people and agencies. He recounted how the organizati­on needed and gained support from the state to become a national heritage area, which gave it the credibilit­y needed to obtain funds.

“It required a planner, Cheryl Auchenbach, to insert a two-sentence paragraph describing the awkwardnes­s and danger of this particular intersecti­on into Berks County’s Open Space and Greenways Plan,” Folwell said. “This identified through an official local document the specific recommenda­tion required by funders to support this bridge project.”

Folwell said the plan came about in the early 2000s, so the bridge project has been around for “quite a while.”

He added that the project highlights the need for long-term and establishe­d private-public partnershi­ps. Folwell said it took trust and cooperatio­n.

“It all began with that open space paragraph about 20 years ago,” he said.

For Whittaker, the bridge opening was a joyful celebratio­n of everything her husband was and of their hopes for their community. Friends of the family and people who worked the doctor came to the event.

When the project lacked money to continue, Whittaker stepped forward and donated to it in memory of her husband, said Schaefer. The couple loved the trail. Peggy of Lower Pottsgrove Townshihp still bikes and walks the trail at 81.

Dr. Richard P. Whittaker passed away from cancer at the age of 75 in 2016. He and his wife had traveled the world, not for pleasure but for volunteer medical trips. Whittaker had been to Haiti after the last earthquake, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Panama, Uganda during its civil war, and Thailand after the tsunami, his wife said.

He was the kind of doctor who would respond to patients at the hospital late at night, she said. Some of the speakers, including state Rep. David Maloney, spoke fondly and thankfully about being patients of Whittaker.

Cyclists who came to the ribbon cutting offered personal thanks to the late doctor’s wife just before they pedaled across the bridge toward Reading.

“It’s so exciting,” Peggy Whittaker said. “My husband would be so pleased.”

 ??  ??
 ?? BEN HASTY — READING EAGLE ?? The placard with the name of the bridge. During the dedication ceremony for the Richard P. Whittaker, M.D. Memorial Bridge Monday morning where the Thun Section of the Schuylkill River trail crosses route 724 in Union Township September 20, 2021.
BEN HASTY — READING EAGLE The placard with the name of the bridge. During the dedication ceremony for the Richard P. Whittaker, M.D. Memorial Bridge Monday morning where the Thun Section of the Schuylkill River trail crosses route 724 in Union Township September 20, 2021.
 ?? BEN HASTY — READING EAGLE ?? Peggy Whittaker holds a souvenir from the ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday for the Richard P. Whittaker, M.D. Memorial Bridge, where the Thun section of the Schuylkill River Trail crosses Route 724in Union Township.
BEN HASTY — READING EAGLE Peggy Whittaker holds a souvenir from the ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday for the Richard P. Whittaker, M.D. Memorial Bridge, where the Thun section of the Schuylkill River Trail crosses Route 724in Union Township.

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