March 27, 2026

Bailey Bridge: Crossings and Connections

Bailey Bridge: Crossings and Connections
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The Bailey Bridge has connected Lynn Haven for generations—but it carries more than traffic.

In this episode of Haven444, we explore the history of this local landmark and the role it continues to play in everyday life, from early crossings to quiet moments of fishing, walking, and reflection.

Because some bridges don’t just take us across the water—they connect us to each other.

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There are places in every community that people pass through every day or use or drive across or walk across without stopping to think about it at all.

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It becomes a part of our everyday routine.

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A road, a path, a bridge, something designed to take us from one place to another, to carry us.

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But some bridges do more than that.

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They hold history.

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They carry memory.

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They quietly connect not just land, but people and time.

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Here in Lynnhaven, one of those places stretches out across the water.

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It's pretty simple in appearance.

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It's a bridge, a great bridge, but it's layered in history and meaning.

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And like so many things in this community, it's a story that didn't begin as we see it today.

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Wonder what that bridge was like back in the day.

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Well, for that, we're gonna have to go to our local historian, Mr.

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Jack Hutchins, who moved here in the 1940s as a boy.

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And he can tell you the stories of the things they did that we would tell children to never do today.

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Still, it's wonderful to hear him tell it.

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We went swimming at the park.

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I mean, every summer, just about every when we got out of school, we went in, and then there was a sandbar that went out into the bay, a good number, probably uh two or three hundred feet.

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A sandbar that's not doesn't exist anymore, but that's what we swim off of.

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But we would go swimming there just all the time.

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And one thing we would do several times, we would actually swim all the way across the bay.

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We would do that probably several times each summer.

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And then we would jump off the, and I don't know if I need to be saying that, we would jump off the middle span of the bridge.

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And I and none of us are got hurt.

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I was 10.

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We probably stopped when we were about 15 or 16.

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Anyway, there was a lagoon and a boathouse there that were left there.

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Kids can't do that today, though.

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And just like the Kilpatrick's, where they had a grocery store and the Kilpatrix, well, they had actually built a ladder that hung on the side of the bridge.

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Now keep in thinking today, the State Road Department, nobody else would permit that.

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But that ladder stayed there for years.

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We used it, we'd jump off the cellar bridge, swim down about halfway toward Lynn Haven and climb up.

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Long before the modern bridge, there was a simple wooden crossing here.

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When this area was still new and finding its footing.

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As the community grew, so did the need for something stronger.

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And in 1946, that crossing became a permanent bridge, a structure built not just for its function but for connection.

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It was named for one of Lynn Haven's early pioneers, D.J.

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Bailey.

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A name that still remains even as the city around it has changed.

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From those early beginnings to what stands here today, Crossing has continued to evolve, just like the community it serves.

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Today, the old and the new exist side by side.

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A modern bridge carries the steady rhythm of our daily life with cars moving back and forth, people heading to work, running errands, going home, and just beside it the original structure remains the old Bailey Bridge.

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And it's no longer just a way to go across.

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It's a place to be.

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We sat down and visited just a tiny bit with Bobby Baker, who's our chief infrastructure director.

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So he's a man who knows something about roads and bridges and what it takes to build them.

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He was here when the old Bailey Bridge was the only Bailey Bridge.

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But what he really wanted to talk about was the fact that he and his wife take their golf cart a couple of times a week and slowly drive across the bridge and back, looking at the views and the wildlife, the birds, and just enjoying being a part of this community that they have both served for 24 years.

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Well, when I first started here, the first time in 1990, we were using it.

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It was the bridge, the old Bailey Bridge.

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That was Highway 77.

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Then they built the new bridge.

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In January of 1999, the DOT transferred it to the city.

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So we've had it for what 25 years?

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It was just the volume of traffic.

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And you know, they needed to make it wider and four-lane.

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It's hard to believe that was the main bridge semis passing each other every day.

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It's not a causeway, so there's no commercial boat traffic.

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So the DOT approached the city and said, if we wanted it, they would need it to us.

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We have to do perpetual maintenance.

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It has to remain a passive type bridge.

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Then we had to get a submerged sovereign land easement underneath it.

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You can't create a marina on it or boat docking or anything like that.

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So we've been maintaining it since 1999.

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They said with no traffic on it, that bridge still had another lifespan of 50 years or better.

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And it could possibly go to 100 years.

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I walk it, drive my golf cart on it.

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They're fishing, they're walking their dogs, they're just exercising, golf carts, bicycles.

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They catch flounder, mullet, speckle trout, redfish, sheephead.

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They do pretty well.

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The community loves it.

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In the evenings, it gets very busy.

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Not so much in the heat of summer, but in the evenings, like right before dark, there's a lot of people on it.

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Fishermen will stay late into the night, but a lot of people go watch the sunset because it's got a great west view.

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And they just love the sunsets off of it.

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Fourth of July, it gets packed.

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Because you can see the whole fireworks display from there.

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So there's a lot of people gather 4th of July.

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So some come for the Fourth of July, yes.

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But some just come to fish, and some to walk, and some just to watch the sun settle over the bay.

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They're all enjoying just the sound of the water moving beneath them, and quiet conversations of the other people they pass along the bridge, the sound of a fishing line cutting through the air.

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And without realizing it, they become a part of the story.

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This place called home continues to tell.

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It's a different kind of connection here.

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It's not rushed.

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It's not loud.

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Just steady and shared.

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For years.

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And we've lived over here for 11 years uh on Illinois, so we we go every few days.

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So and sometimes we'll walk up there.

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We exercise.

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My husband comes and fishes off the pier sometimes, but usually we just exercise.

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We usually don't catch anything.

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He tries, it's beautiful.

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And it's something, I don't know, after the hurricane, it seems like the sunsets are even more beautiful.

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There was Melissa Miller out walking with her daughter on a beautiful day across the old Bailey Bridge.

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Just walking in the footsteps of all those people who have walked that bridge before.

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I'm Dave Spillane.

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And this is the first time I've uh been out here in a quite a while, and uh so I'm just enjoying this nice day out here, and we enjoy the seeing the bay and walking together out here.

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It's just nice.

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It's awesome.

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I th a lot of people use it and enjoy it, and I do too.

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I love to see the dolphins and the birds, manatees, all kinds of things.

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Places like this don't ask for attention, they don't demand it.

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They simply exist, quietly doing what they were always meant to do, connecting us to the other side.

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But not just one side of the water to the other.

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They connect the people to place, past to present, and to one another.

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And maybe that's why people keep coming back to this bridge.

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It's not just a cross, but it's to pause, to look out, to remember, to feel even for a moment, what it means to be a part of something that continues.

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To be standing on that same bridge where Mr.

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Bailey's granddaughter cut the ribbon for the opening.

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And there are photos of that.

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And here we are, in this place today, still working to make it something special.

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Because every city has places that connect us to one another.

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The Bailey Bridge is one of ours.

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This is Haven 444, your community podcast.

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And if you'd like to drop us a line and offer a suggestion for a place in Lynhaven that you would like to see us visit, or maybe there's someone who's an original resident or a newcomer that you would like for us to speak with, drop us a line at haven444 at cityoflinhaven.com.

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We look forward to hearing from you.

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And if you're enjoying the podcast, share it with others, share it with family members, share it with friends, share it with those people you would like to see, consider visiting the city or perhaps even moving here.

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Because this is a part of Lynn Haven.

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These images of community life that you're hearing, these voices, yeah, they do tell the story of this place that you don't always hear.

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But now you get a chance to listen.

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We will be having a community blood drive.

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We are honoring an employee.

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This was something that was very important to David Eldridge.

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He worked with the city for 10 years and unfortunately passed away much too young.

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But we want to carry on something in his memory that was very important to him in his life.

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He was always very big on donating blood for people in need for the community so that we have those reserves that are very important in times of crisis.

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And for those in the community who would like to join us for the first annual David Eldridge Blood Drive, it is going to be April 2nd, and we'll be near the Senior Center near City Hall, and you'll be able to see the bus out there.

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And the hours are 10 a.m.

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to 1.30 p.m.

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So please spread the word and join us for a worthy cause in memory of David.

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Thank you earlier to Barbara Hood, who was walking the bridge and walks it five days a week.

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Thanks for taking time to visit with us a little bit.

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Tell us that you've been watching manatees.

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And we're just gonna give the last word to this wonderful woman fishing with her son, having a great day, teaching him the things she did as a kid.

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Yeah, we we come out as often as we can.

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We have some friends right off the bridge, so they let us use their equipment.

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And I'm just trying to get my son out here as often as he would like to come because he's just now getting into fishing and following in my footsteps.

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So it's great to have kids who like to get outside and enjoy fresh air for once in a while, you know, instead of playing games and things like that.

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This is Haven Four Four Four.

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Our city.