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<mediaplayer width='800' height='600'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPxLLO61lE4</mediaplayer>
<mediaplayer width='800' height='600'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPxLLO61lE4</mediaplayer>
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|[[Image:Tab30.jpg|right|thumb|250px|The George Rogers Clark Memorial Bridge as seen from Jeffersonville, with Louisville, Kentucky in the background]]
William Branham often told of a vision he had as a young child of 16 men falling to their deaths while building a bridge across the Ohio river. 
==Prophecy==
:''I was playing marbles out with my little brothers, out in the front yard. And all at once I had a strange feeling come on me. And I stopped and set down aside of a tree. And we were right up on the bank from the Ohio River. And I looked down towards Jeffersonville, and I seen a bridge rise up and go across that, the river, span the river. And I seen sixteen men (I counted them) that dropped off of there and lost their lives on that bridge. I run in real quick and told my mother, and she thought I went to sleep. But they kept it in mind, and twenty-two years from then the Municipal Bridge now (that many of you cross when you cross there) crossed the river at the same place, and sixteen men lost their life building that bridge across the river. It's never failed to be perfectly true.''  (My Life Story, Los Angeles, April 19, 1959)
==About the Louisville Municipal Bridge==
Originally called the '''Louisville Municipal Bridge''', the '''George Rogers Clark Memorial Bridge''' is a four-lane cantilever bridge crossing the Ohio River between Louisville, Kentucky and Jeffersonville, Indiana, carrying US 31.  Construction began in June 1928 by the American Bridge Company of Pittsburgh when William Branham was in Arizona working as a cowhand.  William Branham returned to Jeffersonville in 1929 after receiving news of his brother Edward's passing, and the new bridge would have been opened or was close to completion at that time. In 1949, the bridge was renamed in honor of George Rogers Clark. The bridge was rehabilitated in 1958, and is still in use today.
==Problems with the Prophecy==
===Problem 1: No evidence of fatalities===
We have not been able to find any historic documents or evidence supporting the statement that 16 men died during the construction of the Louisville Municipal Bridge.
The possibility has been raised that records were not as accurate in 1929, and that these fatalities were simply not recorded.  However, earlier deaths on other bridges were recorded, and it is unlikely that the families of 16 men would allow their memory to be forgotten.
===Problem 2: Similar fatalities on another bridge===
Our research indicates that many deaths occurred during the construction of the Big Four Bridge, which is a railroad bridge a half mile upstream from the Municipal Bridge that opened to the public in 1895. 
A summary of these fatalities includes:
 
#12 people died working on a pier foundation when a caisson flooded,
#4 people died when a wooden beam broke in a different pier caisson
#21 workers died when a construction crane was dislodged by wind, causing the supporting truss and 41 workers to fall into the Ohio river. 
In William Branham's vision, 16 people died when they fell off the bridge.  With the Big Four Bridge, 16 people died working in caissons under the bridge while 21 died falling off the bridge.  All of these fatalities occurred before William Branham was born. 
===Problem 3: The timing of the vision===
The Louisville Municipal Bridge opened on October 31, 1929.  William Branham said that he had the vision twenty-two years prior to the accident.  This places the vision in 1907, which is before he was born.  However, William Branham also said he had this prophecy when he was either five or six years old (approx. 1914) while playing marbles with his brother.  The only thing that happened in 1936, which is twenty-two years from 1914, is that the toll on the Louisvill Municipal Bridge changed from 35 cents to 25 cents.  As a result, the fulfillment of this prophecy has nothing to do with twenty-two years from the date of the vision.
===Problem 4: William Branham's Reference was to the Municipal Bridge===
We understanding that William Branham took Pastor Pearry Green underneath the Municipal bridge, and pointed out the exact section of the bridge that fell into the river.  The problem is not in Pearry Green's retelling of the story - as he did not grow up in Jeffersonville and had no reason to doubt William Branhambut - but with William Branham's recollection of the facts and the prophecy. Again, there is no historic indication that any section or portion of the Municipal Bridge fell into the Ohio river.
==A Big Question==
William Branham was living in Arizona, not Jeffersonville, when the Municipal Bridge was built.  When he returned to Jeffersonville on the news of his brother's passing in 1929, the new bridge would have been a significant new landmark.  Perhaps he recalled hearing stories of accidents on the Big Four bridge as a child, and confused them with the new bridge that had been built.  However, William Branham repeats that he remembered the vision, and that his mother wrote it down - which means he should have been accurate in retelling the vision. 
This should raise serious concerns about William Branham's credibility as a prophet, such as:
*If this vision was fabricated, were any other visions fabricated as well? 
*If this was a false prophecy (claimed to be accurate) are there other false prophecies? 
If you have any evidence of the accident as William Branham describes it, we would appreciate being able to update this article. 
==Video Script==


William Branham tells of a vision that he had as a young boy...   
William Branham tells of a vision that he had as a young boy...   
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'''If you have any additional facts relating to the subject of this video information, please contact us.'''
'''If you have any additional facts relating to the subject of this video information, please contact us.'''
==Reference==
*Allgeier, M.A. (1983). Louisville Municipal Bridge, Pylons, and Administrative Building, Louisville Landmarks Commission.
*The Encyclopedia of Louisville (1 ed.). 2001.
*Luhan, Gregory A. (2004). Louisville Guide, Princeton Architectural Press.
*National Register of Historic Places
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