The Municipal Bridge Vision: Difference between revisions

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    <mediaplayer width='900' height='650'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPxLLO61lE4</mediaplayer>
    <mediaplayer width='800' height='600'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPxLLO61lE4</mediaplayer>


    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...   

    Revision as of 04:11, 29 September 2012

    <mediaplayer width='800' height='600'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPxLLO61lE4</mediaplayer>

    William Branham tells of a vision that he had as a young boy...

    And then sometime about a month after that, 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. As you see It here in the auditorium, It's been that way all the time.
    My Life Story April 19, 1959 Los Angeles,CA

    William Branham related this same story many times and other ministers have repeated it as the gospel truth.

    The Louisville Municipal Bridge opened to the public as a toll bridge on October 31, 1929. It was renamed the George Rogers Clark Memorial bridge in 1949, but is known locally as the Second Street Bridge.

    The Municipal Bridge crosses the Ohio River between Jeffersonville, Indiana and Louisville, Kentucky. A half mile east is the Big Four railway bridge.

    Construction on the Big Four Bridge started in 1888. 12 men were drowned while working on a pier foundation and another 4 men died when a wooden beam broke.

    In late 1893, 41 men fell from the bridge when a truss fell into the river. 20 of these men were rescued while the other 21 perished in the river. This was one of the worst bridge disasters in US history. However, there is no record of anyone being killed in the construction of the Municipal Bridge or of 16 men falling to their death from that bridge.

    The Big Four Bridge was the ONLY Louisville Bridge with serious accidents during its construction, and these accidents all occurred long before William Branham was born. Not a single person died during the building of the Municipal Bridge.

    Based on William Branham’s testimony, he had the vision 22 years before the bridge opened, which means he had it before he was born. And William Branham consistently retells this prophecy indicating it was fulfilled exactly as he saw it when, in fact, the event never happened.

    ...And they wrote it down. And twenty-two years from then it happened just exactly, and sixteen men lost their life. It's never been, out of the thousands of things, but what it's been perfectly right. (From that time - 62-0713)

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