Restoration stalled, in 2014. Postcard promoting the Sanborn Bridge. First, a little background on the Sanborn family, whose holdings included this utilitarian covered bridge -- and then the Vermont Historic Register nomination's statement of significance of the bridge. (from Child’s Gazetteer 1887). D ea. Benjamin Sanborn was born in Wheelock, October 16, 1798. He was the fifth child of a family of twelve—eight boys and four girls—all but one of whom lived to adult age. At the age of twenty Benjamin purchased of his father the remaining year of his minority, and struck out in life for himself. October 26, 1830, he was married to Miss Abigail B. Stanton, daughter of Isaac W. Stanton, of North Danville. At the age of thirty-two, having accumulated, by industry and strict economy one or two thousand dollars, he purchased the farm in Lyndon, where he lived and died, a large part of the land being then heavily timbered with the stately maple, elm and h...