Peggy Sue Bridge, 1997; Original and print

from $70.00

The original pen-and-ink drawing is approximately 7”X9”. The print can be made either at the original or double the size, in either plain black-and-white, or with the ochre color of the grating.

This image was drawn on location, standing on the famous Peggy Sue Bridge in Los Alamos, several years before it was removed.

One of the most iconic sights in Los Alamos, this pipeline bridge crossed Acid Canyon, linking several Los Alamos neighborhoods. An urban myth linking the name of this bridge to a high-schooler named Peggy Sue, has endured over the years. The Peggy Sue Bridge has since been decommissioned, but memories remain for the many who crossed the yawning gap below.

Walter Siglock states, “The lovely Peggy Sue Cameron is pictured in the senior class of "55 La Loma year book. She was a tall, quiet, pretty girl who is listed as coming from Arizona. I heard she had moved back to Arizona, the Cottonwood area. Speculation...she was Mormon. And no. Buddy Holly did not know her. Too bad”.

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The original pen-and-ink drawing is approximately 7”X9”. The print can be made either at the original or double the size, in either plain black-and-white, or with the ochre color of the grating.

This image was drawn on location, standing on the famous Peggy Sue Bridge in Los Alamos, several years before it was removed.

One of the most iconic sights in Los Alamos, this pipeline bridge crossed Acid Canyon, linking several Los Alamos neighborhoods. An urban myth linking the name of this bridge to a high-schooler named Peggy Sue, has endured over the years. The Peggy Sue Bridge has since been decommissioned, but memories remain for the many who crossed the yawning gap below.

Walter Siglock states, “The lovely Peggy Sue Cameron is pictured in the senior class of "55 La Loma year book. She was a tall, quiet, pretty girl who is listed as coming from Arizona. I heard she had moved back to Arizona, the Cottonwood area. Speculation...she was Mormon. And no. Buddy Holly did not know her. Too bad”.

The original pen-and-ink drawing is approximately 7”X9”. The print can be made either at the original or double the size, in either plain black-and-white, or with the ochre color of the grating.

This image was drawn on location, standing on the famous Peggy Sue Bridge in Los Alamos, several years before it was removed.

One of the most iconic sights in Los Alamos, this pipeline bridge crossed Acid Canyon, linking several Los Alamos neighborhoods. An urban myth linking the name of this bridge to a high-schooler named Peggy Sue, has endured over the years. The Peggy Sue Bridge has since been decommissioned, but memories remain for the many who crossed the yawning gap below.

Walter Siglock states, “The lovely Peggy Sue Cameron is pictured in the senior class of "55 La Loma year book. She was a tall, quiet, pretty girl who is listed as coming from Arizona. I heard she had moved back to Arizona, the Cottonwood area. Speculation...she was Mormon. And no. Buddy Holly did not know her. Too bad”.