Masons work on the Brooklyn Tower. |
On
January 3, 1870 construction began on the Brooklyn
Bridge.
When
opened more than 13 years later on May 24, 1883 at 5,989 feet
the
Bridge spanning the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn was the longest suspension
bridge ever constructed and remained so for twenty years. It was also the first suspension to employ
steel wire cables, among many other engineering innovations.
A bridge connecting the two cities of New York and Brooklyn had been
discussed for decades. The problem was that
any bridge had to accommodate heavy shipping use on the river. A conventional draw bridges would not allow a
large enough opening for the large sea going vessels operating on the river and
no trestle or arched bridge could be built high enough. By the end of the Civil War improved technology of the suspension bridge finally made
the project feasible.
John A.
Roebling, a German born
engineer had pioneered in constructing them.
The Delaware Aqueduct in Pennsylvania and a bridge crossing the Ohio River at Cincinnati were prototypes of the much larger Brooklyn project, for
which Roebling began making plans and drawings in 1867.
While conducting surveys for the bridge Roebling’s foot
was crushed in an accident. He
contracted tetanus and died. Some
officials wanted to abandon the project without him. His son and assistant, 31
year old Washington Roebling,
himself an experienced civil engineer, took over the project.
Construction finally began under the younger Roebling’s
personal supervision in January 1870.
Digging the caissons to support the two stone towers of
the bridge caused many workers to become disabled with what was then called caisson disease and is now called decompression sickness or the Bends.
Early in construction Washington Roebling himself was
badly disabled by the malady. Unable to
come personally to the job site, he watched progress from a window in his sick
room and communicated to the job through his wife, Emily Warren Roebling herself a skilled mathematician and
draftsman.
Twenty-seven men were killed and many more maimed in the
construction of the bridge.
The bridge was built to accommodate pedestrians,
carriages and wagons, street cars and a steam railway. John Roebling designed it “six times
stronger” than necessary to support the initial estimated weight of traffic,
including three separate support systems.
This has enabled the bridge to endure and continue in use with the
introduction of automobile traffic when most contemporary structures have long
since been torn down and replace.
The opening on May 24, 1883 was an occasion of wild
celebration in the two cities. President Chester Alan Arthur and New York Mayor Franklin Edison marched
across the bridge as cannons fired continuous salutes and were met by Brooklyn Mayor Seth Low.
Washington Roebling was still too ill to attend the
ceremony, but the dignitaries went to his home to shake his hand and Emily
Roebling led the first of 150,300 people and 1,800 vehicles that crossed the
bridge that first day. The waters of the
East River were crowded by ships of all sorts, private yachts, and humble row
boats. That evening the largest
fireworks display yet seen in America was shot off from the bridge towers, deck
and assembled ships.
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