Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Brooklyn Bridge
Episode Date: October 16, 2021Brooklyn wasn’t always a part of New York City. It used to be a separate city located across the East River from New York, which at the time was only on the island of Manhattan. For decades, peopl...e talked about a bridge to connect New York and the growing city of Brooklyn to facilitate travel and commerce. In 1883, that bridge finally opened. Learn more about the Brooklyn Bridge on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Brooklyn wasn't always a part of New York City.
It used to be a separate city located across the East River from New York, which at the time was only on the island of Manhattan.
For decades, people talked about a bridge to connect New York and the growing city of Brooklyn to facilitate travel and commerce.
In 1883, that bridge finally opened, and it was one of the greatest engineering achievements of the 19th century.
Learn more about the Brooklyn Bridge and how it was built on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Do you ever climb into bed ready to sleep only to have your mind start racing the moment your head hits the pillow?
Thoughts bouncing around, replaying the day or jumping ahead to tomorrow?
That is exactly why Catherine Nikolai created Nothing Much Happens.
Each episode is a gentle, cozy bedtime story where, well, nothing much happens.
No drama, no tension, nothing you need to follow closely.
Just soft narration, calming repetition, and soothing sensory details designed to help your mind slow down and your body relax.
It's not about entertainment, it's about rest.
And millions of listeners around the world use it every night to quiet their thoughts and finally fall asleep.
If you've ever struggled to shut your brain off at night, this might be exactly what you've been missing.
You can listen to Nothing Much Happens wherever you get your podcasts.
Episodes are every Monday and Thursday.
This episode is sponsored by Audible.com.
My audiobook recommendation today is The Great Bridge,
the epic story of the building of the Brooklyn Bridge by David McCullough.
So daring a concept as spanning the East River to join two great cities
required vision and dedication of the kind that went into building Europe's great cathedrals.
During 14 years of construction, yodds against success seemed overwhelming.
Thousands of people were put to work, bodies were crushed and broken, lives lost,
notorious political empires fell, and surges of public doubt constantly threatened the project.
But the story of the building of the Brooklyn Bridge is not just the saga of an engineering miracle.
It is a sweeping narrative of the social climate of the time,
replete with heroes and rascals who helped either to construct or to exploit the great enterprise.
You can get a free one-month trial to Audible and two free audiobooks
by going to audibletrial.com slash everything everywhere,
or by clicking on the link in the show notes.
The idea of a bridge connecting Lower Manhattan and Brooklyn went back at least until the year
1800. In 1800, however, Brooklyn was little more than a town with about 6,000 people.
However, in the 19th century, Brooklyn grew rapidly. By 1850, the population had reached 100,000, and the population doubled each of the next two decades.
The bridge, which would eventually be built, was conceived in 1852 by German immigrant John Augustus Roebling.
Roebling was a noted architect who had previously built several other suspension bridges, most famously the Roebling Bridge in Cincinnati, Ohio, which at the time it was opened in 1866, was the longest suspension bridge in the world.
In 1867, the state of New York approved funding for a suspension bridge from New York to Brooklyn,
and a corporation was created the same year, naming Roebling as the chief architect of the project.
Approval of the bridge within the city was led by Tammany Hall political machine leader Boss Tweed,
who liberally bribes city officials to get it approved.
The bridge, as Roebling envisioned it, would be the longest and tallest suspension bridge in the world.
Moreover, the bridge would use steel cables.
Almost everything at the time was made out of iron.
Steel was stronger than iron, and Robling felt that it was the building material of the future.
Unfortunately, John Robling had an accident in 1869. His foot was crushed by a ferry
colliding into a dock, and he had to have his toes amputated. He then developed an infection
and died within a month. The chief engineer duties were then passed to his son, Washington Robling.
Construction began in 1870, and the first order of business was the construction of the two
casons. A caisson is basically an inverted box with an opening at the bottom. The casons were
massive wooden, airtight structures that were sunk where the towers were going to be located.
The bottom opening of the caisson would be on the bottom of the river, and there were chambers
that allowed workers to enter the caisson to excavate the soft mud on the river bottom.
They had to dig down to a firm substrate under the river to start building a base for the towers.
Work in the caissons was miserable, and it was the most famous.
as part of the construction of the bridge. The air pressure inside the caisson was the same as the
water outside, and there was no light. Workers would have to dig and break up large boulders to
continue to make the caisson sink lower. It was miserable work. It was dark and hot, and you had to
work by candlelight, and the air circulation was poor. An estimated 265 men each day worked in the
caissons for an entire year. Working in an environment with such high air pressure isn't inherently
dangerous. What is extremely dangerous, however, is going from a high-pressure environment to a
low-pressure environment quickly. What soon became obvious was that the men working in the
casons, known as sandhogs, were getting ill, and in some cases, even dying. It became known as
casein disease or decompression sickness. Today, we know it as the bends. This is actually the
biggest risk associated with scuba diving today. What was happening was that when they depressurized
from the high atmospheric pressure inside the caisson.
The dissolved nitrogen in their blood and muscles was literally turning into bubbles.
The same as what happens when you open up a soft drink.
Washington Roebling would regularly go into the caissons himself for inspections
and later became paralyzed after suffering from decompression sickness.
He was no longer able to oversee the construction of the bridge in person
and had to observe it through a telescope from a room he had near the foot of the bridge.
The day-to-day duties of the lead engineer were given to his wife,
Emily Roebling. She would pass along notes from her husband to the engineers on site, and she was well-versed in mathematics and engineering herself, and she held this post for the next 11 years until the bridge was completed. Once the caissons had reached their desired depths, they were filled with bricks and concrete and became the foundations for the towers of the bridge. The towers are reached 278 feet or 85 meters tall. They're made out of granite, limestone, and cement. The towers were the most time-consuming part of the project,
having taken four years to build after the caissons were finished.
The towers were built with a neo-Gothic arch in the middle,
but the original design by John Robling was to have the towers look like Egyptian tombs.
On the other end of the bridge are anchorages, where the cables are anchored down.
They are massive structures that serve the function of an anchor, as the name would suggest.
There are also some enormous vaults inside the anchorages.
These vaults are cool and damp and were used for decades as a storage area for wine.
In the year 1900, the storage on the Manhattan side sold for $5,000 per year and $500 per year on the Brooklyn side.
The vaults were later used as a bomb shelter, and today they just store equipment.
There's a time capsule on the Brooklyn side that was put in place in the 100th anniversary in 1983,
with instructions that had not be opened until 2083.
The site of the Manhattan Anchorage was previously the location of George Washington's home
when the United States Capitol was located in New York.
The cables, as I mentioned before, were made out of steel,
specifically galvanized steel, which was a first for suspension bridges.
There are four main cables, two on the inside near the median of the road,
and two on the outer edges of the road.
Each main cable is 15.75 inches or 40 centimeters in diameter.
There are a bundle of 19 strands with each strand consisting of 273 wires,
for a total of 5,282 wires per cable.
This was the first bridge to use this bundled wire technique for the main cables.
The bridge finally opened on May 24, 1883, after 13 years of construction.
The first person to officially cross the bridge was Emily Roebling.
The mayors of New York and Boston crossed the bridge to shake hands in the middle,
and in the first 24 hours the bridge was opened, over 150,000 people walked across.
The bridge was considered an engineering wonder of the era alongside the Suez Canal, the Transcontinental Railroad, and the transatlantic cable.
Despite over a million people crossing the bridge in its first year, there were still doubts by some people about the structural integrity of the bridge.
To put those doubts to rest, in 1884 on the first anniversary of the bridge's opening, P.T. Barnum led a parade of 21 elephants across the bridge.
The bridge was at first a toll bridge. The initial fees were a penny to cross on foot,
five cents to cross on horseback, and ten cents to cross with a horse and wagon.
Transporting cattle would cost five cents per cow and two cents per sheep.
Pedestrian tolls were removed in 1891, and all tolls were removed in 1911.
One of the bridge's biggest contributions to American culture is the phrase selling the Brooklyn Bridge.
And this actually comes from a real thing.
There was a conman named George C. Parker in the early 20th century,
who actually sold the bridge many times, usually to new.
immigrants to the city. What he was actually selling was the right to take tolls on the bridge.
On several occasions, the police were called to take down toll booths that people set up after
supposedly buying the bridge. The Brooklyn Bridge's title as the world's longest suspension
bridge only lasted 20 years. Its title was taken in 1903 by the Williamsburg Bridge, which was just up
the river. The Brooklyn Bridge isn't the biggest or best bridge in the world anymore, but it still
holds the distinction of being the first truly modern bridge. A 2003 BBC documentary series
listed it as one of the seven wonders of the industrial world. And today, the bridge is on the
tentative list to become a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Its history and innovative engineering
techniques make it one of the most significant bridges in the world. And if you don't
believe that, then I have a bridge that I'd like to sell you. The associate producers of
Everything Everywhere Daily are Peter Bennett and Thor Thompson. If you'd like to support
the show, please join the list of patrons over at patreon.com. And also remember, if you leave a
review or send me a question, you too can have it read on the show.
