Manhattan Bridge -- Brooklyn History
Photo via Wikipedia

Read Part 2 of this story.

In the family of bridges that link our city, the beauty queen is of course, the Brooklyn Bridge. The Williamsburg Bridge is cast as the ugly sister, but the dysfunctional problem child is definitely the Manhattan Bridge.

There have been problems with its design, its construction and its functionality since the day the ribbon was cut. Like most epic New York tales, the Manhattan Bridge story is of political machinations, enormous ego, unthinkable amounts of money, delays, death, and also great beauty.

Even Robert Moses makes an appearance in our tale. The Manhattan Bridge is the third bridge to cross the East River to Brooklyn, and was proposed when it became quite apparent that another bridge was needed to move goods and people from Manhattan to Brooklyn and beyond.

By 1898, the Brooklyn Bridge, now 15 years old, was carrying electric trolleys and an El train across the span (each way) and had its pedestrian lanes above, leaving only one lane in each direction for the wagons and all other traffic crossing between Manhattan and Brooklyn.

One traffic jam in 1898 was so bad, the weight on the bridge caused it drop 12 feet, and engineers were afraid that if the amount of traffic was not removed, the bridge would fall. It was obvious that another bridge was needed from downtown Manhattan to the busy Fulton Ferry area.

In 1901, plans were started for the new bridge, called Bridge No.3. The mayor of New York was Brooklyn’s own Seth Low, elected to be a reform mayor to counter the influence and graft of the Tammany Hall bunch, who were busy being the real power in NY.

Manhattan Bridge -- Brooklyn History
Lindenthal’s Bridge. Image via uh.edu

Mayor Low hired engineer Gustav Lindenthal, a respected bridge engineer and architect to design what would be the Manhattan Bridge. Lindenthal had grand plans of a huge bridge with 14 lanes of track, as well as towers large enough at the base to hold auditoriums.

Design wise, it would be a suspension bridge looking like a morphed version of both the Brooklyn and Williamsburg Bridges. His most innovative idea was to use intersecting I bars, like giant bicycle chains instead of cable wire in the suspension.

Other engineers were skeptical of this construction, but the loudest complaint came from the Roebling Wire Company, which made the cables used on almost every suspension bridge since Papa and Mama Roebling had constructed the Brooklyn Bridge.

They were expecting the contract for Bridge No. 3, but they did not make giant bicycle chains, and the contract for the materials in a NYC bridge would have go elsewhere. This could not be. Lindenthal was undeterred, and was confident of his design.

He drew up the plans, but before they could be implemented, Low’s two year mayoral term was up, and the Tammany machine installed George McClellen as mayor.

McClellen appointed a political hack named George Best as Chief Engineer, who was not an engineer or even an architect, who immediately fired Lindenthal, and hired a Latvian-born bridge builder named Leon S. Moisseiff to complete the bridge.

The new plans called for the same sort of towers, but the suspension would be made of iron cable. Moisseiff’s design was based on a new engineering theory called suspension theory that postulated that suspension bridges were inherently stronger than was originally thought, due to their basic structure, so they didn’t really need to have the massive stiffening trusses that the Willliamsburg Bridge employed, because the curve of the cables allows for greater strength and flexibility than stiffer structures.

Manhattan Bridge -- Brooklyn History
Photo via skyscrapercity.com

With that theory in mind, Moisseiff basically underbuilt the bridge, reducing the stiffened trusses from Lindenhal’s 55 feet to 26 feet, and then he also put the subway and streetcar tracks on the outer edges of the roadway, instead of in the middle, as in the both of the other East River bridges. In retrospect: bad idea, all around.

Mayoral terms in those days were short, and McClellan wanted this bridge to be open before he left office, so the race was on to finish it.

Because it was a Tammany Hall project, a whole lot of money had to be spread around, and the bridge, which was supposed to cost under $20 million ended up at $31 million by the time it was finished. Initially, that is. In reality, the bridge would become a massive black hole sucking money into its maw well into the 21st century. But I’m getting ahead of the story.

The respected architectural firm of Carrere and Hastings, designers of the NY Public Library, was brought in to design the approaches to the bridge, as well as some of the decorative elements in the towers.

Manhattan Bridge -- Brooklyn History
Photo via Wikipedia

In accordance with the very popular City Beautiful Movement, they designed large public plazas leading to the bridge from both sides, designed in a very grand Baroque manner with a gleaming triumphal arch and colonnade on the Manhattan side, and a more sedate, but impressive portal with statues on the Brooklyn side.

The very ornate Manhattan side was modeled on the Porte St. Denis, an entrance in Paris. The less ornate Brooklyn side featured statues by famed sculptor Daniel Chester French, the sculptor of the Lincoln Memorial.

He created two female figures depicting Manhattan and Brooklyn, on two large pedestals flanking the entrance to the bridge. These are now gone, removed in the 1960’s, the statues moved to the Brooklyn Museum.

Manhattan Bridge -- Brooklyn History
Photo via Wikipedia

Carrere and Hastings also embellished the ironwork of the bridge itself by adding Beaux Arts details to the towers. These details are best seen and appreciated from the pedestrian walkway.

Throughout the building of the bridge, the fired engineer, Gustav Lindenthal complained loudly about Tammany Hall ineptitude and graft, about overinflated budgets, delays and corruption. Mayor McClellan, who wanted to be seen as a reformer, although he wasn’t, rushed the bridge construction along to prove him wrong, and promised that his last act as mayor would be to open the bridge.

Manhattan Bridge -- Brooklyn History
Manhattan Bridge Plaza, 1917. Photo via Bowery Boys

The four cables spanning the East River were spun in a record four months in 1908. He just squeaked through, and on December 31, 1909, the last day of the year, and on his last day in office, McClellen cut the ribbon and drove a small party of freezing Brooklynites across the bridge to great fanfare. Well, actually the bridge wasn’t really done.

No one would use it for a couple of years yet. The trolley tracks, subway tracks, and the pedestrian roadway were unfinished. The grand plazas wouldn’t be finished until 1916. The problems with the Manhattan Bridge were just beginning.

Manhattan Bridge -- Brooklyn History
Photo via transporationnation.com

Next time: Problems, money, problems, money, problems, money……the rest of the story of the Manhattan Bridge.


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Ditto;

    Yup, I read that. They were actually considering to drive piles in the floor of the tunnel to stabilize it. The other amazing thing about the RR tunnel is that it was not bored out. Rather, they used a huge hydraulic jack to “push” most of the silt away and form the tunnel.

    WB’er;

    They are now building a second tunnel for the NJT. This is the biggest infrastructure project approved under the “stimulus” package last year.

  2. Benson – I read a great book a few years ago about the Pennsylvania railroad and the push to dig the tunnels under the Hudson. After the first tunnel was built they found it moved up and down a bit as the tides turned. They kept trying to fix it, and couldn’t, and in the end they gave up and decided it was OK to have some flexibility as the movment was proportionate along the whole length. Interestingly, I heard Lindethal was miffed becuase his alternative plan for a huge rail bridge acorss the Hudson was dismissed as too expensive. In the end, the cost of the tunnel and the need to transfer from steam to electric to go through the tunnel worked out to be very expensive.