The Great Bridge (94 page)

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Authors: David McCullough

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BOOK: The Great Bridge
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cholera fought off by

 

disillusionment of

 

intellect

 

as inventor

 

philosophical speculations

 

preoccupation with work

 

range of interests

 

requirements for success

 

will and determination of

 

childhood of

 

Civil War and

 

death of

 

accident

 

continuing work on bridge

 

funeral

 

Washington assumes charge of building bridge after John’s death

 

education of

 

as engineer decision to become

 

return to engineering

 

his family and Edmund and

 

his will and

 

impersonal relations with

 

wealth of family and

 

wives and children of

 

immigrates to U.S.

 

agrarian dream of

 

founds Saxonburg

 

Hegel

 

trans-Atlantic voyage

 

on life

 

religion and church attendance

 

spiritualism

 

visitation from Johanna

 

Washington Roebling and, see Roebling, Washington A.—John Roebling and

 

works of

 

Allegheny River Bridge, see Allegheny River Bridge

 

Cincinnati Bridge, see Cincinnati Bridge

 

dams and locks

 

extant

 

first bridge

 

first commission

 

iron rope for canal system

 

Niagara Bridge, see Niagara Bridge

 

on opposition to his bridges

 

plans for St. Louis bridge

 

as pioneer

 

professional secrets and

 

railroad route and

 

Saxonburg house

 

Smithfield Street Bridge

 

as testimonials of national spirit

 

tour of works, see Bridge Party

Roebling, John A., II (son of Washington Roebling)

 

as child

 

his father and

Roebling, Josephine (daughter of John Roebling)

Roebling, Karl (brother of John Roebling)

Roebling, Karl G. (son of Ferdinand Roebling)

Roebling, Laura (daughter of John Roebling),
see
Methfessel, Laura

Roebling, Lucia (second wife of John Roebling)

Roebling, Mary (daughter of John Roebling)

Roebling, Washington A. (son of John Roebling)

 

Brooklyn Bridge inauguration and

 

building the Brooklyn Bridge approval of plans and

 

on bridge building

 

cables for, see Cables caissons for, see Caissons completion of

 

federal government approval of bridge

 

finding center line for

 

foundations for, see Foundations

 

towers for, see Towers

 

trains and, see Trains

 

characteristics of

 

admired

 

compared with John Roebling

 

competence of

 

gift of observation and memory

 

modesty and personal heroism

 

physical description

 

as Chief Engineer appointed

 

assumes charge after John’s death

 

attempts to remove

 

bribes for use of inferior steel

 

comes under suspicion

 

display for Machinery Hall

 

engineering staff under

 

see also Collingwood, Francis, Jr.; Farrington, E. F.; Hildenbrand, Wilhelm; Martin, C. C.; McNulty, George; Paine, Col. William H.; Probasco, Samuel final responsibility and

 

“histories” of bridge

 

reports by

 

reporters interview

 

resigns

 

salaries for personnel

 

salary of

 

stake in bridge

 

stock in bridge

 

suits brought against

 

supplies for bridge

 

childhood of

 

in Civil War

 

battles taken part in

 

bridges built during

 

correspondence with Emily during

 

enlistment

 

off-duty activities

 

tunnel at Petersburg

 

on the war

 

education of

 

Emily’s marriage with as constant companions

 

correspondence during the Civil War

 

courtship

 

Emily on her husband

 

joins Washington in Cincinnati

 

Washington as Edmund’s guardian

 

Washington on his wife

 

Washington’s resignation from bridge work

 

Washington’s return to bridge work

 

on greatness

 

health of

 

on the bends

 

bends from Brooklyn caisson

 

bends from New York caisson

 

Emily and, see Roebling, Emily—Washington’s health and exhaustion

 

his condition worsens

 

improvement in

 

recuperates in Europe

 

rest in Newport

 

“water cure,”

 

last years of

 

John Roebling and bridge building together

 

bridge building turned over to son

 

bridge study by Washington

 

Brooklyn Bridge and

 

compared

 

death of John

 

disillusionment of John

 

on his father and mother

 

on John’s accident

 

John’s affection for

 

John’s confiding in

 

on John’s leaving Saxonburg

 

John’s second wife

 

on John’s spiritualism

 

John’s view of Saxonburg

 

on John’s vocation

 

map of Pennsylvania during Civil War

 

memory of John and

 

naming of Washington

 

Washington on Cincinnati Bridge

 

Washington on vitality

 

Washington’s return to Saxonburg

 

work day

 

on Roebling mind

 

second marriage of

 

sells his interest in John A. Roebling’s Sons

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