History of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge
 Tacoma Narrows Bridge shortly after collapse
showing approach and bridge tower with hanging bridge deck, November 7,
1940. James Bashford Press Photos. PH Coll. 290.51 University of Washington
Libraries. Special Collections Division. |
Pt. 1: Introduction
The following images and text detail the story of the Tacoma
Narrows Bridge from the inception to the reopening of a reconstructed
bridge in 1950. Links to further pages on the Construction, Opening, Collapse,
Aftermath, and Reconstruction are available at the bottom of the page.
Text sources are listed in the bibliography at the end of the Reconstruction
section. Image sources are described in the captions accompanying the
images. The images are the exclusive right of the cited institutions (the
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Division and the Museum
of History and Industry), please contact them for reproduction permission.
For additional images and documents relating to the history of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, see the Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collection on the UW Libraries Digital Collections website.
The storm cable assembly and catwalks are shown
during the construction of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, January 10, 1940.
PH Coll. 11.19 University of Washington Libraries. Manuscripts, Special
Collections, University Archives Division.
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The original Tacoma Narrows Bridge was built between November
1938 and July 1, 1940. Lauded as an essential economic and military portal
to the Olympic peninsula, its completion was called a triumph of man's
ingenuity and perseverance. Four months after it opened to the public
it fell, in what was later called "the Pearl Harbor of engineering."

Opening day of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, July
1, 1940. PH Coll. 290.25 University of Washington Libraries. Manuscripts,
Special Collections, University Archives Division.
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Contemporary accounts appeared to be shocked by the collapse
although the bridge began exhibiting wavelike motions during the final
stages of construction. Soon after its official opening the bridge gained
a reputation for this movement and became informally christened 'Galloping
Gertie.' Professor F.B. Farquharson, an engineering professor at the University
of Washington, and other University engineers were hired to suggest methods
to reduce the movement on the bridge. Over the next few months experiments
were conducted on a scale model but a solution to the problem proved elusive.
Bridge midsection crashing into the waters
of the Tacoma Narrows, November 7, 1940. Bashford and Thompson Photo. PH
Coll. 290.36 University of Washington Libraries. Manuscripts, Special Collections,
University Archives Division.
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On November 7, 1940 Professor Farquharson was there to witness
and document the spectacular collapse of what had been the third longest
suspension bridge in the world with the longest single span in the country.
In the aftermath many theories were discussed concerning the cause of
the bridge's collapse. Ultimately an investigative board for the Washington
State Toll Bridge Authority announced the failure was due to the bridge's
design reacting to the wind in the Narrows
Broken wires on the Tacoma Narrows Bridge,
November 16, 1940. James Bashford Press Photos. PH Coll. 290.59 University
of Washington Libraries. Special Collections
Division.
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Although rebuilding the bridge was immediately suggested,
investigations on the wreckage found that the entire superstructure to
be unusable. The onset of World War II further stalled attempts to rebuild.
Salvage activity continued on the bridge through 1942 with the materials going
to the U.S. war effort and the profits saved for the construction of a
new bridge.
Souvenir booklet commemorating the opening
of the second Tacoma Narrows Bridge. Accession Name: UW Engineering Experiment Station Records (71-3) Box 17 Folder
26 Misc., Photographs, etc. University of Washington Libraries. Manuscripts,
Special Collections, University Archives Division.
[Front Cover] [Back Cover]
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While the salvage work went on Professor Farquharson was
commissioned to test models of the old Narrows Bridge and the new proposed
design for the bridge. At the University of Washington's new structural
research lab, built specifically to house the models, tests proved that
the new design was sound. Construction on the new bridge began in the
summer of 1948 and was finished in October 1950. The previous three and
a half years spent studying aerodynamics insured a bridge that would not
mimic the first, the Tacoma Narrows Bridge has remained standing.
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