History of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge
Opening day of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge,
July 1, 1940. PH Coll. 290.25 University of Washington Libraries.
Special Collections Division.
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Pt. 3: Opening and Experiments to study 'ripple'
The following images and text detail the opening and study
of the movement of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. Links to further pages on the Introduction, Construction, 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.
[Enlarge image] The completed Tacoma Narrows Bridge.
James Bashford Press Photos. PH Coll. 290.24 University of Washington
Libraries. Special Collections
Division.
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The Tacoma Narrows Bridge opened to the public on July 1, 1940.
It sprawled over its contemporaries with the third largest suspension
span in the world. It had cost $6,400,000, was over a mile long, and had
taken nineteen months to complete. An estimated 10,000 people attended
the opening ceremony. Governor Clarence Martin extolled the many uses
of the bridge emphasizing the economic and military importance of spanning
the Tacoma Narrows.
[Enlarge image] Opening Day dedication ceremonies
at the tollbooth of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Collection, PI- 20791. Courtesy of the Museum of History and Industry,
Seattle.
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The opening ceremonies suggested nothing of the eventual collapse
of the bridge. There was no public indication that anyone expected anything
but a bridge that would stand the test of time. However, while there were
no expectations of collapse, movement began registering on the bridge
during the construction of the floor section. This movement, in which
the bridge deck rose and fell 1 1/3 feet above and below its normal position,
created a sensation similar to motion sickness.
Headline from the Opening Ceremony Booklet Official
opening, Tacoma narrows bridge and McChord Field, June 30 --- July 4,
1940, A.D. Tacoma: 1940, p.4 University of Washington Libraries. Special
Collections, Pacific Northwest.
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[Enlarge image] Cover for the brochure of the Official Opening of the
Tacoma Narrows Bridge, June 30-July 4, 1940. PH Coll. 11, Scrapbook no.
1 University of Washington Libraries, Manuscripts, Special Collections,
University Archives Division.
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Personell Roster for the bridge project. Official
opening, Tacoma narrows bridge and McChord Field, June 30 --- July 4, 1940,
A.D. Tacoma: 1940, p.24 University of Washington Libraries. Special
Collections, Pacific Northwest.
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[Enlarge image] Data sheet on the 1940 Tacoma Narrows Bridge.
PH Coll. 11, Scrapbook no. 1 University of Washington Libraries, Manuscripts,
Special Collections, University Archives Division. |
The toll bridge (nicknamed 'Galloping Gertie'), which cost
55 cents per car, 15 cents per extra passenger, and 15 cents for pedestrians,
became something of a tourist attraction. Lines of up to 50 cars formed,
waiting to 'ride' the bridge. Although engineers were convinced that the
structure was safe, in late July 1940 the University of Washington, under
the direction of Professor F.B. Farquharson, began filming the bridge's movement and conducting a series of experiments to devise
methods to limit the movement.
Headline from the Seattle Post Intelligencer July 19,
1940 Pierce County-Tacoma Narrows Bridge Pamphlet File N979.744 University
of Washington Libraries. Manuscripts, Special Collections, University
Archives Division.
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Taking place in the basement of Guggenheim Hall (the engineering
department's building), the experiments were done on a scale model of
the bridge. Farquharson's team discovered motion on the model was diminished
when anchor cables were attached from the center bottom of the approaches
to the ground.
[Enlarge image] Transit and Motion Picture Camera mounted on Tacoma Narrows
Bridge Tollhouse. PH Coll. 290.26 University of Washington Libraries.
Special Collections Division.
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[Enlarge image] Professor Farquharson viewing
film of the bridge's sway, 1940. PH Coll. 290.29 University
of Washington Libraries. Special Collections
Division.
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However, when installed on the actual bridge, the cables
[Enlarge image] Logbook entry of the motion on the Tacoma Narrows
Bridge, recorded by F.B. Farquharson on August, 12, 1940. UW Engineering
Experiment Station Records, Acc. No. 06-034, Bridge Movement Data Logbooks.
University of Washington Libraries. Manuscripts, Special Collections, University
Archives Division.
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snapped in the wind. Further experimentation suggested that drilling
holes in the side girders would keep the wind from pushing and pulling
on the bridge. Another suggestion was to install semicircular deflector
shields as means of streamlining the side girders.
At the beginning of November 1940 the deflector shields were
approved by the Washington Toll Bridge Authority and were to be installed
in the coming weeks. The approval came too late for the bridge. To the shock
of even those studying the bridge's movement, on November 7, 1940 the Tacoma
Narrows Bridge collapsed.
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