The 'John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge' spans the
Ohio River between
Cincinnati, Ohio and
Covington, Kentucky. When the first pedestrians crossed on
December 1 1866, it was the longest
suspension bridge in the world at 1,057 feet (322 m), a status it maintained until 1883. Today, many pedestrians use the bridge to get between the arenas in Cincinnati (
Paul Brown Stadium,
Great American Ball Park, and
U.S. Bank Arena) and the hotels and
parking lots in
Northern Kentucky.
Filling a need
By the mid-1800s, Cincinnati had become the nation's leading inland
port, and
ferry traffic to and from Covington and
Newport, Kentucky was at a level where the need for a bridge was apparent. The Covington-Cincinnati Bridge Company, led by Covington businessman Amos Shinkle, was formed to oversee the project. The state of
Ohio mandated, however, that if a span was to be built, the piers could not interfere with the city's river shipping, and the deck would have to be high enough for the stacks of
steamboats to pass underneath. The 1849 charter for the bridge required:
★ no piers in the river
★ a length of 1,400 feet [427 m] and,
★ a deck clearance of 112 feet [34 m].
No such bridge had ever been built, but
engineer John August Roebling submitted a design and was awarded the job. By the time construction started in 1856, a new charter had eased the specifications for the bridge, shortening the required length to 1,000 feet (305 m) and height to 100 feet (30 m).
from
Covington to
Cincinnati, at night.]]
Engineering achievement
Construction continued for over ten years, interrupted by financial shortages and the
Civil War, during which the city and the unfinished bridge were under threat of attack. The bridge was completed in December 1866. As the first bridge to use both vertical suspenders and diagonal stays fanning from each of its 230-foot (70 m) stone towers, it served as the prototype for Roebling's design of the
Brooklyn Bridge, which exceeded the Cincinnati bridge in length when it opened in
New York in 1883.
When the Roebling Bridge was formally opened on
January 1,
1867, the driver of a horse and buggy was charged a
toll of 15 cents to cross; the toll for three horses and a carriage was 25 cents. Pedestrians were charged a cent.
Alterations and designations
The original deck of the bridge was built at the lowest possible cost due to Civil War inflation, but the stone towers were designed to carry a much heavier load than was originally demanded. In 1896, the bridge was painted blue (rather than brown) and received a second set of main cables, a wider steel deck, and a longer northern approach. The reconstruction significantly altered the appearance of the bridge, but the new 30-ton weight limit extended its usefulness through the 20th century and beyond.
The Covington-Cincinnati Bridge Company--a private company--operated the bridge until the Commonwealth of
Kentucky purchased it in 1953 for $4.2 million. The state collected tolls until 1963 when the
Brent Spence Bridge was opened on
Interstate 75, downstream, approximately 0.6 of a mile to the west of The Roebling Suspension Bridge.
The bridge was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1975 and designated a
National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark in 1983. It remains the busiest of Cincinnati's four non-expressway automobile or pedestrian bridges. Initially called the "Covington-Cincinnati Suspension Bridge," it was renamed in honor of its designer and builder on
June 27, 1983.
The state of
Kentucky closed the bridge on
November 13 2006 to make extensive repairs to the structure.
[1] It was scheduled to reopen
April 22 2007, but reopened about a month ahead of schedule in late March. However, it will close again for much of 2008 for repainting.
[2]
Trivia
This bridge was shown in the 1988 movie ''
Rain Man'' as Charlie and Raymond go across the bridge in a
Buick Roadmaster convertible.
Notes and references
1. Roebling Suspension Bridge To Close For Six Months
2. Roebling is ready to reopen
External links
★
★
An extensive photo-documentation of the Roebling Bridge
★
Roebling Suspension Bridge at Cincinnati-Transit.net
★
Roebling Bridge Photographs
★
Photo of bridge from
Google Maps
★
John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge at Bridges & Tunnels.
★
The Suspension Bridge. ''Cincinnati Transit''.
★
Bridging the century. ''The Cincinnati Post''. March 25, 1999.
★
John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge. ''RootsWeb.com''.
See also
★
List of largest suspension bridges
★
List of crossings of the Ohio River
★
List of historic civil engineering landmarks