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Galloping
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The City of Tacoma and Pierce County Board
of Commissioners asked the State to construct a bridge across the
Narrows. The legislature appropriated $25,000 to study the request.
Satisfied with the results of the study, on May 23, 1938, the State of
Washington submitted an application to the Public Works Administration
(PWA) requesting funds for construction of a bridge.
Between the time the state legislature
authorized the money to study the proposal and the completion of that
study, Lacey Murrow, Director of the Washington State Department of
Highways, had given Clark Eldridge, a bridge engineer with the
department, the green light to design a bridge to span the Narrows.
Eldridge’s plan called for a 5,000 foot, two-lane suspension bridge.
When completed, the structure would be the third longest suspension
bridge in the world.
After examination of Eldridge's plans in May
of 1938, the Public Works Administration agreed to finance 45 percent
of the construction, provided that the State of Washington retain a
board of independent engineering consultants to reexamine Eldridge's
design. The State complied and employed the firm of Moran and Proctor
to study the plans for the substructure. Furthermore, the State
retained Leon S. Moisseiff, the world-renowned suspension bridge
builder to examine the plans concerning the superstructure. Both Moran
and Proctor and Moisseiff made significant alterations to Eldridge's
original design. Specifically, Moran and Proctor wanted an entirely
different substructure. As to Moisseiff, he substituted the 25 foot
deep open stiffening truss with an eight foot, shallow plate girder,
resulting in a much lighter bridge.
Prior to the opening of the construction
bids, a group of contractors notified the engineers they could not meet
the specifications for the substructure. As a result, Moran and
Proctor's plans for the substructure were scrapped, and Eldridge's
original plans for the substructure were reintroduced. After
consultation with Moisseiff, it was agreed that Eldridge's design for
the substructure would be used in conjunction with Moisseiff's plans
for the superstructure. This modified plan was approved by the Public
Works Administration and bids for construction were opened on September
27, 1938. The Pacific Bridge Company's low bid of $5,594,730.40 was
accepted. The Bethlehem Steel Company was an associate contractor that
supplied and erected the steel and wire. Work on the bridge began in
early 1939 and on July 1, 1940, the $6.4 million bridge opened and the
link between the Washington mainland and the Olympic Peninsula was
complete.
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Vertical oscillations of the roadbed
occurred even during the construction phase and raised questions about
the structure's stability. Some breezes as low as four miles per hour
caused oscillations, while stronger breezes often had no effect. Prior
to the bridge's opening, hydraulic buffers were installed at the towers
to control the stresses. The undulations continued, however, and
further studies were undertaken at the University of Washington. Their
recommendation of the installation of tie-down cables in the side spans
were implemented, but to little effect.
Local folks lost no time in nicknaming the
bridge "Galloping Gertie." Fascinated by Gertie, thousands of people
drove hundreds of miles to experience the sensation of crossing the
rolling center span. The disappearance and then reappearance of cars
often highlighted the experience. For four months, the Washington Toll
Bridge Authority thrived as traffic had trebled from what had been
expected. Although concerns about the bridge's stability had been
voiced, bridge officials were so confident of the structure, they
considered canceling the insurance policies in order to obtain reduced
rates on a new one.
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Once the structural integrity was compromised major portions of the
bridge deck began to fall into the Tacoma Narrows channel. Notice the
unfortunate car on the bridge deck in the upper right corner of this
picture. The larger section of bridge decking in this picture is
approximately 600 feet long. The smaller section in the center of the
picture is 25 feet long.
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Throughout the early morning hours of
Thursday, November 7, 1940, the center span had been undulating three
to five feet in winds of 35 to 46 miles per hour. Alarmed by this
constant motion, highway officials and state police closed the bridge
at 10:00 A.M. Shortly thereafter the character of the motion
dramatically changed from a rhythmic rising and falling to a two-wave
twisting motion. The twisting motion grew stronger with each twist;
span movement had gone from 5 foot to 28 foot undulations. This
twisting motion caused the roadbed to tilt 45 degrees from horizontal
one way and then 45 degrees from horizontal the other way.
For about 30 minutes, the center span
endured the twisting. At about 10:30 A.M., a center span floor panel
dropped into the water 195 feet below. The roadbed was breaking up, and
chunks of concrete were raining into the Sound. At 11:02 A.M., 600 feet
of the western end of the span twisted free, flipped over, and plunged
down into the water. Engineers on the scene hoped that once this had
happened, the remainder of the span would settle down. The twisting
continued, and at 11:09 A.M., the remaining bridge sections ripped free
and thundered down into the Sound. When this happened, the 1,100 foot
side spans dropped 60 feet, only to bounce up and then settle into a
sag of 30 feet. As for the center span, it rested on the dark and
tide-swept bottom of the Narrows.
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