As early as 1693, a ferry operated, crossing the Schuylkill River at Fairmount, the hill on which the Philadelphia Museum of Art now stands.[1] Being upstream of the others, this was called the Upper Ferry.
For the Upper Ferry site, bridgebuilder Louis Wernwag designed "The Colossus", the longest single-span wooden bridge in the United States. Construction began in April 1812, and it opened on January 7, 1813. A double-arched-truss with a clear span of 340 feet (103.6 m), it was a marvel of engineering for its time. Also called the "Colossus of Fairmount," the "Upper Ferry Bridge," and the "Lancaster Schuylkill Bridge," the toll bridge was part of the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike. It was destroyed by fire on September 1, 1838.[2]
Thomas Birch painted at least two views of the bridge, and one of them was made into an 1813 engraving by Jacob J. Plocher. This "Upper Ferry Bridge" engraving was copied frequently on Staffordshire china.[3]
"Schuylkill Waterworks" (1835), with "The Colossus" in the background.
"A View of Fairmount and the Waterworks" (1835) by John Rubens Smith.
2nd bridge: Wire Bridge at Fairmount
Five miles upstream from Fairmount, iron manufacturers Josiah White and Erksine Hazard built a wire-cable footbridge in 1816. Though a modest structure – 407 feet (124 m) in length with a suspended walkway 18 inches (0.46 m) wide – and a temporary one – it stood for less than a year – the Spider Bridge at Falls of Schuylkill is thought to have been the first wire-cable suspension bridge in history.[4]
Twenty-five years later, permanent wire-cable suspension bridges had been built in France and Switzerland. To replace "The Colossus," Charles Ellet, Jr. designed the first major wire-cable suspension bridge in the United States.[5] The 358-foot-long (109 m) "Wire Bridge at Fairmount" was commissioned by the City of Philadelphia, and opened to traffic on January 2, 1842. It had no toll, and stood for over thirty years.[6]
The Callowhill Street Bridge was designed by Jacob H. Linville, engineer, and built by the Keystone Bridge Company, 1874–75. A double-decker bridge that carried passengers, vehicles and streetcars on its upper deck and trains (later removed) on its lower, it was a Whipple truss of cast and wrought iron, 350 feet (110 m) long and 48 feet (15 m) wide. The arches between the decks were decorative and removed circa 1900; the ornate railings were removed by 1910. It was demolished in 1964.[7]
Callowhill Street Bridge in an 1875 advertisement.
^Wainwright, Nicholas B. (1974). Paintings and Miniatures at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: HSP. p. 294.
^Peterson, Charles E. (March 22, 1986). "The Spider Bridge, A Curious Work at the Falls of Schuylkill, 1816". Canal History and Technology Proceedings. v: 243–59.
^Steinman, David; Watson, Sara Ruth (1957). Bridges and their Builders. New York: Dover. p. 210.
^Crawford, C. (September 14, 1988). "Callowhill Street Bridge"(PDF). Historic American Engineering Record. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. p. 1. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
References
Report of the Managers of the Lancaster and Schuylkill Bridge Company to the Stockholders, March 3, 1814. Romney, VA: William Harper, reprinted by Louis Wernwag. 1835.
Nelson, Lee H. (1990). The Colossus of 1812: An American Engineering Superlative. New York, NY: American Society of Civil Engineers. ISBN0872627373.