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Eads Bridge

Location: East St. Louis, IL, USA
Date: 1874
Category:
Creator(s): Eads, James

In the decade following the Civil War, the Mississippi River began to lose its standing as the primary transport artery in the Midwest. Railroads were taking over, and Chicago was rapidly becoming the center of Midwestern commerce. The Eads Bridge was the first major railroad link over the Mississippi, constructed by the city of St. Louis in an attempt to maintain its dominance as a regional commercial hub.

The bridge's designer and builder, James Buchanan Eads, faced unbelievable challenges: political and financial wrangles; shipwrecks, ice storms, and tornadoes; and 14 men dead from caisson disease. Seven years and 7 million dollars after construction began, the bridge opened, carrying fifteen 50-ton locomotives loaded with coal, water, and daredevil passengers. The bridge continues to carry traffic across the Mississippi River today.

Resources

  1. Howard S. Miller and Quinta Scott, The Eads Bridge, University of Missouri Press, 2nd Ed.1999  
Tags: Era: 1870-1879
Innovation designated by:
Eads Bridge
Courtesy Flickr/Patrick Yodarus (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Eads Bridge
Address:
Eads Bridge
Mississippi River
East St. Louis, IL, USA

Eads Bridge

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