Friday, November 19, 2004

The Narrows Bridge Came Tumbling Down

As someone who grew up in Tacoma, WA, the suspension bridge associated with my hometown -- The Narrows Bridge -- was something I held in awe. We traveled that bridge often. It seemed so huge, carrying us at such a height over the water below, and its towers and cables seemed so enormous. Like the Golden Gate (which we usually felt was somehow inferior to our own bridge), some people took their life by leaping off the bridge and into the chilly, fatal water.

The Narrows Bridge was also notorious, of course, because the original version, referred to at the time as "Galloping Gertie" because it tended to move when the wind rose, completely fell apart during a storm. The date was November 7, 1940. By 1950 the bridge I knew was finished and cars were once again able to cross the waterway.

Assembled by the University of Washington Library, there is an online exhibition that retells the story of that original bridge with pictures and historical information. You can see the rebuilding effort, too.

For a "blast" from the past, visit History of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge.