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Historic American Engineering Record
West Penn Bridge
HAER No. PA-443
(South Railroad Bridge)
Pennsylvania Railroad,
spanning Allegheny River
Pittsburgh
Allegheny County
Pennsylvania
PHOTOGRAPHS
WRITTEN HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE DATA
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
National Park Service
Northeast Region
U.S. Custom House
200 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
WEST PENN BRIDGE (SOUTH RAILROAD BRIDGE)
HAER NO. PA-443
Location: Pennsylvania Railroad, spanning Allegheny River, Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania
UTM: East 17.586420.4479120
West 17.586150 4479090
Quad: Pittsburgh East, PR1979 1:24,000
Date of Construction: 1890, 1903
Builder: Pennsylvania Railroad
Present Owner: Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh (URA)
Present Use: Not in use [Reopened in June 1999, rehabilitated as part of the Three Rivers Heritage Trail.]
Significance: Built to provide railroad access to Washington's Landing (formerly Herr's Island), the South Railroad Bridge has become a signature bridge in the City of Pittsburgh. The elegant double intersection Pratt truss frames a dramatic view of the City of Pittsburgh and the Allegheny River.
Project Information: The URA has undertaken a redevelopment project on Washington's Landing requiring pedestrian access from the north shore of the Allegheny River to the island. The existing Three Rivers Heritage Trail, a hiking and biking trail, connects Three Rivers Stadium along the north shore of the Allegheny River to a point opposite Washington's Landing. A similar hiking and biking trail and other recreational facilities are present on the island. The rehabilitation of the South Railroad Bridge is the most practical and expedient manner of connecting these two sections of the City trail system.
Christine Davis
Christine Davis Consultants, Inc.
560 Penn Street
Verona, PA 15147
West Penn Bridge (South Railroad Bridge)
HAER No. PA-443
(Page 2)
The South Railroad Bridge spans a back channel of the Allegheny River in the City of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The bridge was built in 1890 to connect the mainline of the Western Pennsylvania Railroad (West Penn) with Herr's Island. In 1861, the West Penn had purchased the abandoned Pennsylvania Canal right-of-way along the shore of the Allegheny River. Within the next five years, the West Penn used this right-of-way to construct a railroad between Blairsville, Pennsylvania and Allegheny City, now Pittsburgh's North Side. In 1871, the West Penn extended its line north to Butler County and east to Bolivar in Westmoreland County. [1] The Pennsylvania Company leased the rail line and guaranteed the principle and interest of the bonds of the West Penn Company. [2]
In 1881, Allegheny City granted the West Penn Railroad a right-of-way across the back channel of the Allegheny River at the upper or northem end of Herr's Island as part of a railroad loop around the island. [3] At that time, the oil industry dominated the island. [4] By 1887, the West Penn had expanded their facilities on the island by adding new tracks to more efficiently serve the island's industries [5] At this time, the Pittsburgh Provision Company submitted plans to enlarge their facilities on the island, the company contacted the West Penn to request a connection with the mainline. The connection was made by purchase and condemnation resulting in the construction of the South Railroad Bridge across the south end of the island. The West Penn selected a double intersection Pratt truss for the South Railroad Bridge. This truss type, also known as the Whipple, Whipple-Murphy or Linville tnuss, involves the addition of diagonals to the original Pratt truss form. The diagonals extend across two panels while retaining the parallel top and bottom chords of the Pratt truss. The double intersection truss was patented in 1847 by Squire Whipple and modified slightly by the addition of crossing diagonals in 1863. Typically, the Pratt truss has end posts, but there is no evidence for the attachment of end posts on the South Railroad Bridge.
The South Railroad Bridge was the second double intersection Pratt truss bridge to connect Herr's Island with the shore. The first structure provided roadway access to the island and was fabricated by the Pittsburg Bridge Company in 1883, a year after an earlier bridge washed away during the Flood of 1882. [6] The South Railroad Bridge possesses similarities to this 1883 bridge and was likely built by the same bridge eompany.
On April 1, 1903, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company acquired the 85-mile West Penn Railroad and five other branch lines. [7] The Pennsylvania Railroad consolidated their East Liberty Stock Yards and several smaller livestock markets to establish the Union Stock Yards on Herr's Island. The yards ranked sixth in the nation for the number of livestock handled through a railroad facility. The Union Stock Yards served livestock trains traveling ffom Chicago to New York and Philadelphia in response to a new Federal law requiring railroad companies to provide a rest stop for animals transported over the rail system. Under this law, animals had to be unloaded, fed and watered every 36 hours and rested for eight hours before resuming the trip. [8]
After owning the West Penn Railroad for only five months, the Pennsylvania Railroad prepared plans on September 11, 1903 to rebuild the existing South Railroad Bridge to Herr's Island for a cost of $150,000. A second bridge at the north end of the island was under construction at the same time. [9] The need for the bridge rehabilitation project was the increase in the original elevation of Herr's Island due to the dumping of fill and refuse on the island's surface. [10]
West Penn Bridge (South Railroad Bridge)
HAER No. PA-443
(Page 3)
As a result, new bridge abutments and piers were required to raise the level of the South Railroad Bridge. These concrete wing abutments anchor the bridge to the island while concrete piers carry the bridge over the back channel, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) and River Road. At this time, the original curved brick viaduct between River Avenue and the mainline also was capped with concrete to increase the structure's height. Plate girder sections connected the viaduct to the mainline and to the Pratt truss. This bridge rehabilitation can be noted in a comparison of archival maps published in 1907 and 1910. [11]
Today, the South Railroad Bridge spans the back channel of the Allegheny River, River Avenue, and the former B&O, now CONRAIL. The four-spans of South Railroad Bridge include the pin connected, double intersection Pratt truss and three plate girders. The Pratt truss measures 58.5 meters (64 feet) in length and 6 meters (20 feet) in width. Two plate girders bracket the truss. The girder from the truss to the island measures 19.5 meters (64 feet) in length and is 6 meters (20 feet) wide. The second girder measures 56 meters (183 feet) in length and is 6 meters (20 feet wide). The third plate girder joins the brick viaduct to the railroad's main line. This girder measures 80 meters (263 feet) in length and 6 meters (20 feet) in width. The deck of the metal truss once had a double-track system of steel rails separated by a cribbing of railroad ties. The rails have been removed. The deteriorated wood deck was recently damaged when vandals set fire to the south side of the deck. The concrete abutment for the plate girder section over River Avenue is in very poor condition having sustained damage during a vehicular accident. A curved red brick viaduct connects the truss with the railroad's mainline. Openings in the viaduct provided access points for industrial buildings that once occupied the lots bracketing the viaduct. A brick wall on the north side of the viaduct is incorporated into the South Railroad Bridge's abutment with concrete. The concrete is in poor condition and a deep fracture occurs at the point of connection between the brick wall and the viaduct. Concrete has been used to raise the level of the tracks.
Located on River Road beneath the South Railroad Bridge is a small stone abutment, all that remains of a former railroad siding used to connect two industrial buildings with the B&O's mainline. Neither the buildings nor the siding are extant. The abutment measures 1.8 meters (6 feet) by 4.6 meters (15 feet) in length.
On CONRAIL's right-of-way at the approach to the South Railroad Bridge is a rare railroad artifact, a "tattletale", used by the train's brakemen who once rode on the train's roof. The tattletale warned brakemen of an impending low bridge or abutment and was used until the 1960s when two events rendered the tattletale obsolete. First, the Intemational Commerce Commission (ICC) ruled against personnel riding on the top of train cars and second, after improved technology in the communication system and brakes, the brakeman no longer was required to ride the roof. The artifact is the only known example within a one hundred-mile radius of Pittsburgh.
SIGNIFICANCE
Built as a railroad bridge to access Herr's Island, the South Railroad Bridge has become a signature bridge in the City of Pittsburgh, having been featured in a 1974 publication on North
West Penn Bridge (South Railroad Bridge)
HAER No. PA-443
(Page 4)
American bridges [13] and in a three-part series about Pittsburgh published by Fortune Magazine in August of 1967. This elegant iron and steel truss bridge frames a dramatic view of the City of Pittsburgh from Herr's Island The bridge is significant under National Register Criterion C for the significant engineering characteristics evident in the double intersection Pratt truss, plate girders, concrete and stone abutments, and brick viaduct.
REPOSITORIES
Records housed in the following repositories were used in the preparation of this document: the Library of Congress, the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, the University of Pittsburgh's Hillman Library, the Pattee Library of the Pennsylvania State University, the Pennsylvania State Archives, and the files of the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh (URA). Although a series of original drawings for the 1883 roadway bridge to Herr's Island were found in the URA's collection, no original drawings or historic photographs of the South Railroad Bridge were found, presumably because the structure was a railroad bridge. Archives for the Western Pennsylvania Railroad Company were examined in the Pennsylvania Archives, Record Group MG 286. No photographs or drawings of the bridge were found in this collection. The Pittsburgh Photographers collection housed at the Archives of Industrial Society could not be accessed during this study due to a change in personnel but it is possible that photographs may exist in the collection.
West Penn Bridge (South Railroad Bridge)
HAER No. PA-443
(Page 5)
FOOTNOTES
1] Western Pennsylvania Railroad. Annual Report to the Interstate Commerce Commission, 1903. Pennsylvania State Archives. Pennsylvania Railroad Collection. Pennsylvania Archives MG286.
2] Schotter, H.W. The Growth and Development of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Allen Lane and Scott, Philadelphia, 1927. p. 63, 88.
3] City of Allegheny. Annual Reports of the Various Officers and Standing Committees of the City of Allegheny, 1881.
4] Herr, Fred R. Herr's lsland. The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, 53 (3), 1970, p. 214.
5] Western Pennsylvania Railroad. Western Pennsylvania Railroad Minute Book, 1887. Pennsylvania Archives, MG 286.
6] Pittsburgh Bridge Company. "Cross Section of Floor, Herr's Island Bridge", 1883. Drawing on File in City of Pittsburgh Department of Engineering and Construction.
Hopkins, G.M. and Company. Atlas of the Cities of Pittsburgh, Allegheny, amd the Adjoining Boroughs. G.M. Hopkins and Company, Philadelphia, 1872.
Sanborn Insurance Compamy. Sanborn Insurance Company Map of the City of Pittsburgh. Sanborn Insurance Company, New York, 1884.
7] Schotter, H.W. 1927.
8. Herr. Fred R. 1970, p. 215.
Davis, Christine and Vem L. Cowin. Archaeological Survey and Land-Use History of the North Shore Redevelopment Area, Pittsburgh, PA. A Report prepared for the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh, 1988.
9] Anonymous. "Notes." The Railway Age. September 11, 1903, p. 345.
10] Davis, Christine, et.al. 1988.
11] Hopkins, G.M. and Company. Atlas of Greater Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. G.M. Hopkins & Company, 1907
Hopkins, G.M. and Company. 1910.
12] Metzger, William. Personal interview on July 28, 1997 in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania.
13] Plowden, David. Bridges: The Spans of North America. Viking Press, New York, 1974.
West Penn Bridge (South Railroad Bridge)
HAER No. PA-443
(Page 6)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Anonymous. 1903. "Notes." The Railway Age. September 11, 1903. p. 345.
City of Pittsburgh. 1914. "Location Map, Herr's Island Showing Railroads & Streets, Scale 150'=1' "
City of Allegheny. 1881-1903. Annual Reports of the Various Officers and Standing Committees of the City of Allegheny.
Davis, Christine E. 1990. A Cultural Resource Survey of Washington's Landing. City of Pittsburgh, Pennsvlvania. A report prepared for the Urban Redevelopment Authority, Pittsburgh, PA.
Davis, Christine and Verna L. Cowin. 1988. Archaeological Survey and Land-Use History of the North Shore Redevelopment Area, Pittsburgh, PA. A Report prepared for the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh.
Herr, Fred R. 1970. Herr's Island. The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine. 53 (3):21 1-226.
Hopkins, G. M. and Company. 1872. Atlas of the Cities of Pittsburgh. Allegheny and the Adioining Boroughs. G. M. Hopkins and Company, Philadelphia.
___. 1907. Atlas of Greater Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. G. M. Hopkins & Company.
___. 1910. Atlas of Greater Pittsburgh, Pennsvlvania. G. M. Hopkins & Company.
Metzger, William. 1997. Interview on July 28, 1997 in Pittsburgh, PA.
Pittsburg Bridge Company. 1883. "Bridge Hand Rail Designed by the Pittsburg Bridge Company, Pittsburg." Drawing on File in City of Pittsburgh Department of Engineering and Construction.
___. 1883. "Cross Section of Floor, Herr's Island Bridge". Drawing on File in City of Pittsburgh Department of Engineering and Construction.
West Penn Bridge (South Railroad Bridge)
HAER No. PA-443
(Page 7)
Plowden, David. 1974. Bridges: The Spans of North Arnerica. Viking Press, New York.
Sanborn Insurance Company. 1884. Sanborn Insurance Company Map of the City of Pittsburgh. Sanborn Insurance Company, New York.
Schotter, H.W. 1927. The Growth and Development of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Allen Lane and Scott, Philadelphia.
SE Technologies Inc. 1990. Land-Use History Review and Archaeological Survey/Phase I. Proposed North Shore East Riverfront Park Environmental Assessment Final Report. A Report prepared for the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh.
Western Pennsylvania Railroad. 1887-1902. Western Pennsylvania Railroad Minute Book. Pennsylvania Archives, MG 286
___. 1903. Annual Report to the Interstate Commerce Commission. Pennsylvania State Archives. Pennsylvania Railroad Collection Pennsylvania Archives MG 286.
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
INDEX TO PHOTOGRAPHS
West Penn Bridge HAER No. PA-443
(South Railroad Bridge)
Pennsylvania Railroad, spanning Allegheny River
Pittsburgh
Allegheny County
Pennsylvania
Photographers:
William M. Metzger
Charles R. Martin
June, 1997
PA-443-1 VIEW SOUTHWARD FROM WASHlNGTON'S LANDING BRIDGE
PA-443-2 SIDE VIEW FROM WEST BANK VIEW SOUTHEAST
PA-443-3 SIDE VIEW DETAIL FROM WEST BANK
PA-443-4 EAST PORTAL AND PIERS, VIEW WESTWARD
PA-443-5 INSIDE TRUSS VIEW EASTWARD
PA-443-6 EAST PORTAL, VIEW WESTWARD WITH DECK
PA-443-7 DETAIL OF TRUSS MEMBERS, VIEW NORTHEAST
PA-443-8 VIEW EASTWARD TOWARD DECK AND WEST PORTAL
PA-443-9 DETAIL OF TRUSS, VIEW NORTHEAST
PA-443-10 DETAIL UNDERSIDE OF GIRDER VIEW WESTWARD
PA-443-11 DETAIL OF TOP OF GIRDER, VIEW SOUTHWEST
PA-443-12 PIER, VIEW WEST
PA-443-13 PIER, VIEW EAST
PA-443-14 PIER AND GIRDER, VIEW SOUTH
PA-443-15 NORTHWEST PORTAL, DETAIL
PA-443-16 PIER, VIEW EAST
PA-443-17 RIVER AVENUE VIEW SOUTH, PIER AND GIRDER
PA-443-18 RIVER AVENUE VIEW NORTH PIER AND GIRDER
PA-443-19 UNDERSIDE OF TRUSS, VIEW EAST
PA-443-20 UNDERSIDE OF TRUSS, VIEW WEST
PA-443-21 "TATTLETALE" FROM BRIDGE, VIEW SOUTH
PA-443-22 "TATTLETALE", VIEW SOUTH
Page created:
Last modified:
09-Jun-2002
HAER Text: Christine Davis, Christine Davis Consultants, Inc.
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