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A History of the St. Louis Bridge; Containing a Full Account of Every Step in its Construction and Erection, and Including the Theory of the Ribbed Arch and the Tests of Materials

(American, 1837 – 1914)
1881
Medium/TechniqueIllustrated book
DimensionsOverall: 36 × 28.4 × 5.8 cm (14 3/16 × 11 3/16 × 2 5/16 in.)
Credit LineWilliam A. Sargent Fund
Accession number2018.2278
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsIllustrated books
Description
Completed in 1874, the steel-and-masonry bridge that James Eads designed to span the Mississippi River at Saint Louis was immediately celebrated as one of the great engineering achievements of the nineteenth century. The bridge became an important symbol of the increasing industrial prowess of the United States, while also serving as a metaphor for the knitting together of the eastern and western halves of the nation. Since the Renaissance, there had been a tradition of celebrating (and advertising) technological achievements with lavish commemorative publications. Nineteenth-century engineers embraced that that tradition with enthusiasm, often employing new technology in the books themselves. This grand publication, by Calvin Woodward, dean of the engineering school at Washington University, is illustrated with an extensive series of moody and dramatic photomechanical reproductions of photographs. It is among the earliest American books to use phtography so extensively to record an engineering achievement.
InscriptionsIn ink, on title page: Presented to / Mr. John Bridge Aspinall Q. C. / With the kind regards of / Jas B. Eads / London / April 1884.
ProvenanceApril 1884, presented in London by James B. Eads (b. 1820 - d. 1887) to John Bridge Aspinall, QC (b. 1818 - d. 1886), Liverpool, England [see note 1]. 2017 sold by John L. Capes (dealer), Staithes, Saltburn by the Sea, to Charles B. Wood, III (dealer), Cambridge, MA [see note 2]; 2018, sold by Charles Wood to the MFA. (Accession Date: September 26, 2018)

NOTES: [1] Per the inscription on the title page. Eads was the designer of the Saint Louis Bridge, and in July 1884 received the Albert Medal of the Royal Society of Arts. [2] In Charles Wood’s catalogue 117, Spring 2018.