Ralph Modjeski
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Ralph Modjeski | |
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Born | Rudolf Modrzejewski January 27, 1861 |
Died | June 26, 1940 Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged 79)
Citizenship | Austria (1861–1883) United States (1883–1940) |
Known for | Building many suspension bridges throughout the United States |
Notable work | |
Parents |
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Awards |
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Ralph Modjeski (born Rudolf Modrzejewski; January 27, 1861 – June 26, 1940) was a Polish-American civil engineer who achieved prominence as "America's greatest bridge builder."
He furthered the use of suspension bridges and oversaw the design and construction of nearly forty bridges that spanned the great rivers of North America, as well as the development of new rail lines. In addition, he trained succeeding generations of American bridge designers and builders, including Joseph B. Strauss, chief engineer of San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge (which was completed six months after Modjeski's San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge).
Formative years and family
[edit]Modjeski was born in Bochnia, in Galicia, on January 27, 1861, to Gustav Sinnmayer Modrzejewski and actress Helena Opid Modrzejewska (best known outside Poland as Helena Modjeska). In 1865, his mother left Sinnmayer, and in 1868, she married polish nobleman Karol Bożenta Chłapowski. In July 1876, they emigrated to America, where, as a matter of convenience, the boy's mother changed her name to Helena Modjeska and her son's name to Ralph Modjeski.[1]
He was a classmate of Ignacy Jan Paderewski in Poland and was a formidable pianist in his own right.
The son returned to Europe to study at l'Ecole des Ponts et Chaussées (the School of Bridges and Roads) in Paris, France. It was in 1883, while studying at Paris, that he obtained American citizenship; however, he always maintained contact with Poland, wrote much in Polish, and emphasized his Polish origins.
In 1885, he graduated from the School of Bridges and Roads at the top of his class. That same year, he married a cousin Felicie Benda; the couple had three children. They divorced in 1931 after a sixteen-year-long separation. That same year, the now seventy-year-old Modjeski married Virginia Mary Giblyn.
Career
[edit]After completing his academic training, Modjeski returned to America to begin his career, working first under the "father of American bridge-building," George S. Morison. In 1893, Modjeski opened his own design office in Chicago. Joined in 1924 by Frank M. Masters Sr., the firm still exists as Modjeski & Masters.[2]
Modjeski's first project as chief engineer was the railroad bridge across the Mississippi River at Rock Island, Illinois. During his career, he served as chief or consulting engineer on dozens of bridges across the United States.
He took over the mis-designed Quebec Bridge after the 1907 disaster that killed seventy-five workers, and succeeded in creating the longest truss span in the world (though a construction accident killed another thirteen workers). It is still the longest cantilever bridge in the world.
Modjeski was the recipient of numerous awards and honorary degrees. He received a doctorate in engineering from Illinois State University in 1911, the Franklin Medal in 1923, a doctorate honoris causa from the Lwów Polytechnic in 1929, and the prestigious John Fritz Medal in 1930. He was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1925 and the American Philosophical Society in 1926.[3][4] In Modjeski's obituary, Frank Masters considered him "one of the world's leading bridge engineers."[5] A PHMC Historical Marker was dedicated in 2007 in commemoration.
Death
[edit]He died June 26, 1940, in Los Angeles, California, nearly 80 years old.He was buried at the Ingelwood Eternity Mausoleum Cemetery in the crypt K-208 [6]
Bridges
[edit]- Chief Engineer
- Government Bridge (1896)
- Thebes Bridge (1905)
- Burlington Northern Railroad Bridge 9.6, Bridge 8.8 and Bridge 5.1 (all 1906–08)
- Quebec Bridge (1907-1917)
- McKinley Bridge (1910)
- Celilo Bridge (1910)
- Crooked River Railroad Bridge (1911)
- Broadway Bridge (Portland, Oregon) (1913)
- Metropolis Bridge (1914)
- Harahan Bridge (1916)
- Metropolis Bridge (1917)
- Mears Memorial Bridge (1923)
- Mid-Hudson Bridge aka Franklin Delano Roosevelt Mid-Hudson Bridge (1930)
- Benjamin Franklin Bridge (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Camden, New Jersey (1926)
- Tacony-Palmyra Bridge (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Palmyra, New Jersey) (1929)
- Wissahickon Memorial Bridge (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) (1931)
- I-74 Bridge aka the Moline to Bettendorf Veterans Memorial Bridge 1933
- Huey P. Long Bridge (1935)
- Blue Water Bridge (Port Huron, Michigan and Point Edward, Ontario, 1938)
- Consulting Engineer
- Manhattan Bridge (1909)
- Market Street Bridge (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania) (1926)
- Ambassador Bridge (Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, 1929)
- George Rogers Clark Memorial Bridge (1929)
- McPhaul Suspension Bridge (1929)
- San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge (1936)
See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Glomb, Jozef (2002). A man who spanned two eras: The story of bridge engineer Ralph Modjeski. Peter J. Obst (trans.). Philadelphia: Kosciuszko Foundation. ISBN 978-0-917004-25-4.
References
[edit]- ^ Durand, W.F. "Biographical Memoir of Ralph Modjeski" (PDF). National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Biographical Memoirs. XXIII (10th memoir). Retrieved 7 November 2023.
- ^ "History". Modjeski and Masters. Retrieved 2023-11-07.
- ^ "Ralph Modjeski". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
- ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
- ^ Masters, Frank (1941). "Memoir of Ralph Modjeski". Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers. 105 (1624).
- ^ https://poland.pl/experience-poland/investments-projects/builder-bridges-america/ [bare URL]
External links
[edit]- BRIDGING URBAN AMERICA, A STORY OF RALPH MODJESKI, a documentary film
- Ralph Modjeski[permanent dead link ] on the ASCE History and Heritage of Civil Engineering website
- Ralph Modjeski at Structurae
- Cultural Heritage site, includes a brief resume
- Encyclopedia Americana. 1920. .
- Ralph Modjeski — Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences