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Who Built the Brooklyn Bridge?
Townhall.com ^ | May 29, 2015 | Michelle Malkin

Posted on 05/29/2015 4:47:14 AM PDT by Kaslin

How many times have you heard President Obama and his minions pat themselves on the back for their noble "investments" in "roads and bridges"? Without government infrastructure spending, we're incessantly reminded, we wouldn't be able to conduct our daily business.

"Every single great idea that has marked the 21st century, the 20th century and the 19th century has required government vision and government incentive," Vice President Joe Biden infamously asserted. "Private enterprise," he sneered, lags behind.

As always, the Beltway narcissists have it backward. Without private enterprise and free-market visionaries, public infrastructure wouldn't exist. Take the iconic Brooklyn Bridge, which turned 132 years old this week. It's not a government official whose vision built that. It's a fierce capitalist who revolted against unimaginative command-and-control bureaucrats in his home country.

Before he went on to pioneer aqueducts and suspension bridges across America, culminating in the Brooklyn Bridge, John Roebling was a government engineer in the German province of Westphalia. A cog in the Prussian building machine, he chafed under autocratic rule. No decisions could be made, no actions taken, he complained in his diary, "without first having an army of government councilors, ministers, and other functionaries deliberate about it for ten years, make numerous expensive journeys by post, and write so many long reports about it, that for the amount expended for all this, reckoning compound interest for ten years, the work could have been completed."

Fed up with innovation-stifling conformity, subordination and red tape, the ambitious 25-year-old Roebling set sail for the U.S. in 1831 aboard the American-built ship August Edward. During the 78-day journey, he wrote of his hopes and dreams "to found a new home in the western continent beyond the ocean, a new fatherland free from tyranny." Upon arriving in Philadelphia, he celebrated his adopted land's free-market economy.

"The numerous hindrances, restrictions and obstacles, which are set up by timid governments and countless hosts of functionaries against every endeavor in Germany, are not to be found here," he reflected in a letter to friends and family.

"The foreigner must be astounded at what the public spirit of these republicans has accomplished up to now and what it still accomplishes every day. All undertakings take place through the association of private persons. In these the principal aim is naturally the making of money." The pursuit of self-interest was in of itself a source of public good, he concluded, "principally (as) a result of unrestricted intercourse in a concerted action of an enlightened, self-governing people."

Roebling failed at silkworm-farming, fabric-dying, rape seed oil farming and canary-raising before embarking on his engineering career. He patented an improved boiler for steamships, a safety gauge for a steam-boiler flue and a steam-powered motorcycle. He traveled wherever he could utilize his skills -- constructing dams on the Beaver River, consulting on hydraulics on the Croton River Aqueduct, knocking on doors for work across Pennsylvania.

With unbridled determination to build a lucrative family business, he patented and pioneered America's first commercially successful wire rope company. Frugal and financially savvy, Roebling operated on saved capital and refused to borrow. Several of his new clients paid him in stock, and he soon had a thriving investment portfolio. Coal mining companies in the anthracite region snapped up his sturdy cables.

Did he have "help" along the way? Plenty -- from other capitalists, that is.

Roebling purchased his wire from industrial pioneer Robert Townsend, who had founded the first iron wire mill west of the Allegheny Mountains in 1816. Townsend, who had learned the wire-making trade from Baltimore wire weaver Hugh Balderson, manufactured rivets, nails, fasteners and telegraph wire, in addition to supplying Roebling with wire for his early experiments and projects.

Samuel Wickersham's Pittsburgh Wire Works also supplied wire as Roebling gained more project work. And Sligo Iron Works made charcoal "blooms" for Roebling's wire: large blocks cast from molten iron and later steel, which were then "hot rolled" at high temperatures between two rotating cylinders into wire rods.

Later, Roebling's sons Charles and Ferdinand built a 200-acre state-of-the-art manufacturing campus, steel plant and village outside Trenton, N.J. Employing 8,000 workers, Kinkora Works produced everything from chicken wire and telegraph wire to tramway and elevator cables.

The suspension cables on the Golden Gate and George Washington bridges were manufactured by the Roeblings. So were the control cables in the Spirit of St. Louis, the first airplane to cross the Atlantic Ocean, and the tramway and construction cables used to build the Panama Canal. Even the wires used to stabilize the wings of the Wright Brothers' aircraft used Roebling trusses.

Here's the lesson White House progressives and Common Core historians won't teach: Roebling's Brooklyn Bridge is a towering legacy of the countless pursuits of individual American innovators who benefited the public by benefiting themselves and their families. The wealth-shaming social engineers in Washington will never understand. Private profit is a public good.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
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1 posted on 05/29/2015 4:47:14 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

I give all credit to the Muslims for this great American landmark. Just because it would be racist not to.


2 posted on 05/29/2015 4:50:30 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Claire Wolfe should check her watch. It's time.)
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To: Kaslin
Who Built the Brooklyn Bridge?

Johnny Maestro.

3 posted on 05/29/2015 4:59:01 AM PDT by TruthShallSetYouFree (Today's Civil Rights movement: Black Lives Matter--unless they are cops.)
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To: Kaslin

The argument isn’t who was the innovator behind the building of America’s infrastructure. It’s solely about what do we do now about its crumbling.


4 posted on 05/29/2015 5:02:11 AM PDT by sakic
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To: sakic

Is it crumbling?

where is the evidence?


5 posted on 05/29/2015 5:04:22 AM PDT by bert ((K.E.; N.P.; GOPc.;+12, 73, ..... No peace? then no peace!)
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To: Kaslin

is the bridge for sale again????


6 posted on 05/29/2015 5:07:07 AM PDT by M-cubed ( Their hope is to find a way to pick a nominee who, if elected, would actually stay the course the w)
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To: Kaslin

Great article! Thanks for posting.


7 posted on 05/29/2015 5:07:35 AM PDT by caver (Obama: Home of the Whopper)
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To: Kaslin

Private profit is a public good.

This deserves to be on every bumper in America.


8 posted on 05/29/2015 5:09:27 AM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: Kaslin

All the brains these progressive libtards claim to have and they still can’t aspire to the wisdom that can be taught by a pencil.


9 posted on 05/29/2015 5:10:03 AM PDT by wastoute (Government cannot redistribute wealth. Government can only redistribute poverty.)
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To: bert

http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/


10 posted on 05/29/2015 5:20:29 AM PDT by sakic
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To: Kaslin

Good book about this by David McCullough called the Great Bridge.


11 posted on 05/29/2015 5:21:33 AM PDT by Mercat (Release the HildeKraken)
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To: TruthShallSetYouFree
Actually according to the History Channel and Wikepedia John Augustus Roebling was the Architect of the bridge

Brooklyn Bridge

Brooklyn Bridge Wikipedia
More sources

Building the Brooklyn Bridge

Brooklyn Bridge

Brooklyn Bridge

12 posted on 05/29/2015 5:26:01 AM PDT by Kaslin (He needed the ignorant to reelect him, and he got them. Now we all have to pay the consequenses)
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To: Kaslin

Anything the Government is connected in building - the price is nearly 100 times the real cost - $600.00 hammer. This was many years ago. Probably the same cost today would be $2200 hammer! Government does not build anything worthwhile without the unions being involved in inflated prices!


13 posted on 05/29/2015 5:26:11 AM PDT by hondact200 (Candor dat viribos alas (sincerity gives wings to strength) and Nil desperandum (never despair))
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To: wastoute
Ha! I saw what you just did there.

Milton Friedman's pencil example is still one of the best illustrations of free market forces at work that I have ever seen/heard.

Good one!

14 posted on 05/29/2015 5:29:26 AM PDT by liberty_lvr (The world is aflame and our pResident is responsible for it.)
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To: liberty_lvr

LOL. Thanks.


15 posted on 05/29/2015 5:31:24 AM PDT by wastoute (Government cannot redistribute wealth. Government can only redistribute poverty.)
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To: Kaslin

“You didn’t build that.”


16 posted on 05/29/2015 5:42:50 AM PDT by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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To: Kaslin

We also gave this bastard $Trillionos of dollars for “shovel ready projects” to build roads and bridges, and have nothing to show for it.

Where did the $Trillions go? We were $8Trillion in debt when this ass hole took over, and now we are $18Tillion in debt.

WHERE DID THE SPEND $10 TRILLION DOLLARS?

Thats $33,000 for every man, woman, and child in the USA


17 posted on 05/29/2015 5:45:40 AM PDT by Mr. K (Palin/Cruz - to defeat HilLIARy/Warren)
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To: Kaslin

Most of the subway system in NYC was built by private companies. Almost all transit (trolleys, buses) was privately-owned until the companies were deliberately destroyed by government.


18 posted on 05/29/2015 5:46:30 AM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: Kaslin
Without government infrastructure spending

Where does the government get the funds to spend on infrastructure?

19 posted on 05/29/2015 5:47:27 AM PDT by MosesKnows (Love many, trust few, and always paddle your own canoe.)
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To: Mr. K

The unions and Democrat cronies.


20 posted on 05/29/2015 5:49:36 AM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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