Weird Facts
The Tacoma Narrows Bridges have attracted a host of life's oddities.
This special collection of "Weird Facts" offers the best
of those fun and unique incidents. Here are the curious, funny,
zany, improbable and sometimes bizarre moments that are part of
the strange history of the Narrows Bridges.
Weird Fact #1: Crazy Shindler
When steamboat captain Ed Lorenz told his story about Shindler's comment
to the newspapers in 1938, he added, "We all thought Shindler
was crazy."
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Weird Fact
#2: The Trashed Photograph
With David Steinman's proposed bridge sketch (1929), the framed
photograph by Marvin Dement Boland is nearly 5 feet long. The Tacoma-based
photographer died in 1950. The only known surviving copy of this
photo is in the collection of the Gig Harbor Peninsula Historical
Museum. The image can be seen in the Museum's on-line exhibit, "A
Tale of Two Gerties." A volunteer at the Museum donated
this unique item after receiving it from a friend, who had found
the photo in the trash next to the Rosedale Community Club.
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Weird Fact #3: Understatement
of the Day
After Galloping Gertie's collapse, Lacey V. Murrow (former
Director of State Highways now in military service at nearby McChord
Air Base) was shaken and heart-broken, like many others. When interviewed
the day after the disaster by a reporter, he sadly observed, "Every
major bridge project is an adventure."
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Weird Fact #4: The $450 Car
Reporter Leonard Coatsworth, who lost his car (and poor Tubby)
in the collapse of the first bridge, had trouble getting reimbursed
for his loss. He sent in a claim, but six months passed with no
news and no money. Finally, Coatsworth wrote a letter to the State
Toll Bridge Authority, pleading for a response. But, more time passed
before he received compensation. Finally, the WSTBA reimbursed Coatsworth
for the loss of his car, $450.00. They had already paid him $364.40
for the loss of his car's "contents".
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Weird Fact #5: Galloping Gertie Has Deja
Vu
The name "Galloping Gertie" was first used for the Wheeling
Bridge. Charles Ellet built this 900-foot long suspension bridge
in 1849 over the Ohio River at Wheeling, West Virginia. Back then,
it was the longest suspension bridge in the world. It collapsed
in a windstorm in May 1854.
On the Tacoma Narrows Bridge many of the most experienced workmen
had followed bridge construction projects all over the country.
Called "boomers," they formed the nucleus of the crew.
Many of them came from families where building bridges was almost
a tradition. Possibly one of their grandfather's had worked on the
Wheeling Bridge. Many had come to the Narrows Bridge project from
the newly completed Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.
Interestingly, the Golden Gate Bridge is abbreviated "G.G."
and it had a tendency to "bounce" in the wind when it
was first finished. In early May 1940, when workers were building
forms and laying concrete for the roadway, the Narrows Bridge began
its soon-famous ripple. It was probably one of the "boomers"
who dubbed the bouncing span, "Galloping Gertie." Local
residents picked up the nickname and it stuck.
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Weird Fact #6: Tacoma Bridge Spans Ocean
The effects of Galloping Gertie’s fall lasted long after the
catastrophe. Clark Eldridge, who accepted some of the blame for
the bridge's failure, learned this first-hand. In late 1941 Eldridge
was working for the U. S. Navy on Guam when World War II began.
Soon, the Japanese captured Eldridge. He spent the remainder of
the war (three years and nine months) in a prisoner of war camp
in Japan. To his amazement, one day a Japanese officer, who had
once been a student in America, recognized the bridge engineer.
He walked up to Eldridge and said bluntly, “Tacoma Bridge!”
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Weird Fact #7: He Who Jabs Last, Jabs
Best
Charles Andrew was diplomatic and subtle, but also forceful. He
got in the final "jab" at federal authorities for under-funding
the 1940 Narrows Bridge. In an article in Engineering News Record
about "Redesign of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge," in 1945
Andrew wrote: "Traffic over the original bridge, during its
brief existence, indicated that a structure of considerably greater
cost would have been justified."
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Weird Fact #8: Ninety-four Kids Reach
Top of Tower
The towers are how tall? Try corralling 94 kids, say 7th graders
with an average height of 5 feet, then stand them up straight and
tall, stacking head-to-toe and they will stretch from the pier to
the top of the tower! Since it only takes 93.4 such kids to accomplish
that feat, the 94th lucky youngster will have his/her belly button
level with the top of a tower. And, he or she will have a fine view
of Mount Rainier to the east, the Olympic Mountains to the west,
and Puget Sound looking both north and south.
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Weird Fact #9: FHS Student Predicts Fall
of Bridge
On the evening of November 6, 1940 Carol Peacock, a student at Fife
High School, sat down to do her homework for journalism class. The
assignment was to let her imagination run wild and write an essay
that began, "Just suppose . . ." The essay she wrote,
"Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collapses," turned out to be a
shocking reality the very next day.
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Weird Fact #10: Bridge Failure Turns to
Heart Failure
Engineer Moisseiff's heart also failed. The fate of Leon Moisseiff,
whose design for Galloping Gertie now rests on the floor of Puget
Sound at the Narrows, is a curious tale. After Gertie collapsed
in 1940, the once proud and honored engineer continued to work.
But, his brilliant career had ended in tragic failure. He was gravely
dismayed and disheartened. Only three years later, at age 70, he
died—of heart failure.
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Weird Fact #11: Legend of the Fearless Motorcycle
Ride
One area resident, Jean Robeson, recalls a story of a wild motorcycle
ride by one of the bridge workers in 1939. Soon after workmen completed
the first catwalks on the bridge, one of them rode his motorcycle
all the way from one end of the unfinished bridge to the other—and
lived to tell about it.
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Weird Fact #12: Zero to 60 in 4 seconds
On June 28th, 1940 Pete Kreller, a 26-year old painter, fell 190
feet into the Narrows and survived with relatively minor injuries.
Bridge engineers told Kreller that his tumble of 190 feet lasted
4 seconds and he reached a speed of 60 miles per hour. The next
person to survive a fall from the bridge was a woman in June 1983.
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Weird Fact #13: Eight
Legs are Better than Two
One of the world's largest octopus species makes its home in Puget
Sound. A popular starting point for scuba divers visiting Galloping
Gertie's sunken ruins is Titlow Park, just under the current Narrows
Bridge. From the late 1940s through the 1960s Gertie provided the
backdrop for local fans of "octopus wrestling." More
on octopus wrestling
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Weird Fact #14: Coug Gal Helps Build Bridge
The only woman working on the 1940 Narrows Bridge was the twenty-something
blonde, Miss Marie Guske, a 1938 graduate of Washington State College.
The workforce on the 1940 Narrows Bridge project typically included
over 200 men. Miss Guske handled secretarial work and answered telephone
calls for engineer Clark Eldridge.
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Weird Fact #15: Gephyrophobics Anonymous
"Gephyrophobia" is the fear of crossing bridges. There
is no statistical data available on the impact that the collapse
of Galloping Gertie may have had on gephyrophobics.
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Weird Fact #16: Earthquake Breaks Bridge,
Bridge Bashes Barge
On April 13, 1949 an earthquake measuring 7.1 on the Richter
scale shook the Puget Sound region. The current Narrows Bridge's
towers swayed as much as six feet from perpendicular. The 28-ton
cable
saddle on the north side of Tower 5 (East Tower) was in place,
but not secured. It fell over 500 feet, plunging through a barge
below (which sank) and dropping 140 feet to the bottom of the Sound.
It took workmen 3 days to retrieve the cable saddle. It had suffered
a small bend on one corner of the base, which was repaired. After
a total of 10 days, workers replaced the cable saddle on top the
tower.
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Weird Fact #17: Pesky Paint Pontificators Ponder
Gertie Green
What's that color? Some call it "Gertie Green." It's a
grayish, queasy shade according to some pesky paint pontificators.
Officially, it is "Narrows Green." The paint is manufactured
by Wasser High-Tech Coatings in Seattle. Today, most places on the
Current Narrows Bridge have a thick coating of paint. At least four
layers have been added since the bridge opened in 1950. The same
color was used on the 1940 Narrows Bridge.
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Weird Fact #18: Golden Rule Gets Wagon Across
Bridge
Who was the last car to make it safely across Galloping Gertie?
A family of three in a bakery wagon, says one report. On the morning
of November 7, 1940, Elbert Swinney drove his regular route for
the Golden Rule Bakery, crossing the Narrows from Tacoma toward
Gig Harbor. In the truck were his wife, Hazel, and their 5-year
old son, Richard. It was an exciting trip for the lad. Years later
he recalled, "The sides of the bridge were solid walls. I would
see water on one side and then the other. My mother was screaming
a lot."
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Weird Fact #19: Golden Rule Record Challenged
by Doctor
Who was the last car to make it safely across Galloping Gertie?
A newspaper report on November 9, 1940 credited Dr. Jess W. Read
with being last person to drive safely over the bridge.
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Weird Fact #20: Never Salt Your Saddle
The legacy of that 1949 earthquake remains today. The cable
saddle on the East Tower (Tower 5) that spent 3 days on the bottom
of the Narrows remembers its tumble very well. Today, that cable
saddle rusts more quickly that the others. "It seems likely,"
says Kip Wylie, "that the cast steel absorbed just enough salt
water that paint doesn't bond to the surface as well as on the other
saddles, so it corrodes faster."
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Weird Fact #21: Gertie Rests 30 Fathoms Under
the Sea
Exactly where were Galloping Gertie's remains later that
day? On November 28, 1940 the U. S. Navy's Hydrographic Office released
current location information for the first Narrows Bridge: latitude
47:16:00 north; longitude 122:33:00 west; 30 fathoms deep.
Weird Fact #22: Lovejoy Collapses at Ruined
Bridge
On November 12, 1940, Mrs. Gertrude Lovejoy of Puyallup
was "stricken" and died suddenly while viewing the shocking
sight of the ruined Gertie.
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Weird Fact #23: Last Man Walking
Newspapers at the time, and over the years since 1940, have given
the title "Last Man on the Bridge" to Leonard Coatsworth,
Howard Clifford, Barney Elliott, and Professor Farquharson. Some
people have thought that the "mystery man" pedestrian,
college student Winfield Brown, was last.
At first, Leonard Coatsworth became most widely heralded as the
"Last Man on the Bridge." That may have been because newspapers
across the country published the reporter's dramatic story of his
flight off the doomed bridge and the loss of his car and dog Tubby.
Actually, in their departures from the bridge, Brown outran Coatsworth.
Coatsworth was already back safely when Clifford sprinted past Elliot.
Farquharson stayed after Elliot straggled to the safety of the Toll
Plaza. Farquharson, driven by the desire to record for engineering
science the fate of the failing bridge was the last man on Galloping
Gertie.
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Weird Fact #24: Here Comes the Bridge
It was a brisk Friday morning at the end of October 1998. Commuters
crossing the Narrows Bridge might not have noticed the bride and
groom. Airman First Class Bobby Collins and optician April Koons,
both 22 years old and in love, became the first couple married on
the Current Narrows Bridge at a brief ceremony. Why the Narrows
Bridge? Why not? "That sounds cool," said Collins when
the idea came up. After the ceremony, he told a local newspaper
reporter, "It's the greatest feeling in the world."
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Weird Fact #25: Reporter Banks on Bridge Security
"As secure as the Narrows Bridge," proclaimed
a large billboard for the Pacific National Bank along the 6th Avenue
route between downtown Tacoma and the Narrows Bridge. Photographer
Howard Clifford and reporter Bert Brintnall from the Tacoma News
Tribune saw the sign as they drove toward the Narrows Bridge on
the morning of November 7, 1940. Clifford made a note to get a photo
of the billboard on their return downtown. Within an hour after
the bridge disaster, a crew of workmen covered the sign with plain
white paper. By the time Clifford and Brintnall returned, there
was nothing to photograph. But, the story made it into the newspaper,
and thus, into history.
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Weird Fact #26: Coast Guard Comes In First --
and Last
First - and last - under the bridge was the Coast Guard Cutter,
Atlanta. The Atlanta became the first ship to pass under the Narrows
Bridge when it opened on July 1, 1940. On November 7th, the Atlanta
was on a routine trip northward through the Narrows. Only moments
before the center span fell into the Narrows, (probably around 10:30
to 10:45 a.m.) the Atlanta cruised beneath the rolling span. Chunks
of concrete hit her decks, but caused no damage. Commander of the
vessel, Lieutenant W. C. Hogan, watched closely as the bridge swayed
and twisted above them. "It looked as though it would surely
break up," Hogan told the newspapers later. When Gertie did
fall into the Narrows, Hogan radioed the news to his Seattle headquarters,
becoming the first to tell the world of the great disaster.
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Weird Fact #27: From Steel to Sausage
"Steel Men," is a 1962 folksong about bridge workers
and two different bridge collapses, but not Galloping Gertie. The
song, written by David Martins and sung by Jimmie Dean, is part
of the work song collection of the Folklore
Heritage in the Pacific Northwest.
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Weird Fact #28: Poetry in Motion
The 50th anniversary for the 1950 Narrows Bridge moved one
local poet, Bette Dawson, to pen a poem about its predecessor. The
poem takes the musical title for its own: "The Ballad of Galloping
Gertie." A copy of the work is at the Gig Harbor Peninsula
Historical Society Museum (GHPHSM)
in Gig Harbor.
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Weird Fact #29: How Many 7th Graders Does It
Take...?
How big was the 1940 Narrows Bridge? Use a teenager for a
yardstick. The deck was narrow, only 39 feet wide. That means it
would take about eight 7th-grade students (averaging 5 feet tall)
lying head-to-toe to stretch across the bridge. How about the length?
The bridge was 5,939 feet long. That would take about 1,188 of those
average 7th graders.
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Weird Fact #30: Top Box Office has 14 Year Run
The revenue collected on the first day of operations totaled
a whopping $11,541. That daily record held for an astonishing 14
years, until August 1964.
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