Louis Wernwag
Louis Wernag was a bridge builder in the United States in the early 19th century.
Early life
On leaving school, in order to evade military service, he was secreted by a shepherd in the mountains, who directed his attention to the study of astronomy, natural history, and other scientific subjects. In 1786, he made his way to Amsterdam and then to Philadelphia.United States
His earliest venture in the United States was the building of a machine for making whetstones. Soon afterward he began to build power mills and bridges. While conducting this business he purchased land containing large quantities of white oak and pine timber in New Jersey, from which he got out, about 1809, the keel for the first U. S. frigate built at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.Bridges
In 1810 he erected a bridge across Neshaminy Creek on the road between Philadelphia and New York City. The following year, he built a drawbridge across Frankford Creek at Bridgeburg, a "cantilever" type with a center panel that could be raised to allow vessels with tall masts through.His third wood bridge was built across the Schuylkill River in 1812-13 at Philadelphia. This structure, known as the "Colossus of Fairmount," consisted of a single arch, the span of which was 340 feet. In consideration of its length of span — the longest ever erected for a wooden bridge — solidity and strength, "The Colossus" was regarded as one of the wonders of the world.
In 1813, he built a bridge across the Delaware River in New Hope, Pennsylvania, which was 32 feet wide and had two wagon lanes and two lanes for pedestrians. He constructed the first Conowingo Bridge in 1818 and rebuilt Theodore Burr's Port Deposit Bridge in 1824, both crossings of the Susquehanna River in Maryland.
In 1836, Benjamin Henry Latrobe II designed the first viaduct and bridge over the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal and Potomac River at Harper's Ferry, Virginia, now West Virginia, for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
The bridge, a wooden truss structure, was built by Wernwag in 1836-1837.
Over his 27-year career, Wernwag built 29 bridges. These are listed in the Engineering News of August 15, 1885, p. 99.