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Great Plains dwellers have been moving great big things
from one place to another for a long time--things like teepees, claim
shanties, railroad depots, barns, and even grain elevators. At times whole
towns were moved to new locations when anticipated rail lines failed to
materialize. In recent years, many a historic home has been moved out
of harms waybe it rising water, the wheels of progress,
or the wrecking ball.
This day in 1898 was moving day for one of the heaviest structures ever
moved across the prairie. OK
Across the prairie is a
bit of an exaggerationthis thing only moved about two and a half
feet. But still
getting it moving and getting it to stop in the right
place involved expert engineering, dangerous work, and a measure of luck.
According to the Bismarck Daily Tribune the weight of the thing was calculated
at 9 million pounds.
Railroad engineers move very heavy thingsthats their stock
in trade. But this move was a bold undertaking for Chief Engineer E. H.
McHenry and crew. Their task was to move the concrete and granite pier
that holds up the east span of the Northern Pacific bridge over the Missouri
River. The structure rests on landon the eastern slope, in Bismarck.
This is no small bridge. The Mighty Missouri was a major obstacle when
the rails reached Bismarck from the east in 1873. Crossing the Red, the
Sheyenne, and the James had been relatively routine. The rails stopped
at Bismarck for nine years, except for temporary tracks laid on the river
ice, until the bridge was completed in 1882. The delay was due in part
to the railways financial problems, but the expense and the physical
challenge of bridging the Missouri were contributing factors.
The east pier was problematic from the beginning. Though it rested on
a 20-foot thick concrete foundation well below the surface of the ground,
the giant structure was sliding toward the river at 3 to 4 inches per
year. After futile attempts to stop the movement, engineers set out to
excavate and modify the foundation and slide it back into position in
1898. Preparation for the big move lasted eight months.
On moving dayMay 29ththe massive pier sat ready to move on
a system of steel rails and rollers that had been inserted between the
old and new foundations. All of this was down in a deep excavation. As
pressure was applied with giant screws and levers, the pier began to move,
but so did the earth on the west side of the excavation. As a great crack
developed in the earth, work was stopped and the workmen scrambled out
of the pit to safety.
Minutes later, the wall of the excavation caved in, falling against the
west side of the pier. The Tribune reported, For perhaps a second
the ponderous granite cylinder trembled at the impact. Then there was
a slight movement of the whole pier in a forward direction, and
then
the huge stone structure slid forward at a speed which seemed impossible
for so ponderous a mass
The entire pier shot forward grandly, majestically,
smoothly upon its steel rollers
and then stopped dead upon the foundation
nature
had assisted the work of the engineers
The move was an astonishing success, but didnt totally solve the
problem. According to Edward C. Murphy of the North Dakota Geological
Survey, the east pier has continued to move over the years and additional
countermeasures have been needed
but nothing so dramatic as 9 million
pounds of granite moving majestically back to its proper place.
Written by Russell Ford-Dunker
Sources:
Murphy, Edward C. Movement of the East Pier of the Northern Pacific
Railway Bridge at Bismarck, N.D. North Dakota Geological Survey.
Retrieved from http://www.ndsu.edu/instruct/schwert/ndgs/bism_brg.htm
Pier Is Moved Bismarck Daily Tribune, 30 May 1898, p. 3.
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