Persistence: the Brooklyn Bridge

By | August 29, 2025

[August 29, 2025]  As children we used to tease each other occasionally by telling our friends we had a real “good deal” for them.  We would sell them a bridge … called the Brooklyn Bridge … at a great price.  This teasing game likely came about in the 1800s when the bridge was associated with political corruption, and yet the idea of persistence.

Fast forward to today.  The average New Yorker knows very little about or even cares about the history of this bridge but their life is made better by what happened 130 years ago in this tale of persistence.  The bridge today spans the “East River” between Manhattan and Brooklyn, New York.

The gripping story of the bridge design and construction and the monumental social, political, and engineer challenges that are part of its history, is not well known.  Taking 14 years of construction to complete, the odds of it being built seemed overwhelming.  Opening on May 24, 1883, the world took notice of a great accomplishment of mankind.

The story of “The Great Bridge” is also about the remarkable engineering family, the Roeblings.  Robert’s vision and his son Washington’s skill, persistence, and courage were instrumental in what happened.  But also Washington’s wife Emily who trained herself as an engineer to help her caissons’ disease” debilitated and bedridden husband finish the last 10 years of construction is another remarkable story.

“Thousands of people were put to work. Bodies were crushed and broken, lives lost, notorious political empires fell, and surges of public doubt constantly threatened the project. The Brooklyn Bridge is not just the saga of an engineering miracle; it is a sweeping narrative of the social climate of the time, replete with heroes and rascals who helped either to construct or to exploit the great enterprise.”  – David McCullough, The Great Bridge: The Epic Story of the Building of the Brooklyn Bridge. Simon and Schuster Paperbacks, 1972

Construction of the bridge was immensely controversial and not because people believed it would likely to fall into the river.  It was built in one of the busiest waterways in the world, doubling in costs, a new construction design with suspension cables, and inferior wire to name a few obstacles.

Through it all, Robert, Washington, and Emily Roebling, the “sand hogs”, and other construction workers labored long and hard to see the joining of two large cities.  Today, the Brooklyn Bridge is easily the most recognizable bridge due to its design.  A true story and great example of persistence.

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Author: Douglas R. Satterfield

Hello. I provide one article every day. My writings are influenced by great thinkers such as Friedrich Nietzsche, Karl Jung, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Jean Piaget, Erich Neumann, and Jordan Peterson, whose insight and brilliance have gotten millions worldwide to think about improving ourselves. Thank you for reading my blog.

11 thoughts on “Persistence: the Brooklyn Bridge

  1. mainer

    Gotta love Gen. Satterfield and his bridges. LOL.
    🏙️🗽🌉

    Reply
    1. New York Yankee Fan

      And we continue to take crap panned out by the “others” who love us but won’t admit that they are really wanting to be New Yorkers themsevles. I ♡ New York.

      Reply
  2. Darryl Satterly

    More great stories from Gen. Doug Satterfield. I will also refer folks to today’s article which is a review of a good on WWII American engineers – the 291st Combat Engineers. Great read and link to a soldier who lost their helmet 🪖 back then and it’s returned to the soldier’s daughters today. Gen. Satterfield is a good storyteller. 🫡

    Reply
  3. Larry Michen

    A great story that deserves retelling to our kids to show them that when life is tough and we overcome, then we are happy. The pursuit is not happiness itself but the struggle/journal/adventure that matters most.

    Reply
    1. Pink Cloud

      Point well taken, Larry and you are starting to sound like Gen. S.

      Reply
  4. Paulette_Schroeder

    Oldie but goodie. This is an earlier post by Gen. Doug Satterfield that helped establish him as a visible, respected senior leader outs on t,he Internet. Let’s all pray that Gen. S. keeps these articles coming. I also recommend that he publish another book, and this time based on his “Letters to my Granddaughter.” That will be great because it would be a collection of stories from Gen. S.’s recollections of his childhood. And they are funny as heck.

    Reply
  5. King Henry VIII

    Nicely written about America’s most famous bridge. Built in a time of greatness.

    Reply
    1. Albert Ayer

      Indeed, iconic!! 🇺🇸 American iconic. Shows us what can be done when we don’t have a bunch of people claiming victimhood and wanting government handouts.

      Reply
  6. JT Patterson

    Yep, my personal favorite bridge in America. It’s iconic.
    “Through it all, Robert, Washington, and Emily Roebling, the “sand hogs”, and other construction workers labored long and hard to see the joining of two large cities. Today, the Brooklyn Bridge is easily the most recognizable bridge due to its design. A true story and great example of persistence.” – Gen. Doug Satterfield
    🌉

    Reply

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