翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ James Findlay
・ James Findlay (Cincinnati mayor)
・ James Findlay (MP)
・ James Findlay (Vancouver mayor)
・ James Fingleton
・ James Finlay
・ James Finlay Bangladesh
・ James Finlay Weir Johnston
・ James Finlayson
・ James Finlayson (actor)
・ James Finlayson (industrialist)
・ James Finlayson (minister)
・ James Finlayson (politician)
・ James Finlayson (surgeon)
・ James Finley
James Finley (engineer)
・ James Finley (minister)
・ James Finley House
・ James Finley House (Chambersburg, Pennsylvania)
・ James Finley House (Harshaw, Arizona)
・ James Finn
・ James Finn Garner
・ James Finnegan
・ James Finnegan (singer-songwriter)
・ James Finney
・ James Finney (swimmer)
・ James Fintan Lalor
・ James Fiorentino
・ James Firth
・ James Fischer


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

James Finley (engineer) : ウィキペディア英語版
James Finley (engineer)

James Finley (1756〔Judge James Finley gravestone, Laurel Hill United Presbyterian Church cemetery, Fayette County, PA〕 – 1828), aka Judge James Finley, is widely recognized as the first designer and builder of the modern suspension bridge. Born in Ireland,〔 Finley moved to a farm in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, near Uniontown.〔 Elected a justice of the peace in 1784, he went on to become county commissioner in 1789, and a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives and Senate. From 1791 until his death, he was an Associate Judge for Fayette County.〔Kranakis, Eda, ''"Constructing a Bridge"'', The MIT Press, 1997〕


His Jacob's Creek Bridge, built in 1801 for US$600,〔 and demolished in 1833, was the first example of a suspension bridge using wrought iron chains and with a level deck. It connected Uniontown to Greensburg, spanning 70 feet (21 metres), and was wide.〔


Finley is also credited with designing and constructing a chain suspension bridge across Dunlap's Creek in Brownsville, Pennsylvania, in 1809. In 1820, however, the bridge collapsed under a heavy snow combined with the loads from a six-horse wagon team. The bridge was replaced by the Dunlap's Creek Bridge, the country's first cast-iron bridge, in 1835.〔''Structural Iron 1750–1850'', edited by R.J.M. Sutherland, Ashgate, 1998. pp. 18-19.〕
Other bridges built in accord with his patent include:
* Potomac River, 1807, 39 metre span
* Chain Bridge at Falls of Schuylkill, Philadelphia, 1808; 2 spans, eastern span 60.96 metre (200 ft), western span about 30.48 metre (100 ft); collapsed January 1816 under a heavy weight of snow.
* Newburyport, Massachusetts over the Merrimack River, 1810, 74 metre (244 ft) span, collapsed 1827
* Lehigh River, Northampton, Pennsylvania, retained in service until 1933
Although he has been credited with designing as many as forty bridges, only twenty sites have been identified. None of Finley's bridges survive.
Finley patented his system in 1808 and also published a paper on the principles of the deck-stiffened suspension bridge.〔Finley, James, ''"A Description of the Patent Chain Bridge"'', The Port Folio Vol. III, Bradford & Inskeep, Philadelphia, June 1810〕
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「James Finley (engineer)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.