Joseph Strauss
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- For the composer, see Josef Strauss
Joseph Baermann Strauss (January 9, 1870 - May 16, 1938) was an American engineer and designer.
He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio to an artistic family, having a mother who was a pianist and a father who was a writer and painter. He graduated from the University of Cincinnati in 1892, serving as both class poet and president. Upon graduating from the University of Cincinnati, Strauss worked at the Office of Ralph Modjeski, where he began to innovate the design of bascule bridges. He was Chief Engineer of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California. He placed a brick from the demolished McMicken Hall at the University of Cincinnati in the south anchorage before the concrete was poured. Strauss was also designer of the Burnside Bridge (1926) and the Lewis and Clark Bridge (1930). He also wrote a poem saluting the Sequoia of Northern California and Southern Oregon. He died in Los Angeles, California.
[edit] External links
- Structurae: Joseph Baermann Strauss (1870-1938)
- The American Experience, PBS
- Biography by the ASCE
- [1]
- History and Heritage of Civil Engineering by the ASCE
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