Building The Golden Gate Bridge

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @safemoneyenterprises5203
    @safemoneyenterprises5203 9 місяців тому +43

    My dad was a GI coming back on a troop ship from the Philippines at the end of WW11. After 21 days on that troop ship they went under the golden gate bridge. My dad was laying on his back looking up at underside of the bridge. Until his death at age 92 in 2008, he said the sight of that bridge was the most beautiful thing he had witnessed in his long life. LV cohocton ny

    • @gemmamudd7167
      @gemmamudd7167 4 місяці тому +1

      Thanks for sharing cool story

  • @electricg40
    @electricg40 6 років тому +261

    My grandfather was a bridge painter on the Golden Gate Bridge. He was very proud of the job they did.

    • @bruceperkins7253
      @bruceperkins7253 2 роки тому +10

      They're constantly going over every square inch of that structure looking for any signs of rust, and if found, they scrape it and get
      rid of all of it, and then the application of a fresh coat of orange paint. Then they move to the next spot. 365
      Days/yr. And when I say every inch I mean from the
      top of the towers, along the
      cables, the guardrails, and along the sides and under
      neath the span

    • @timotundy
      @timotundy 2 роки тому +6

      I’ve walked over that bridge multiple times. I get nervous at the midway point. It’s HIGH up. Amazing your grandfather painted the bridge.

    • @NasirDagamer21
      @NasirDagamer21 2 роки тому +4

      @@bruceperkins7253 the guy reading this comment is a NERD!!!!!!! Yes You

    • @christophercolumbus8944
      @christophercolumbus8944 2 роки тому +2

      did he tell how long it was going to last?

    • @kevinjay5908
      @kevinjay5908 2 роки тому +2

      I’ve heard 250 years

  • @ldchappell1
    @ldchappell1 7 років тому +1563

    My grandfather worked on the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge. He had a rough life and a drinking problem but working on the Golden Gate Bridge was one thing he was really proud of. He passed away in 1966.

    • @samboslc
      @samboslc 7 років тому +94

      God Bless your grandfather and his courage

    • @jeffsmith2022
      @jeffsmith2022 7 років тому +74

      God bless him and all the men who worked on the bridge...

    • @grefmercado8968
      @grefmercado8968 7 років тому +8

      This is dev'll brigade combat

    • @elizamagana5555
      @elizamagana5555 7 років тому +15

      I have conmemorative coins de golden gate ignagurecion and paper too

    • @hhchung8602
      @hhchung8602 7 років тому +1

      ldchappell1 ?9(

  • @Max-lx5pi
    @Max-lx5pi 2 роки тому +39

    Having served on a Nuclear Submarine in the 70s, I have seen the Golden Gate Bridge from below as we left Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo.
    After serving , stayed living in the City, I drove the bridge quite a few times, walked on it and flew over it. One of the most beautiful iconic structures that represent America.

  • @randyr.212
    @randyr.212 5 років тому +100

    What a massive feat of engineering to build this back in the 1930's. To think of the enormous amount of weight on all the spans across the bridge and to have the tolerances right and have everything match up perfectly. Just incredible.

  • @georgewu5
    @georgewu5 6 років тому +851

    At 23:00, I was moved to tears. I was sailing on s.s. Cleveland under the bridge in August 1956 from Hong Kong to start my American dream at the age of 19. We rode on top of the bridge the next day. I was awed by the sight of the greatness of the engineering ! At first I was a full time waiter, then part time in college. And finally I passed the registration exams and became an architect, I never forget what I experienced when I was on the Golden bridge that day ! George Wu, A.I.A. ARCHITECT, NCARB 2018-4-6

    • @johnlarson7858
      @johnlarson7858 6 років тому +34

      georgewu5 Thats a wonderful memory. It’s clearly evident that seeing and experiencing this engineering marvel first-hand played a large role in the path you would chose for yours and your family’s lives.
      It is said that this was a time when no one, who saw the bridge as you did that day, had ever seen anything like it. Simply put: nothing like it, or even close to it, actually existed.

    • @tuckergreen2138
      @tuckergreen2138 6 років тому +7

      georgewu5 you were moved to tears? Ok.

    • @befuddled2010
      @befuddled2010 6 років тому +31

      Thank you for sharing your experience. It takes real people sharing personal experiences to make history come alive to the rest of us. I grew up in the Bay Area and lived in the city for a time and appreciate your experience. We share the emotional bond to bridge you cite. Cheers my friend!

    • @charleslindsay2973
      @charleslindsay2973 6 років тому +52

      I think tucker green could use a dose of reality. Join the the Marines and we will make tears flow from your eyes.

    • @RB747domme
      @RB747domme 5 років тому +2

      Charles Lindsay what or where is tucker green? I'm afraid I'm not from the west coast, so I don't really know the names of places over there. The connection of the Marines and the Golden Gate Bridge is not one that I know. Explain please?

  • @greyhamlogan2255
    @greyhamlogan2255 Рік тому +43

    And to achieve this marvel, there were no computers, no CAD, just incredible engineering skill of the designers and builders. Congratulations 🎊 😊😊

  • @gkprivate433
    @gkprivate433 3 роки тому +37

    I am an old engineer. I really did use a slide rule as a freshman in college. I so appreciate the skull sweat that went into the design and construction of things back in the 20s and 30s. Slide rules, pen and paper calculations. Just brilliant work

    • @ApartmentKing66
      @ApartmentKing66 11 місяців тому +2

      Indeed! Things were built to LAST in those days, even more so if you took good care of it. Even though you worked for an employer/conglomerate, you still took pride in your work. Otherwise, word got out that it was junk, whatever it was. Nowadays, everything's built to fall apart to create the need to buy another. Pride of workmanship is long gone.

  • @jflow5601
    @jflow5601 6 років тому +124

    The Golden Gate bridge is one of the most beautiful structures that man has ever created. It's design is timeless. Traveling on this bridge as the fog rolls in over the bay makes me marvel at its builders.

    • @drats1279
      @drats1279 2 роки тому

      You are correct, it's a shame it is now adjacent to one of the most pathetic shit hole cities in this country, democRAT communist-dominated San Francisco.

    • @trentcruise3084
      @trentcruise3084 2 роки тому

      @@drats1279 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @kelvinf45
      @kelvinf45 2 роки тому +1

      Debatable opinion, but i respect it

    • @beefjuicer4808
      @beefjuicer4808 2 роки тому

      That’s what happens when a nations run by White people. Blacks built nothing. Ghews steal everything

    • @stumarston6812
      @stumarston6812 2 роки тому +1

      @@kelvinf45 But will you respect his opinion in the morning?

  • @VlajCo-di8lc
    @VlajCo-di8lc 7 місяців тому +15

    This was the time when America was truly great. RIP good old times, people, culture, friendship, tollerance, paternity, prosperity and diversity.

    • @dwightmcqueen5771
      @dwightmcqueen5771 5 місяців тому +1

      @VlajCo-di8lc we can again but it starts with each of us we must speak out against the wrong doing of Washington DC and work to end russophobia and get along with others and respect each other regardless of our views religions race whatever. And don't be afraid to speak the truth no matter what and be willing to fight to defend the truth. Each one of us can make a difference I promise. I don't want credit for anything but I feel good knowing I have changed many people views about Russia just by talking to those who where against Russia but after I shared the truth about Russia and showed them proof that Russia isn't the moster that our cia owned media wants you all to think and our so called government. They try so hard to stir up hate because Russia won't kiss there rear ends

    • @VlajCo-di8lc
      @VlajCo-di8lc 5 місяців тому

      @@dwightmcqueen5771 I know all of that. You are absolutely right. I would like to see America patriotic again, protecting their families and culture.

    • @gulfmarine8857
      @gulfmarine8857 2 місяці тому +1

      Ttump hates Unions and Union made projects. All his merch is Chinese made.

    • @HerrPoopschitz
      @HerrPoopschitz 28 днів тому

      @@dwightmcqueen5771what a strange diatribe. Stop watching whatever ‘news’ you consume.

  • @edrodrigues3939
    @edrodrigues3939 6 років тому +278

    My Father who was a Ford Model A/T Mechanic in San Francisco drove across the Golden Gate Bridge on the 1st day. He was rather proud of that fact and mentioned it periodically.

    • @artysanmobile
      @artysanmobile 5 років тому +4

      Ed Rodrigues I’ll bet! How could anyone ever forget that?

    • @toddwieland7664
      @toddwieland7664 5 років тому +7

      With a cigar and a fedora we'll go

    • @sleeplessaquarius
      @sleeplessaquarius 5 років тому +4

      Oh wow! Thats pretty cool! :)

  • @eduardomirandaroxas8056
    @eduardomirandaroxas8056 6 років тому +122

    To all those men who spend their time and labor for this bridge every one of you is a hero for you proved the impossible a possible truth, America is truly blessed because of you .

    • @Builder99
      @Builder99 5 років тому +2

      I agree 100% you are so right...These men earn our respect...and I'm a proud Canadian...married to a great American...

    • @jacobwynn8566
      @jacobwynn8566 3 роки тому +1

      A friend of mine tried to destroy the Golden gate bridge but he was stopped by me and Jacob w

  • @nobodyspecial6436
    @nobodyspecial6436 5 років тому +7

    A safety net used in the 30’s.... that was pretty forward thinking and safety belts as well!!! For those reasons 19 hard working men made it home at the end of a hard day... I bow my head in a moment of silence and respect to the ones that built all these structures and to the not so fortunate ones who paid the ultimate sacrifice for progress..... May you all rest in peace.... I may be a Canadian but I still am proud of both of our countries..and the brave men that built them

  • @ratnampeddipaga8530
    @ratnampeddipaga8530 5 років тому +13

    We need to Praise the workers , technicians and the engineers who were involved in this unique project.. Though they didn't have the technology which we have today they did their level best .. Today we are enjoying their talent and hard work..They deserve appreciation forever..

  • @motormouthalmighty
    @motormouthalmighty 3 місяці тому +1

    just an utterly remarkable achievement and feat of engineering!bordering on unbelievable!joseph strauss was one of history's true pioneers!

  • @sandyt4343
    @sandyt4343 6 років тому +150

    There’s never a mention of the crane operators who worked on these jobs. Such talent to run those old. Friction drive winches , waterfall spools, and not kill our injure the crews. Such a tense job every day would be really tough.

    • @mikebrabant4170
      @mikebrabant4170 5 років тому +5

      Did anyone lose their life building this bridge?

    • @annamariahultquist8445
      @annamariahultquist8445 5 років тому +4

      I really admire the concentration and dedication of these stable and sensitive hard working men. Thank you so much.

    • @Music.cigars.2024
      @Music.cigars.2024 5 років тому +3

      I don't blame them for being alcoholics IF they were

    • @jerryvivanco4352
      @jerryvivanco4352 5 років тому +6

      Then do your own documentary and mention the crane operators!!!!

    • @347chas
      @347chas 5 років тому +2

      Please enplane waterfall spools, i've not heard that term, thank you.

  • @Starfire777
    @Starfire777 7 років тому +213

    I was born there in sight of this AWESOME BRIDGE!! 1932, Everyone was So PROUD of this Bridge they would say THEY had a Part in Building this Bridge! "MY PARENTS BUILT THIS BRIDGE" etc and so on.I am 85 now and quite AMAZED at this FEAT some would say it could NOT be BUILT!!

    • @michaelwills1926
      @michaelwills1926 7 років тому +6

      777Starfire it has stood the test of time. Hats off to that intrepid generation.

    • @Starfire777
      @Starfire777 6 років тому

      AT the BOTTOM on UP!!

    • @twstf8905
      @twstf8905 6 років тому +7

      For an OLDER gentleman, you SURE do have EXCEPTIONAL UA-cam language SKILLS!
      Knowing RIGHT where to add INFLECTION, and JUST which words to EMPHASIZE in order TO make YOUR point!
      WELL done, MATE!! 👍✌

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe 6 років тому +2

      +TWSTF 8 Do you think it's inevitable that we lose our language skills? It's not.

    • @MaXGTS1
      @MaXGTS1 6 років тому

      @@twstf8905 Sounds like you want to take him out on a date.

  • @miketwocoat
    @miketwocoat 10 років тому +239

    those workers were fearless and skilled at balancing so high up, nerves of steel.

    • @circusboy90210
      @circusboy90210 6 років тому +32

      all people back then where just better people. playground had things almost 40 feet high , nobody sued if their stupid kid got hurt . we are so weak today.

    • @godzofegypt1732
      @godzofegypt1732 5 років тому +6

      People did die before the net was put up. Unfortunately ten people died when something heavy fell on the net and ripped it.

    • @slomoe5409
      @slomoe5409 5 років тому +8

      This was back when even women in this country had balls........

    • @Urbicide
      @Urbicide 5 років тому +4

      Today's OSHA would have gotten their panties all bunched up at all of what would be considered violations being committed back then. Hard hats & a safety net were considered state of the art protection. It seems we go from one extreme to another. Regardless, life is too short, without man devising ways, or wars, to make it even shorter. Enjoy life while you are able.

    • @bobv8219
      @bobv8219 4 роки тому

      Direction

  • @johnprice7303
    @johnprice7303 6 років тому +34

    I live in England, I caught my first glimpse of the bridge was from a Pan Am 747 as it circled above the bay, I was so excited that I almost wept.
    The first thing my wife and I did after checking into our Hotel was to order a cab, which took us to, and across the bridge, waited for me to take a few photos then took us back across the bridge to our hotel in the city. Our holiday itinerary always included a visit to the bridge, so next morning we repeated the trip, with the huge windows and raised seats, which gave us a different perspective of bridge and surrounding areas. This happened before 911, but we have never forgotten our first trip to the US.

    • @sleeplessaquarius
      @sleeplessaquarius 5 років тому +3

      Hi! Great story! Thanx for sharing! :)

    • @piknick111
      @piknick111 3 роки тому +1

      I grew up in Northern California but I remember the first time as a kid visiting it felt other worldly. Quite amazing the scale by today’s standards and the weather it sits in.

  • @nebtheweb8885
    @nebtheweb8885 5 років тому +40

    Here is a little tidbit I found about the painting of the Golden Gate Bridge...
    _"Many misconceptions exist about how often the Bridge is painted. Some say once every seven years, others say from end-to-end each year. Actually, the Bridge was painted when it was originally built. Until 1965, only touch up was required. In 1965, advancing corrosion sparked a program to remove the original lead-based paint (which was 68% red lead paste in a linseed oil carrier). The removal continued to 1995. In 1965, the original paint was replaced with an inorganic zinc silicate primer and acrylic emulsion topcoat. In the 1980s, this paint system was replaced by a water-borne inorganic zinc primer and an acrylic topcoat. The Bridge will continue to require routine touch up painting on an on-going basis."_ The Golden Gate Bridge Organization

    • @xolclint
      @xolclint 5 років тому

      My grandfather worked on painting the bridge. We lived in San Francisco.

    • @sharksport01
      @sharksport01 4 роки тому +2

      When i was a kid i was so confused why it wasnt gold.

    • @Humble-iq5ue
      @Humble-iq5ue 3 роки тому +1

      Is it true that it takes so long to paint that by the time they reach the end they must go back and start over

  • @Uftonwood2
    @Uftonwood2 6 років тому +8

    Lets be thankful that someone had the foresight to film this epic piece of engineering, designed and built with all those component parts marshalled and delivered without a computer, which is one thing we couldn't do today.

    • @btpcmsag
      @btpcmsag 6 років тому

      Notice, the trains delivering all the steel were powered by *steam locomotives* -- before the advent of diesel engine drives.

    • @hotrd91614
      @hotrd91614 3 роки тому

      Not knowing then there would be a UA-cam

  • @TWOCOWS1
    @TWOCOWS1 7 років тому +262

    i absolutely LOVE these wonderful, old American presentations. informative, directly to the point. The presentation voice is always authoritative, and yet confrontational and soothing. NO PC--thankfully, but just the simple unbridled facts. THANK YOU FOR POSTING.

    • @haroldclark4485
      @haroldclark4485 5 років тому +9

      Nice how they don't mention the guys that fell in the concrete to be buried. The safety belt looked real enough - to be used where they didn't slow down production. Safety isn't PC if you're the one walking the planks.

    • @markrobinson-he7xj
      @markrobinson-he7xj 5 років тому +2

      Agree, ...my impression also,,,maga

    • @braddocke.hutton7392
      @braddocke.hutton7392 5 років тому +13

      Yeah I'd love to hear someone modern talk with this type of paternal authority to his voice. Very proper and yet un-PC sounding. I'm sure he referred to Indians as "The Red Man" and Tribespeople as "Savages", and yet I don't detect any disrespect in his character.
      People back then were very interested in the progress of man over mother nature. It was a kind of innocence they possessed because they didn't yet need to look at the repercussions of unbridled expansion yet.
      The American family unit was taken for granted and it was just understood that each person would do their best before god and could trust his government to have his country's best interest in mind.

    • @davidearea242
      @davidearea242 5 років тому +6

      @@braddocke.hutton7392- Couldn't agree more. Sadly, look where we are now...

    • @braddocke.hutton7392
      @braddocke.hutton7392 5 років тому +7

      @@davidearea242 Modern SJW's have no respect for the men who built this country.
      They see construction and development as inevitable byproducts of Eurocentric Patriarchal Societies, not as amazing accomplishments or examples of teamwork and coordination.
      One friend I recently spoke with was taught in college that slaves built this country and he stood behind that.
      I couldnt shake my head hard enough.

  • @garryrainey6300
    @garryrainey6300 5 років тому +20

    My Grandmothers brother Paul was an engineer at Phoenixville Steel and was on this project. I met him when I was 23..Wonderful Man!

  • @take942
    @take942 6 років тому +239

    4 years to build the Golden Gate Bridge in the 1930's. 5 years to re-build a simple 2 lane roadway bridge over a highway in 2011.

    • @floydmayweather5469
      @floydmayweather5469 5 років тому +22

      That’s what health and safety has done to the industry

    • @JohnConnor-qi2yz
      @JohnConnor-qi2yz 5 років тому +15

      Guess you guys don't know about the people that died while building the bridge.

    • @Rangerman69420
      @Rangerman69420 4 роки тому +9

      @@Kaje_ 11 people dead and 19 severely injured on top of the Natives and multinational workers being treated like slaves yeah we really have become weak haven't we...

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito 4 роки тому +4

      Maybe the company re-building bridge was not as rich as one building golden gate bridge. Amish still do farming with horses.

    • @johnypitman2368
      @johnypitman2368 3 роки тому +5

      Bureaucrats

  • @carguybd
    @carguybd 3 роки тому +9

    Built in the ‘30s, it’s stunning today and always will be. I’ve been across it many times and it’s always special to think of the talented people who designed and built it way back when.

  • @NJOwensGoFastAngelYYZ
    @NJOwensGoFastAngelYYZ 9 років тому +31

    As a Journeyman Ironworker I am heartbroken that the writters of this documentary didn't bother to write in the true grit, the commitment and courage, and the sacrifices of the raising gang (Union Ironworkers) .. So much attention was paid to the engineers and planners .. So little credit given to the men who truly take these projects from sketches and mathematical figures and bring them into real-world existence .. FORGET THE PAPER PUSHERS .. America, you should all know that the great structures that are seen as iconic in this country are built by Ironworkers !! Golden Gate Bridge, Brooklyn Bridge, Sears Tower, 1 WTC, St Louis Arch, Etc. Etc. ... UNION IRONWORKERS !!!

    • @madisonelectronic
      @madisonelectronic 9 років тому +1

      +Nathan Owens Why not explain to others how ironworkers and other building trades scam their lunch hours so by rotating the lunch hours among trades you collectively sit on your asses one third of the day? get a connector to explain it if you are too dumb.

    • @topbanana8438
      @topbanana8438 7 років тому

      Tacoma Narrows Bridge?????

    • @stannousflouride8372
      @stannousflouride8372 7 років тому +1

      That remarkable story is told in this excellent video:
      The Men Who Built The Golden Gate Bridge
      ua-cam.com/video/iPmOyzIiC4g/v-deo.html
      The first major job that required safety harnesses, hardhats, and respirators.
      The safety net was proposed by Strauss and paid for by Bethlehem Steel.

    • @jcroopjr
      @jcroopjr 7 років тому

      N.J. Owens On the money brother!

    • @theodorezatorski7168
      @theodorezatorski7168 6 років тому

      Without the construction personnel this bridge would remain a set of illustrations on a drawing board.

  • @builtfromscratch4105
    @builtfromscratch4105 3 роки тому +17

    My grandfather worked on the golden gate, He died 4 years ago . He would tell me story’s about him being 800 feet in the air

    • @johnedwards5516
      @johnedwards5516 8 місяців тому +1

      Tell us your favorite story

    • @waiouru1971
      @waiouru1971 5 місяців тому

      @@builtfromscratch4105 I honestly get the heebies from a H&S angle watching the men nonchalantly leaning on a crane hook that high up - "the safety net proved successful saving 19 lives"
      Sheeesh how many were lost b4 that!?

  • @mrdavidk14
    @mrdavidk14 7 років тому +47

    When I lived in SF in the 1960's and '70's, I used to go fishing at the pier near Fort Point. Used to park with the girlfriend at night near the fort also. Great memories that I will never forget. Loved that city during those years.

  • @BillKinsman
    @BillKinsman 2 роки тому +4

    Every time I drive over The Golden Gate Bridge, I am in awe of the scale of the cables that hold the roadway up! It is still an incredible feat of engineering. This is a great documentary of the achievement.

  • @leesantos9711
    @leesantos9711 5 років тому +12

    Those men were true unsung heroes , 30 lost their lives ! R.I.P.

  • @FredFairbanks
    @FredFairbanks 7 років тому +128

    Everyone's favorite bridge, and rightly so. As a Coast Guard sailor, I have made 50 or more trips in and out under the bridge. The most dangerous trip was on Christmas Eve, 1940 in the worst storm in history to hit the Golden Gate, and we were trying to respond to an S.O.S. from the lumber schooner, Daisy Gadsby. It took us 15 hours to get from Hunters Point to the lee of the Farallon Islands. We were ordered to return to Port, and that is when every man on our cutter stained his scivies. This was the Ariadne, 165 feet long, 600 tons dead weight. The waves were so huge we were picked up like a surf board and we began to fly. When we slowly slipped back into the trough behind was when every man was in a panic of fear, due to the danger of being swamped by a wave, stern first, and sinking stern first, all men and the cutter being lost. The old hands estimated we were flying at 45 mph as we went under Golden Gate bridge and Alcatraz loomed all too quickly but we survived.

    • @jpstenino
      @jpstenino 6 років тому +6

      thank you much appreciated would really like to hear more details have you written anything up?

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 6 років тому +2

      You say every man sitted in his britches.

    • @frankhajek4821
      @frankhajek4821 6 років тому +11

      No disrespect meant, but if this is a 1st person account, to be on board in 1940, the poster would be at least 95 years old today. Coast Guard service members are known as Coast Guardsmen formally and Coasties informally. There are no sailors in the Coast Guard.

    • @hankreedball2852
      @hankreedball2852 6 років тому +1

      I did the same in Navy warships .. awesome view

    • @robertallen6710
      @robertallen6710 6 років тому +2

      Not my favorite bridge..Mackinaw Bridge is more awesome...

  • @master-kq3nw
    @master-kq3nw 7 років тому +120

    these workes were brave people.

  • @chrisevans5259
    @chrisevans5259 6 років тому +8

    One of the greatest constructions of the 20th century, it's masterpiece of workmanship and engineering , that still stands with a proud presence into the 21st century.

  • @ThomasAffoltertevis
    @ThomasAffoltertevis 5 років тому +11

    A true national treasure -- reallly a world treasure. Not because it's an impressive architectural feat (which it is) but because it's deservedly one of the world's iconic manmade landmarks with things like the Eiffel Tower and Taj Mahal. I lived some years in San Francisco and I never got over the beauty of the bridge and how it fits its natural setting, surely one of the worlds' beautiful places.

    • @sleeplessaquarius
      @sleeplessaquarius 5 років тому

      I agree! Ive always wanted to go to this bridge!! I love bridges.

  • @bicyclist2
    @bicyclist2 5 років тому +7

    This video may be old but it doesn't matter. I hope to see it some day. This is the kind of thing we used to watch at school in social studies class in the 80's. Thanks.

    • @larrydenning4343
      @larrydenning4343 5 років тому

      You need to see it indeed. Anyone who thinks man made structures cannot exist in harmony with nature is dead wrong. I was once blessed to view the bridge from the Marin Headlands on a clear night with a full moon shining over the city. By far the most amazing sight of my lifetime.

  • @samboslc
    @samboslc 7 років тому +109

    And it still stands today; a tribute to the engineering and laborers of the time.

    • @theodorezatorski7168
      @theodorezatorski7168 6 років тому +11

      This bridge was designed without the aid of computers. No autocad. No hand held calculators.

    • @lifewithalicia9474
      @lifewithalicia9474 3 роки тому

      @@theodorezatorski7168 to o

    • @kingsman3087
      @kingsman3087 3 роки тому +4

      99.9 percent of people that ride over that bridge never pay a single thought to the design and construction of that bridge

    • @The-San-Francisco-Treat
      @The-San-Francisco-Treat 2 роки тому

      @@kingsman3087 I am the 1 percent that does

  • @lucreziia100
    @lucreziia100 5 років тому +16

    They said it couldn't be done! But in the true American "can do" spirit and through much hard work, they did it! Hauling the metal parts to the other side of the country to be constructed into that great bridge! All hail Joseph Strauss and all the incredible men who built it against all the odds. These are also the Great Americans, as much as Washington or the Founding Fathers.

  • @henrywashington3732
    @henrywashington3732 6 років тому +97

    Much prop's to the men that built this bridge. I'm chicken walking on a finished bridge. These guy's worked off beams and wires.

    • @RichR65Ct
      @RichR65Ct 5 років тому +9

      Henry,these guys aren't much different than we are,most people at the beginning are petrified at first.For most people it starts with a 6ft ladder then a 12ft then a 40ft scissor lift ect...Next thing you know its just routine. 1st thing in the morning getting way up high in the air can be a rude awakening but sometimes for a lot of people that's the difference between a paycheck and sitting at home especially during the great depression.

    • @Thibs1082
      @Thibs1082 2 роки тому

      Nothing like straddling a 8 inch wide ibeam a few hundred feet above the ground as the sun rises.

  • @billnorris6501
    @billnorris6501 6 років тому +1

    Everytime I visit San Francisco, my wife and I walk the the bridge over to Marin, climb up to the overlook on the NW side just to view and marvel at the structure, then we climb down to have ourselves a little picnic on the Marin side. Such a peaceful time. Then we take the stroll back to the Presidio.

  • @jamiemoffatt50
    @jamiemoffatt50 5 років тому +8

    The engineering that went into projects like this is incredible!

  • @shawnmccrary5526
    @shawnmccrary5526 6 років тому +11

    Great bridge. Drove across in 2011. Incredible feet of engineering and construction.

  • @NoizyBoyUS
    @NoizyBoyUS 3 роки тому +3

    Man, I sure do take pride to be born and raised in the bay after watching this historic moment. Marvelous icon. I will remember these skilled workers whenever I drive over this bridge.

  • @joebledsoe257
    @joebledsoe257 7 років тому +172

    Just think, all who had anything to do with design or construction are all dead and gone now, and it still stands.

    • @batvette
      @batvette 5 років тому +8

      Possibly not. Its likely some construction workers who were very young working on the latter part may be still alive. There are quite a few people alive now over 100 years old. But I do believe theyre all dead. Just sayin its possible.

    • @usaturnuranus
      @usaturnuranus 5 років тому +6

      @@batvette So, just an FYI - according to Wikipedia "With the death of Jack Balestreri in April 2012, all workers involved in the original construction are now deceased." But who knows, maybe there are still one or two people who played a part at a very young age, carrying rivets or sweeping up work areas, etc.?

    • @davejones5640
      @davejones5640 5 років тому

      That's a stupid thought.

    • @erichenry386
      @erichenry386 5 років тому

      @@davejones5640 lol dang

    • @luisaaguilarmoyeda9420
      @luisaaguilarmoyeda9420 5 років тому +2

      @@davejones5640 you're the stupid one.

  • @DarkKnight-mf8ub
    @DarkKnight-mf8ub 6 років тому +18

    I’m from England but I love the Golden Gate Bridge, it amazes me how back then they built a bridge like that, also how much weight them two towers have to carry, beautiful

  • @dougwigley8072
    @dougwigley8072 3 роки тому +7

    I've only driven over this bridge once about five years ago. It was an awesome experience.

  • @DYLANJOPLIN1
    @DYLANJOPLIN1 8 років тому +24

    Just went to walk across this beautiful bridge on September 10, 2016!

  • @laurenceobrien1402
    @laurenceobrien1402 6 років тому +21

    I had the privilege of walking across this monumental structure when I visited San Francisco last November and let me tell you it is pretty awesome. The only thing I feel that is missing from it is a big huge stars and stripes on the top as a tribute to world class American engineering. Greetings from Ireland.

    • @dougimmel
      @dougimmel 3 роки тому +1

      Mr. O'Brien, thank you so much for that.

  • @iacsse6381
    @iacsse6381 5 років тому +10

    May the souls of all the seniors, RIP .

  • @glenn3914
    @glenn3914 2 роки тому +1

    this is the third video i ve saw on building the golden gate bridge, i m still in awe of what they did back then, those guys had balls working at that height and in that weather over the bay, its coming close to 100 years that the bridge has been up, a testament to great building and great men

  • @ericjohnson9468
    @ericjohnson9468 4 роки тому +3

    As an Ironworker, I worked one summer on the Golden Gate Bridge in the early 80’s.…an experience I’m proud to have garnered.
    As a retiree by then, I met Al Zampa who survived a fall from the GGB, making him a member of the ‘Halfway to Hell’ club.
    Today there’s another suspension-bridge across the Carquinas Straits in the North Bay, named in honor of Ironworker Al Zampa.

  • @3melendr
    @3melendr 5 років тому +18

    Built with the slide rule; the engineer's most important design tool.

    • @hyliedoobius5114
      @hyliedoobius5114 5 років тому +3

      3melendr not just the slide rule, but lots of higher math, including calculus of hyperbolic functions, differential equations, and some calculations with up to 37 variables. Charles Ellis single-handedly calculated every load and force at every point. The man was incredible!!

  • @azycray4801
    @azycray4801 5 років тому +5

    My grandfather (31yo) and my mother (12yo) walked across the bridge on opening day. She loved to tell the story how they walked and she rode upon his shoulders to get across. One of her fondest memories. I'm glad she is gone and cannot see what that once beautiful city of her birth has turned into.

  • @g.j.koster1986
    @g.j.koster1986 6 років тому +11

    What a great era. And a beautiful piece of architecture of course.

  • @michaelvette7659
    @michaelvette7659 2 роки тому +1

    This feat of building, engineering, shows what mankind can accomplish when everyone works in harmony towards a common goal. I enjoyed reading some of the comments, just as much as the film itself. All added a personal touch. One thing I would've like to have seen is what initial bridge designs were turned down as well as over-engineered designs and proposals, because what they came up with. Is such an awe aspiring melding of esthetics, form and function.

  • @travisphelps3351
    @travisphelps3351 5 років тому +1

    I helped string the cables for a couple weeks but my time there was running short and I had to come back to my own time but I'm proud to have been a part of this magnificent project,I miss the friends I made there.

  • @liveandletotherslive.5458
    @liveandletotherslive.5458 3 роки тому +4

    This is one of best video on engineering.
    I'm from India and loved this work.
    Great respect to all the workers and laborers and engineers and builders and those injured and dead while working.
    If I was shown this video in 2009 before completing my High school I would aspire to become engineer.
    Very nice video.

  • @JoseLopez-oj2ni
    @JoseLopez-oj2ni 5 років тому +3

    For everyone that commented of their families veterans construction workers I have respect for their families for making the golden gate bridge a reality. My hat off solute and my respects to them all veterans workers.

  • @jameswitt2981
    @jameswitt2981 6 років тому +81

    Had a neighbor who, also, work on Golden Gate..
    Tough S.O.B. but good heart..
    Drank whiskey like a fish..
    R.I.P

    • @davejones5640
      @davejones5640 5 років тому +5

      Fish don't drink whiskey.

    • @paulhudnall6460
      @paulhudnall6460 5 років тому +5

      @@davejones5640 Since you are obviously a Captain of Sarcasm, Let me re-word James' post for you... He drank like a fish & whiskey was his drink of choice. Does that help?

    • @YesYouAreAbsolutelyCorrect
      @YesYouAreAbsolutelyCorrect 5 років тому +3

      ​@@paulhudnall6460do you re-word all people who word their words incorrectly?

    • @paulhudnall6460
      @paulhudnall6460 5 років тому

      @@YesYouAreAbsolutelyCorrect I think you mean word sentences incorrectly... And no, this is my 1st time. Well, & 2nd time...

    • @Anonymous-or4ru
      @Anonymous-or4ru 5 років тому +4

      Paul, stop being a tit.

  • @johnallenismynameandmusici2796
    @johnallenismynameandmusici2796 2 роки тому +1

    I went under this beauty many times when I was in the Coast Guard. It's quite a sight when you're out in the Pacific and you finally spot it in the scope. It feels like you're home.

  • @davidturner2113
    @davidturner2113 5 років тому +6

    Wow that was an unbelievable piece of engineering work.

  • @channelofdamian8594
    @channelofdamian8594 7 років тому +34

    Humans truly are amazing

  • @stevemorin9545
    @stevemorin9545 5 років тому +8

    wow what an amazing feat of enginering for that time and is still standing through the test of time gotta have nerves of steel to work on a project like this back in the day .thanks for the history lesson airboyd

  • @larrypeters3675
    @larrypeters3675 5 років тому +1

    I visited SF a couple times and never got the chance to drive over the bridge. I took one of those boat tours that went out in the bay and as the boat went closer to the bridge you're just left in awe of the shear size of it. I mean it's towering and colossal! It's just an amazing thing to see and hopefully one day I can actually take a drive over in one day.

  • @bobtodd6163
    @bobtodd6163 5 років тому

    I'm from England and had the pleasure of visiting San Francisco back in 1999. Travel across the bridge and did a boat trip under it, truly awesome as I remember.

  • @jsmcguireIII
    @jsmcguireIII 5 років тому +7

    Did not know my home town of alameda was so involved in this spectacular project.

  • @saileshramcharan3445
    @saileshramcharan3445 5 років тому +34

    Strauss took 3 years to study and imagine this feat. What a genius.

    • @hyliedoobius5114
      @hyliedoobius5114 5 років тому +11

      SAILESH RAMCHARAN That’s Total BS. Strauss was “the drawbridge king”, designed little bridges for small rivers, his original design was a hideous monstrosity. The suspension design was a concept of Leon Moissieff, modified and adjusted by Charles Ellis. Strauss’s biggest contribution was getting the Northern Cal counties to back the bonds.

    • @briansmith8967
      @briansmith8967 3 роки тому +2

      @Jake Stockton He is correct, that's who he is. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Gate_Bridge

    • @briansmith8967
      @briansmith8967 3 роки тому +1

      @Jake Stockton Yeah, well, there are a lot of documentaries about Strauss and how he wasn't the main designer of the bridge. Do some research.

    • @packingten
      @packingten 3 роки тому

      @Jake Stockton But you THINK you are.

    • @brnmcc01
      @brnmcc01 8 місяців тому +1

      @@hyliedoobius5114 Yup, and Leon had previous experience designing the Manhattan Bridge

  • @SFLRailFan
    @SFLRailFan 12 років тому +21

    No doubt Joseph Strauss was a brilliant visionary and a well accomplished civil engineer. The Golden Gate Bridge earned it's place among the other wonders of the world.

  • @Raptorman0909
    @Raptorman0909 6 років тому +1

    That was one of the best films about the construction of a major project I've ever seen. The construction details go far beyond what you normally get and by the end you have a pretty good idea of the engineering and design. Why can't we make documentaries like this today?

    • @btpcmsag
      @btpcmsag 6 років тому +1

      The building of the foundation for the south tower could be an entire movie all on its own. This film didn't mention the fact that the construction was done underwater, but only initially. You can't pour concrete underwater. The mix proportions get messed up with too much water, no good. So the first project was to build a containment dam surrounding the footing, which rose all the way to the surface of the bay, where the water was then pumped out, leaving an open pit over 100 feet deep for the men to build the foundation inside. The footing had to be far below the bottom of the bay, so too the walls of the dam had to go down below the bay floor as well.
      Long story, but that was why the north tower was finished before the south tower was started, because it took all that time just to put the foundation down and raise the platform underwater, so the south tower would have something to stand on. It was a world class first for a structure built underwater (even though it wasn't literally underwater, because they had open air to work in, protected from the surrounding water by a temporary dam made of sheet metal). This is why the naysayers were howling that it was impossible, but the American engineers didn't let negativity stand in the way; they knew what materials could do, so they just did it, while everyone outside complained. Interesting.
      Today, the whiners are the ones in charge, making the laws and ruining the state.

  • @RollingEasy
    @RollingEasy 5 років тому +2

    My Old Man was a Steel worker and so was I..... But we never worked on anything as stunning and as magnificent as this.... You need to give a lot of credit to the engineers and of course to the men in the workshops too. I just cannot give enough praise to all 'Can Do' people where so many will search endlessly to find every reason under the sun as to why things 'can't be done'... The world is full of those. No laminated and questionable grade cheap Chinese steel here for sure.

  • @ixsachi
    @ixsachi 10 років тому +29

    Awe-inspiring Engineering.

  • @corgimom5626
    @corgimom5626 4 роки тому +9

    I am probably the only one looking at this through 2020 eyes freeking out. These men were fearless... I would be terrified. Also I loved the part where they were like " We take safety into mind, we have a net. It saved 19 people. We also have hard hats" To think those people would have just fell in the water without that sketchy net.

    • @SurferJoe46
      @SurferJoe46 3 роки тому +3

      A lot of people DID fall to their deaths. Once a large piece of equipment fell off the track and sent through the net, taking 10 guys with it. Yes ... people died on this job. And impact at 75+ MPH pretty much assured they wouldn't survive.

    • @RC-ku8pr
      @RC-ku8pr Рік тому

      I'M A 66 AND DEFINITELY ENJOYED THIS VIDEO... I WISH I COULD HAVE THANKED EVERY SINGLE MAN WHO BUILD THIS BRIDGE ESPECIALLY KNOWING IT ONLY TOOK 4 YEARS I WAS BLOWN AWAY UNBELIEVABLE THIS IS WHAT U DEFINITELY CALL HARD WORK . SO SO BEAUTIFUL

  • @alfredoochoa3452
    @alfredoochoa3452 6 років тому +5

    i was just there with the family, crazy how it only took 4 years to make! insanely massive bridge when your up close and personal

  • @dracorpgroup
    @dracorpgroup 4 місяці тому

    Now, I am seventy-eight years of age, and I grew up learning about all the fantastic things that our American friends and neighbors were doing and building. Many magazines, such as Popular Mechanics, were piled high in our study room at the back of the house. It is a remarkable story all the way into the Apollo Moon rockets and all the engineers behind this effort. Most notably, I remember the speech by the then President John Kennedy about committing the country to putting humans on the moon and returning them safely to the Earth. What a monumental achievement!!!
    My hope is that the USA will gather its strength and achieve even more remarkable projects.
    Keep building. Best of luck.

  • @AyeCarumba221
    @AyeCarumba221 2 роки тому +1

    Growing up in Berkeley, one of my all time favorite activities is walking across that bridge. It is impressive not only because of its size, but the Art Deco architecture is extraordinary. Everything is so wonderfully thought out and designed, right down to the very cool light fixtures. When my own kids were old enough, I took them on a field trip to The City, and yes you bet, we walked across the bridge.

  • @tobytwirl04
    @tobytwirl04 5 років тому +12

    Marvellous!..and I think I'm clever when I put a shelf up!

  • @awesomepaintingcompany2955
    @awesomepaintingcompany2955 5 років тому +58

    All done without mordern day computers Just amazing

    • @craigwall9536
      @craigwall9536 5 років тому +2

      They didn't have Spell Checker, either...

    • @davidsaucedo6102
      @davidsaucedo6102 5 років тому +4

      Awesome Painting Company Just balls and whiskey. Amazing

    • @jonessenoj6753
      @jonessenoj6753 5 років тому +2

      A little too amazing !

    • @jaywunder13242
      @jaywunder13242 4 роки тому +3

      Slide rules and shit. Pretty impressive.

    • @scotpens
      @scotpens 3 роки тому

      How about the Brooklyn Bridge? It was first opened to traffic in 1883, back in the horse-and-buggy days.

  • @tronaboron_99
    @tronaboron_99 5 років тому +19

    THE GOOD OLD DAYS WHEN STEEL WAS REAL! 🦾🤖🦾🏗️

  • @iacsse6381
    @iacsse6381 5 років тому +2

    Proud to be a part of the worlds largest industry Constructions

  • @granskare
    @granskare 5 років тому +1

    friends who had lived in SF talked about the fog. I have driven across the Mackinaw Bridge in Michigan. The guys who build the metal forms are to me real heroes!

  • @Garymayes24
    @Garymayes24 5 років тому +5

    Great documentary, loved this. The commentary was second to none.

  • @Vggincidently
    @Vggincidently 5 років тому +14

    I wonder if a project like this could be done today? Materials, techniques, regulations. I would love to see a comparison of costs. Of course one “minor” detail could never be repeated, the fact that it was never done before! God Bless all involved and inspired.

    • @bryanescalante2871
      @bryanescalante2871 3 роки тому

      2 years late..... Yes projects like these can happen ... Only difference is that is a bit much easier then it was back then....

  • @Eidoo66
    @Eidoo66 11 років тому +9

    Love the challenges of engineers ( structural & civil )

  • @orwellknew9112
    @orwellknew9112 2 роки тому

    Now look at SanFrancisco. That a difference 85 years makes. From proud builders to hopeless squatters. That this bridge was built in the 1930’s is truly astonishing. When you look at the automobiles of that era and how primitive they were , it’s hard to fathom that the technology existed to engineer and build such an enormous structure that still stands to this day.
    I can’t deny it, I sorely miss the enthusiasm and certainty that I hear in the voices of people, long gone and mostly forgotten. I have a Sirius account just so I can listen to the old radio programs from the 1940’s and 1950’s in my car. There is something so different about them, something important that we have lost.

  • @bazjr86
    @bazjr86 6 місяців тому +1

    Amazing feat of engineering!

  • @ieast007
    @ieast007 5 років тому +17

    Wow, that's very interesting. I never knew they had to bring all that steel in from Pennsylvania. This was quite a feat when you consider the Bay Bridge was constructed in parallel.

    • @ranger-1214
      @ranger-1214 2 роки тому

      And over east on the Nevada-Arizona border a massive dam was being built across the Colorado River to impound what would become Lake Mead. Those massive jobs helped us recover from the crash of 1929 and the Great Depression.

  • @Citricut2
    @Citricut2 4 роки тому +9

    As an European, crossing the Golden Gate Bridge on a convertible Mustang on the way to San Francisco was the absolute highlight of my West Coast road trip. Praise to the engineers that made this possible.

  • @liammellows-hz3pf
    @liammellows-hz3pf 5 років тому +8

    I was half expecting to watch,"From here to eternity" with the music at the start.

  • @laprepper
    @laprepper 2 роки тому +1

    What a beautiful documentary. I work in aerospace but watching these skilled men was amazing. All that modular pre fab stuff was ahead of its time!

  • @dozerboy67
    @dozerboy67 2 роки тому

    Every year they sandblast and repaint the whole bridge! The square footage to complete such a task boggles my brain. They were hard men who worked on a once in a lifetime project. My grandparents came from the mid west and settled in frisco back in the 30’s

  • @Rob99552
    @Rob99552 9 років тому +55

    Amazing massive engineering feat, especially for it's era in he 1930s, what an exciting time that must have been to live in - but is still one of the most awe inspiring structures on the planet.

    • @Aualan
      @Aualan 8 років тому

      when this is amzing
      (and i agree with you)
      then what is about the pyramids
      the colloseum or any other historical construction :)

    • @andrewbowers_
      @andrewbowers_ 6 років тому

      Alano Morito: A bridge tops them all because it connects worlds. Especially a bridge of this magnitude.

    • @hyliedoobius5114
      @hyliedoobius5114 5 років тому

      The Art Deco touches are also a big plus. An obscure residential architect named Irving Morrow and his wife designed all those cool features.

  • @shawndamccormick278
    @shawndamccormick278 6 років тому +15

    thank you for posting, we all need to remember our history, good and/or bad! You are appreciated.

  • @carrie9744
    @carrie9744 7 років тому +43

    My Uncle was a deep sea diver on this Bridge and many others...

    • @gregparrott
      @gregparrott 5 років тому +3

      Carrie Your uncle was a mighty brave soul to be a deep sea diver in 1936. The tidal currents at the mouth of the bay are severe and equipment back then was very primitive.

    • @347chas
      @347chas 5 років тому +3

      I wish he had gone into detail how they secured the bases to the sea floor.

  • @andybelaska8591
    @andybelaska8591 2 роки тому +1

    Worked on the Golden Gate in 1985 for Dillingham tocola 6 months what a site

  • @hugo_kruger
    @hugo_kruger 5 років тому +60

    I am a structural engineer that have worked on quite a few megaprojects. I am still not sure how the engineers of the time thought of these solutions.
    It is asif we lost some kind of thinking when computers, FEM and autocad took over the profession.

    • @bicyclist2
      @bicyclist2 5 років тому +3

      Agreed!

    • @V8_screw_electric_cars
      @V8_screw_electric_cars 5 років тому +6

      Probably because people spend most time screwing with that autocad instead of actually designing things

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 5 років тому +3

      Yah but that's all just water under the bridge now ain't it

    • @negativeindustrial
      @negativeindustrial 5 років тому +1

      Do you work in CAD or do only the designers below you? I’m a truss designer and I certainly am made better by the tools available to me. They allow me to be more creative in my solutions by handling some of the more mundane aspects.

    • @V8_screw_electric_cars
      @V8_screw_electric_cars 5 років тому +6

      @@negativeindustrial So why nothing has design to it anymore? Look at this bridge it's not only functional but it has beautiful art deco styling…

  • @Anyone553
    @Anyone553 7 років тому +145

    Made in U.S.A. !!! Very impressive!!!!!

    • @artysanmobile
      @artysanmobile 5 років тому +5

      Jimmy Salcedo Awesome and groundbreaking civil engineering takes place in literally every nation on earth. Typically, the technologies that permit such marvels were envisioned and mastered in countries of Europe. Settle down there jingo!

    • @jimmycline4778
      @jimmycline4778 5 років тому +4

      Peter Yianilos come on man, give the USA some credit without crying about some other country doing the same

    • @bossmack187
      @bossmack187 5 років тому +1

      @@artysanmobile you're an asshole. 🖕🏻

    • @mareksykora5197
      @mareksykora5197 4 роки тому

      @@artysanmobile I would say the most experiences these builders got from building of skyscrapers.

    • @alexcarrillo5510
      @alexcarrillo5510 4 роки тому

      Yeah but the Oakland Span Bridge when it was damaged from the 1989 quake took 13 years to build - Thank You Former Governor Arnold for buying steel from CHINA... !!!

  • @laopang91362
    @laopang91362 3 роки тому +12

    Greatest of engineering at the time. It was an amazing achievement.

  • @JamalMcCoy-tx2vz
    @JamalMcCoy-tx2vz 7 місяців тому +1

    A magnificent job well done 👍

  • @mariovaldez1883
    @mariovaldez1883 2 роки тому

    My grandmother came to this country and this was one of the first places she ever went to…an icon that has lasted generations!

  • @user-vf4pb9dt1r
    @user-vf4pb9dt1r 6 років тому +32

    My great grand father worked on building this bridge he died in 2007 three days after my great grand mother died, my mother told me he died from grief after my great grand mother passed away.

    • @juliewatson4314
      @juliewatson4314 5 років тому +1

      Yes. It's called heartbreak syndrome. Happens when someone you live passes and you cant get over them not being there . You can look it up

    • @sleeplessaquarius
      @sleeplessaquarius 5 років тому +1

      Im sorry :(

  • @Musicradio77Network
    @Musicradio77Network 8 років тому +5

    Joseph Strauss was the chief engineer for the Golden Gate Bridge, and Leon Moisseiff was the designer who made this bridge. He has been a designer for the Manhattan Bridge which was the first bridge in New York City built in 1909. He went on to designed other bridges until 1940 when the original Tacoma Narrows Bridge (aka Galloping Gertie) ended in a tragic disaster.

    • @ApartmentKing66
      @ApartmentKing66 8 років тому +2

      I thought the Brooklyn Bridge was the first in New York City...in the 1880s.

    • @pennyenicks7905
      @pennyenicks7905 8 років тому +1

      Yep, the Brooklyn Bridge opened in 1883. It was the first over the East River.

    • @ApartmentKing66
      @ApartmentKing66 8 років тому +2

      Penny Enicks Then it looks like Musicradio77 needs to do a little more thorough fact checking.