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Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Joseph Speight and the Waco Suspension Bridge


One of the most famous landmarks in Central Texas is the Waco Suspension Bridge in McLennan County.  Waco was founded on the banks of the Brazos River just below where it is joined by the Bosque River.  For years, the only crossing nearby was Shapley Ross' ferry that connected what is now East Waco, connecting with the road extending to Dallas, to downtown Waco at the extension of Austin Avenue to the river, connecting a main route to Marlin.  It was also one of several Brazos River crossings of the famed Chisholm Trail.

After the Civil War, certain Waco residents including J. W. Speight, J. B. Earle, H. M. Hood, A. J. Buchanan, O. J. Downs and J. M. Burney held a preliminary discussion to consider a project to build a bridge to span the Brazos in Waco.  Following this discussion, they drew up a petition to the Texas Legislature to grant them a charter to undertake the project.  On November 1, 1886, a charter was granted allowing the group to build an operate such a bridge for 25 years.  The bridge could be funded as a toll bridge and would have a limited monopoly in that no other bridge could be built within 5 miles of Waco.

Speight then called a meeting to be held May 8, 1868 that was attended by himself, Earle, Downs and Burney and they resolved to create the Waco Bridge Company.  It would be stock company, funded by a subscription of 2,500 shares offered for sale to the public at $20/share totaling $50,000.  In the two weeks that followed, the initial offering was subscribed and the first meeting of the Company was held May 25, 1868.  57 individuals signed the minutes including Speight, his daughters Jessie and Sally and future governor Richard Coke.  Speight was nominated to serve as President but Coke nominated and spoke in favor of J. T. Flint who would be elected president of the company.  Initial directors were Speight, Trice, Coke and Wallace.  Coke was a distant relative of Speight's by virtue of the fact that he was married to Mary Evans Horne, whose brother L. L. Horne married Ophelia Jenkins .  It is unknown whether Coke's lack of support disappointed Speight, but there is no obvious evidence that it did.  Speight, Prather and Owens were appointed to draw up bylaws and Speight made a motion that Flint also be added to this group.  Flint opined that he felt the bridge could be built for $40,000.

Things progressed rapidly from this point with the selection of the New Jersey firm of John A. Roebling as designer of the bridge.  Flint was authorized to go to New York City to meet with the firm, set up the contract with Roebling and order the initial materials.  Engineer Thomas M. Griffith was engaged to head up the project.

The location chosen was in the same general area as the Shapley Ross Ferry boarding sites.  On the west side the connecting street was redesignated as Bridge Street.  About three acres were acquired on the east side from Earle's Waco Manufacturing Company.  Bids were let for the masonry portion of the contract and a local company named Trice Brothers was chosen as the supervising contractor.  Trice also furnished the brick and the McCrary and O'Neal company was engaged to furnish the wooden planking.  Engineer George B. Dutton who was also serving as Waco City Engineer was engaged to string the cable.

On March 15, 1869, a capital call of the last 20% of the initial stock subscription was made when it became obvious that costs were going to exceed the initial subscription of $50,000.  Flint was authorized to obtain a loan for another $15,000, which he did.  In addition, the company authorized a second subscription of stock to raise another $25,000.  Construction progressed toward its conclusion.

One expenditure noted was the approval of $13.13 for the purchase of whiskey for the bridge hands as the project neared its end.  The bridge was completed by December 1969 at a total cost of about $141,000 and the first tolls were collected January 1, 1870.  Funding came from the initial and secondary stock subscriptions and from bonds and loans.  The project included the toll house on the west side which still stands today.

Tolls were collected for a few years, but almost immediately opposition to the toll feature began to be voiced, despite the fact that the tolls were needed to pay for the operation and cost of the bridge.  The bridge company continued to own and operate the facility for more than a decade, though one by one the initial officers went on to other pursuits or left due to illness, death or other reasons.  Flint resigned in November, 1873; Coke resigned because he had been elected governor of Texas; Speight died in 1888.

Other notable events in the timeline included a petition by W. A. Taylor to extend his streetcar line over the bridge, which petition was denied.  In 1878, Thomas Griffith was reengaged to fix a sag that had developed in the cabling.  In 1884 and again in 1885, there were floods that came close to submerging the downtown area with the flood in 1885 being noted as the worst flood in the short history of the town.

Opposition to the toll feature reached its peak in the 1880s.  After discussions, effective September 1, 1889, McLennan County offered to purchase 100% of the stock of the Waco Bridge Company.  The offer was accepted and control of the structure was effectively transferred on that date. The cost to the County was equal the shareholders' investment of $75,000.  Simultaneous with the above transaction, McLennan County conveyed the structure to the City of Waco for $1 and the bridge has since been operated without tolls.



The Roebling firm would go on to complete the famed Brooklyn Bridge.  In the meantime, it completed other suspension bridges, but had the wire rope design not worked in Waco, the Brooklyn Bridge might have had to be redesigned.  To the untrained eye, the similarities between the two structures are easily noted, though the Brooklyn Bridge is clearly a much larger and more complex project.  In contrast to the Waco Suspension Bridge, the Brooklyn Bridge took 13 years to complete, at an estimated cost of $15,500,000.

Over the years, the wood planking was upgraded and replaced.  In 1913, the City replaced the older steel with higher gauge steel to handle the heavier traffic and trusses were added to accommodate pedestrian traffic.  The brick towers were rebuilt and stuccoed, giving the structure virtually the appearance it has today.  The bridge was designated in the National Register of Historic Places in 1970 on its centennial anniversary.  It was retired from vehicular traffic the following year but is still in continuous use for other traffic and events.

Note: This article draws heavily on the fine work done by the late Roger N. Conger, who obtained and studied the minutes of the Waco Bridge Company and added his own research.

© 2015, all rights reserved.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Dr. George W. Truett's accidental shooting of Police Chief Arnold

George W. Truett was the husband of the former Josephine Jenkins of Waco, the daughter of Warwick Hoxie Jenkins.  George and Josephine were introduced by Dr. and Mrs. B. H. Carroll. 

117 years ago today, the paragraph below appeared in the Bryan, Texas Eagle:

The Gun of Rev. George W. Goes Off Accidentally While Hunting.

“Dallas, Feb. 5.-J. C. Arnold, chief of police of this city, was accidentally shot yesterday near Cleburne, Tex., while hunting, by Rev. George W. Truett, pastor of the First Baptist church here. The gun of the minister was accidentally discharged, sending a load of birdshot into Captain Arnold’s leg. The wound is not considered dangerous.”

George Washington Truett (1867-1944) was the long time pastor of First Baptist Church. He was born on a farm in North Carolina. He and some of his brothers moved to Whitewright, Texas in 1889 where he joined the local Baptist church and shortly thereafter accepted a call to the ministry. He’d been educated at Hayesville Academy in North Carolina and had served as a teacher before coming to Texas and in 1891 accepted a job to serve as financial secretary of Baylor University in Waco, Texas. The school was heavily in debt and Truett is credited with raising $92,000 to pay off Baylor’s entire indebtedness. In 1893, he then enrolled as a student, graduating in 1897 with a bachelor’s (AB) degree.
He’d served as a student pastor at East Waco Baptist Church and in September 1897, he accepted the pastorate of First Baptist Church, where he would remain until his death from bone cancer in July 1944.

James C. Arnold was born and raised near Wellington, Georgia in 1851 to W. B. and Martha Arnold. He left home to accept work on a farm in Mississippi in 1866. In 1869, he moved to Upshur County, Texas to work for the a son of one of the farm’s owners who operated Camp’s Ferry on the Sabine River. Arnold worked at the Ferry until a year after it was sold in 1871. He then joined a meat contracting company that supplied beef to businesses building the first rail lines from Longview west. From there he moved to Fort Worth to be engaged in the same business, but the railroad suspended operations. He would remain in Fort Worth in the grocery business until moving to Dallas in 1874 where he would briefly work in the meat and hide business until he was hired onto the police force of Dallas.

Arnold served as a patrolman until 1879 when he was appointed deputy city marshall. He continued to rise through the ranks until he was elected as Chief in 1881. As chief he was well regarded and was reelected many times. At the time of the accidental shooting, he had been a part of the Dallas police force for 24 years.

On February 4, 1898, Truett, Arnold (a member of First Baptist church) and Rev. G. W. Banner set out in a buggy to hunt birds at the invitation of former Sheriff Boyd of Johnson County near Cleburne. In the afternoon, Truett’s shotgun accidentally discharged, hitting Chief Arnold in the leg. Truett and Banner quickly tied off a tourniquet to stop the flow of blood. They were successful in getting him to local Dr. Harris who treated the wound. Satisfied that Chief Arnold could make the trip back to Dallas on the scheduled Santa Fe train, they brought Arnold to his home at 451 Commerce Street. At first, Arnold’s condition appeared to be stable, given the wounds, but they called in a local doctor for a consultation. Arnold was given fluids to compensate for the loss of blood, but late on the afternoon of Feb. 5, he began to decline and he died at his home at about 8 PM that evening.

The official cause of death was listed as a heart attack, but Truett blamed himself for the accident and was deeply depressed at the loss of his close friend. Truett had decided to leave the ministry, but was persuaded by friends and church members to continue, which he ultimately did. Truett would later reveal that he had also received a vision of Jesus standing beside him saying “Be not afraid, George. You are my man from now on.” Truett would go on to serve as pastor of First Baptist for a total of 47 years before succumbing to cancer. When he was no longer able to preach because of his final illness, he offered to resign, but he was so beloved by the congregation that they refused to accept his resignation.

To learn more about Truett, please see George W. Truett: A Biography by Powhatan W. James and Thy Will Be Done: A Biography of George W. Truett by Keith E. Durso.

Also please see the web page below for more information about Chief Arnold: http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jwheat/obits/obits98.