American Bridge Company was founded in April 1900, when
J.P. Morgan & Co. led a consolidation of 28 of the largest U.S. steel fabricators and constructors.[2] The company's roots extend to the late 1860s, when one of the consolidated firms,
Keystone Bridge Company, built the
Eads Bridge at
St. Louis, the first steel bridge over the
Mississippi River and still in use. In 1902, the company became a subsidiary of
United States Steel as part of the Steel Trust consolidation.
The company pioneered the use of steel as a construction material; developing the means and methods for fabrication and construction that allowed it to be widely used in buildings, bridges, vessels, and other plate applications.[citation needed] It went on to do work across the nation and around the world.
During World War II, the company built warships for the U.S. Navy. In 1944, American painter
Thomas Hart Benton recorded the construction and launch of LST 768, producing numerous drawings and a painting, Cut the Line.[3]
The town of
Ambridge, Pennsylvania, was an American Bridge
company town (thus the name "Ambridge"), and is near their current headquarters of
Coraopolis, Pennsylvania. Both municipalities are on the Ohio River near Pittsburgh, with access to many steel suppliers, as well as to waterborne and rail transport, to allow shipment of components and subassemblies.
Notable projects
This is a representative list, not an exhaustive one.
^Historic American Engineering Record. The firm listed as the builder of a project is usually not the designer. In most cases, the bridge designer or building architect does not select the construction company, which is chosen by the owners/developers. The designer and the contractor work together closely to get the job done.