Thomas William Moseley

Thomas William Henry Harrison Moseley (November 28, 1813 March 10, 1880) was a builder and designer of wrought-iron arch bridges. He is best known for his "Wrought-Iron Lattice Girder Bridge" patent of August 30, 1870. The only known surviving example of this type of bridge structure is the Hares Hill Road Bridge located in Chester County, Pennsylvania.[1]

Biography

Thomas W.H. Moseley was born near Mt. Sterling, Kentucky on November 28, 1813. He died in Scranton, Pennsylvania on March 10, 1880. He was referred to at times as "Gen. Moseley" because of his time as state adjutant-general in Ohio in the 1840s to early 1850s. He got started in business in Cincinnati, Ohio in the 1850s, which is when Zenas King was on board. By 1861, T.W.H Moseley had made his move to Boston, Massachusetts, and Zenas King started his own company in Cleveland, Ohio. By the early 1870s Thomas Moseley was living in Pennsylvania; Philadelphia first, then in Scranton.[2]

Patents

Patent NoPatent DateInventor Name /City,StateDescription /SignificanceExample /TypeRef. Link
16572February 3, 1857Thomas Moseley /Boston, MassachusettsOutlines distinctive details in remaining Moseley bowstring truss bridges.Hares Hill Bridge
59054October 23, 1866Thomas Moseley /Boston, MassachusettsOutlines distinctive details in remaining Moseley bowstring truss bridges.Hares Hill Bridge
103765May 31, 1870Thomas Moseley /Boston, MassachusettsOutlines distinctive details in remaining Moseley bowstring truss bridges.Hares Hill Bridge
cont'dcont'dcont'dcont'dcont'dcont'd
gollark: No it's not. If you have no comparison benchmark it is not "higher than usual".
gollark: Does she have counts from before?
gollark: Does she count non-13 numbers?
gollark: What if I want to *not* die, beeoid?
gollark: I see firecubez is continuing with their incorrect reasoning wrt. death.

See also

References

  1. "Hares Hill Road Bridge, Spanning French Creek, Kimberton, Chester County, PA". Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record/Historic American Landscapes Survey.
  2. Biography information provided by Robert M. Jackson
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.