Conde McCullough explained

Conde McCullough
Nationality:American
Birth Date:May 30, 1887
Birth Place:Redfield, South Dakota, U.S.
Death Place:Salem, Oregon, U.S.
Significant Projects:Crooked River High Bridge
Isaac Lee Patterson Bridge
Conde McCullough Memorial Bridge
Umpqua River Bridge
Siuslaw River Bridge
Original Alsea Bay Bridge
Cape Creek Bridge
Big Creek Bridge
Ten Mile Creek Bridge
Depoe Bay Bridge
Yaquina Bay Bridge

Conde Balcom McCullough (May 30, 1887  - May 6, 1946) was an American civil engineer who is primarily known for designing many of Oregon's coastal bridges on U.S. Route 101.[1] The native of South Dakota worked for the Oregon Department of Transportation from 1919 to 1935 and 1937 until he died in 1946. McCullough also was a professor at Oregon State University.

Early life

Conde McCullough was born in Redfield, South Dakota, on May 30, 1887.[2] In 1891, he and his family moved to Iowa where his father died in 1904.[2] McCullough then worked at various jobs to support the family.[2] In 1910, he graduated from Iowa State University with a civil engineering degree.[3]

Career

McCullough began working for the Marsh Bridge Company in Des Moines, Iowa, where he remained for one year.[2] He then went to work for the Iowa State Highway Commission.[2] He moved to Oregon in 1916 and became an assistant professor of civil engineering at Oregon Agricultural College, and the sole structural engineering professor at the school.[2] In 1919 he became the head of the Bridge Division of the Oregon Department of Transportation, making him personally responsible for the design of Oregon's bridges at a time when the state was completing Highway 101. His first bridge ODT was the bridge in the town called Rock Point 1919. Concrete pillars are still visible on both sides of the Rogue River.

His designs are well known for their architectural beauty.[4] McCullough advocated that bridges be built economically, efficiently, and with beauty.[1] He helped design over 600 bridges, many with architectural details such as Gothic spires, art deco obelisks, and Romanesque arches incorporated into the bridges.[5] In 1928, he graduated from Willamette University College of Law and passed the bar the same year.[6] In 1935 he moved to San José, Costa Rica to help design bridges on the Pan-American Highway. He returned to Oregon in 1937 to become the assistant state highway engineer.

Later life and legacy

In 1934 McCullough was granted an honorary doctorate from Oregon State University.[6] He published The Engineer at Law with his son John McCullough who also was an attorney.[6] McCullough died of a stroke at his home in Salem, Oregon on May 6, 1946.[7] He was close to his 59th birthday. He was interred in the Mount Crest Abbey Mausoleum at City View Cemetery in Salem. His wife Marie was interred there after her death in 1954. Following McCullough's death, the state of Oregon renamed the "North Bend Bridge" in his honor.

Bridges designed by McCullough

Bridge nameLocationYear completedTotal lengthCarries
Old Youngs Bay BridgeAstoria, Oregon1921U.S. Route 101
Oregon City BridgeOregon City, Oregon1922745 feet (227 m)Oregon Route 43
Dry Canyon Creek Bridgenear Rowena, Oregon1922101.1 ftU.S. Route 30
Myrtle Creek BridgeMyrtle Creek, Oregon1922597.1 ftOld Highway 99
Winchester BridgeWinchester, Oregon1923884 feetOregon Route 99
Lewis and Clark River BridgeAstoria, Oregon1924828 feetU.S. Route 101
Upper Perry Arch BridgePerry, Oregon1924134 feet (41 m)Old U.S. 30 off I-84
Ellsworth Street BridgeAlbany, Oregon19251,090 feetU.S. Route 20
Crooked River High BridgeJefferson County, Oregon1926464 feetU.S. Route 97
Rocky Creek BridgeLincoln County, Oregon1927360 feetU.S. Route 101
Depoe Bay BridgeDepoe Bay, Oregon1927312 feetU.S. Route 101
Big Creek BridgeLane County, Oregon1931180 feetU.S. Route 101
Ten Mile Creek Bridgenear Yachats, Oregon1931180 feetU.S. Route 101
Wilson River BridgeTillamook County, Oregon1931180 feetU.S. Route 101
Sixth Street (Caveman) BridgeGrants Pass, Oregon1931550 feetOregon Route 99
Cape Creek Bridgenear Heceta Head1932619 feet (188.6 m)U.S. Route 101
Isaac Lee Patterson BridgeGold Beach, Oregon19321,898 feet (578.5 m)U.S. Route 101
John McLoughlin BridgeOregon City, Oregon1933720 feetOregon Route 99E
Umpqua River BridgeReedsport, Oregon19362,206 feetU.S. Route 101
Siuslaw River BridgeFlorence, Oregon19361,568 feetU.S. Route 101
Original Alsea Bay BridgeWaldport, Oregon19363,028 feetU.S. Route 101
Yaquina Bay BridgeNewport, Oregon19363,223 feet (982 m)U.S. Route 101
Conde McCullough Memorial BridgeNorth Bend, Oregon19365,305 feet (1.6 km)U.S. Route 101

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Oregon Department of Transportation . Spanning Oregon's Coast . 2013-12-29.
  2. http://cce.oregonstate.edu/about/history/mac/hislife1.htm His Life: From Iowa State to Oregon State.
  3. Book: Hadlow, Robert W. . Elegant Arches, Soaring Spans: C.B. McCullough, Oregon's Master Bridge Builder . Oregon State University Press . 2001 . 0-87071-534-8 . 17 .
  4. Book: Smith, Dwight A. . Historic Highway Bridges of Oregon . Oregon Historical Society Press . 1989 . 242–243 . 0-87595-205-4 .
  5. Sens, Josh. Oregon Coast Bridges. Via, March 2003.
  6. http://cce.oregonstate.edu/about/history/mac/hislife_notjustbridges.htm Not Just Bridges.
  7. Oregon Death Index, 1898-2008