Search 
     
 
 Most Popular Searches:  Thomas Paine | Thomas Jefferson | Music | Great Depression | Edison  
 
American Heritage MagazineApril 1976    Volume 27, Issue 3
Browse Archives

Browse our American Heritage Magazine issues from 1954 to the present.

Archives >>

 
 
 
 
 
POSTSCRIPTS TO HISTORY


 

BENEATH THE RIVER


Now in her ninety-fourth year, Laura Merrill of Wellesley, Massachusetts, is setting the record straight on a small but significant role she played in one of the great engineering triumphs of the turn of the century:
Recently, in going over a scrapbook I kept when I was a young woman, I came across several newspaper clippings from the years 1906 and 1907. One of them reads, in part: “For the first time since the world began, a woman walked beneath the waters of the East River yesterday and she was Miss Emmeline V. Smith, a girl of 19…”

Now, sixty-nine years later, I would like to say that Miss Smith was not the first woman to walk through the East River subway tunnel. I was.

My husband, Ogden Merrill, was the engineer superintending the Manhattan side of this first railway tunnel under the East River. It was being built by the New York Tunnel Company to ease the heavy flow of traffic between Manhattan and Brooklyn. For four years the work had gone on night and day. And for over a year, first as Ogden’s fiancée and then as his bride, I followed the progress closely. On December i, 1906, a steel pipe, six inches in diameter, was forced through the tunnel from the Brooklyn end, hopefully to meet one from the Manhattan side. When the measurements were taken, it was found that the lines of the bores came to within one-tenth of an inch alignment. There was much rejoicing. And it was then I began to coax my husband to allow me to walk through the tunnel with him. Finally, when he saw I was in earnest, he consented. The day for my adventure was set for December 24, 1906- a sort of Christmas Eve celebration. Although I personally encountered no catastrophe, the (rip was not without danger. As the Times reported on December 9, 1906: ”… not more than a dozen lives lost which is a good record considering all the hazards.”

The tunnel extends nearly one mile under the river from Battery Park to Joralemon Street, Brooklyn. When we arrived at my husband’s office in New York, the men equipped me for the journey with sweaters, an oilskin coat, and an old hat. Several pairs of socks and a pair of felt slippers were presented to me to help keep the smallest boots they could find from falling off my feet.

At last we were ready to descend the shaft at the Battery entrance. We stood on a platform without sides or railings, which served as the elevator, and we shot down into the bowels of the earth. I was terrified but didn’t let on. At the bottom of the shaft we were taken into the air-compressor chamber, known as a lock. It looked like a huge water heater lying on its side. The seats inside ran lengthwise. We seated ourselves, the door was closed, and the air pressure was gradually increased to thirty-eight pounds per square inch. This was within two pounds of the maximum used during construction. This pressure was maintained at all times to keep the water out of the tunnel. It took twenty minutes to make the transition. If it had not been done gradually this way, we would have gotten the caisson disease, more commonly known as the bends, which is very painful and can be fatal.

To keep my ears open I was told to swallow my saliva. I obeyed vigorously. At one point I whispered frantically to Ogden: “I have no more spit left! What shall I do?” He laughed and said: “Just go through the motions.” I did, and my ears felt all right again. The story got around and was a great joke among the men. It was no joke to me at the time.

It seemed a long twenty minutes. Finally we were ready to enter the tunnel. When the mouth of the lock was opened, the air hissed past us. Ninety-five feet over our heads flowed the East River, a large body of water on which sailed great ships from all over the world.

The tunnel was surprisingly well lit by electricity. The long vista of lights looked weird in this underground place. Part of the time we walked on a wet, slippery plank. In several places we had to wade through miniature lakes and thick mud from which I had trouble extricating my boots.

As we walked along, my husband explained things to me. When he spoke, his voice sounded strange and high-pitched. As I spoke, my voice seemed so far away that I often could not understand what I myself said. I sounded tense, as though I were greatly frightened, although I felt perfectly calm. He told me to whistle. I could not. It’s impossible to pucker one’s lips to utter a sound under such high-pressure conditions.

The tunnel, Ogden told me, was fifteen and a half feet in diameter. The walls were lined with great steel plates riveted together. Later a concrete lining would be laid on to keep the water from seeping in. About halfway through we saw the great cutting shields still standing head to head. They had met 2,400 feet from the Manhattan side and i ,900 feet from Joralemon Street in Brooklyn. Later they would be removed.

It took us one hour to reach the Joralemon Street end. A workman let us into another lock. The air pressure was gradually decreased. The noise was deafening and hurt my eardrums, but I suffered no ill effects afterward.

When we reached street level and entered the Brooklyn superintendent’s office, he had a cozy fire in his little stove. He served us steaming hot coffee, which was very welcome. And the great adventure was over. But there were later reverberations.

In the spring of 1907 Miss Smith, a young Vassar girl, walked through the tunnel from Brooklyn to NewYork. She claimed to be the first woman to walk through the tunnel, which clearly she was not. She was the first to walk from Brooklyn to New York; she was the first woman to scream in the tunnel when the lights went out; but for sheer female firstness in that tunnel under the East River, I claim the distinction. By the time she made the trip, the rails had been laid, according to the newspaper clipping the men in my husband’s office sent me. They wrote to Ogden, saying he should stand up for my rights. They ended with:

Rah for Mrs. Merrill!
First in lock, first in air,
First from Battery to Brooklyn.
Rah, rah, rah!


 

MEIER’S WONDERFUL CLOCK


Our query about the Great Detroit Clock, which appeared in the October, 1975. issue, was almost immediately answered. Sally Ann Birks of Mt. Clemens, Michigan, writes:
My great-granduncle Felix Meier, inspired by a dream, built his masterpiece over a period of ten years. It was completed and first displayed in Detroit at Merrill Hall in 1879. (I know this conflicts with Ash’s information- 1876—but Felix refined his clock several times during the ten years, so perhaps he didn’t consider it ready for public display until 1879.)

He estimated that it cost him thirty thousand dollars to build. He formed a company with four other men and raised an additional fifty thousand dollars to exhibit the clock in various cities and expositions in the United States. He called it “The AmericanNational Astronomical Clock.” It was shown for little more than a year before all the profits were consumed by the expense of packing and shipping it (Felix’s propensity for drinking and gambling also played a part in this dismal showing).

Finally, in 1880, Felix sold the clock to a Jennie Babcock of New York City, who apparently put the clock in storage for the next fifteen years. In 1895 Felix received a letter (on file at the Detroit Public Library) from an Eliza Anne Thayer. She wrote that the clock “is in storage having passed into my hands. … The woodwork is dusty and a little defaced. It is in condition to need some repairs.” She suggested that Felix come to New York and repair it himself.

Felix, however, was more interested in selling. In his reply to her (also on file) he inquires about any offers to buy it and wonders if he would get a commission if he could come up with a buyer. He also warns her that the patent expires in 1896 and that she should sell the clock before that or renew the patent.

That is the last we know of it until Felix was on his deathbed in 1908. He wanted to know then what had happened to his clock. According to his granddaughter, her father, Louis, went to New York to trace it. He discovered that the clock had burned in a warehouse fire. But a press release in the Detroit Library indicates that the clock perished in a fire that destroyed Steeplechase Park on Coney Island.

So that was Felix’s folly. The story doesn’t end here, however. Felix’s son, Louis, carried on his father’s trade and built his own masterpiece. He began it in 1892 and completed it in 1904. This gigantic clock is equal to its predecessor in intricacy and detail. It was hand-carved from a single piece of mahogany, and the figures (people of fourteen nations) march to the strains of a music box around a globe that revolves once every twentyfour hours. My grandmother, Clare Roellinger, and Louis’s wife, Julia, made authentic costumes for the animated dolls.

The clock is now housed at the L. M. Gear Company of East Detroit, Michigan, a concern owned by Louis’s grandsons. They had an addition built onto the company offices to accommodate the fourteen-foot clock and its weights, which extend into a well eight feet beneath it. Visitors are welcome.


 
 
Discuss this article  |  Print this article  |  Email this article
 
 
E-Mail Newsletters
 
 

Get E-Mail Newsletters when we publish articles on any of the topics below:

EAST RIVER SUBWAY TUNNEL
 
FELIX MEIER
 
GREAT DETROIT CLOCK
 
JOHN ADAMS
 
LAURA MERRILL
 

Help

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Contact Us  |  Subscriber Services  |  Terms and Conditions  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map  |  Advertising  |  Forbes.com  
 

American History from AmericanHeritage.com. Copyright 2008 American Heritage Publishing. All rights reserved.