Saturday, April 22, 2023

The Saturday Morning Post: Tunnels


There may be tunnels in my DNA.  The father of my father's mother, (Paternal-Maternal great grandfather) was a sandhog.  A tunnel digger. He started working  in coal mines in England, moved onto Tube tunnels in London, then to New York. If he hadn't done that work, and had not moved to North America to work, I wouldn't be here.  

His specialty was working in "soft soils" sand or mud. Things like tunneling under rivers or lakes.  Often they would build a wall, and pump in air, raising the air pressure to slow the water seeping in.  If this wasn't done carefully, the workmen suffered from decompression sickness.  A practice that probably shortened his life.  

Most of the New York subway system was built, the way the Wilkes Street Tunnel pictured above was built, a process called cut and cover.  In cut and cover they dig a trench, put the infrastructure in place, build the tunnel and fill back in over it.  Most cut and cover segments are relatively shallow. It is messy on the surface, but fast and much less expensive than digging deep tunnels.  

My great grandfather's work was long before modern tunnel boring machines, the work was done with drills, explosives, shovels, and rail cars to haul out the rock and dirt.  

There are two family legends from his work.  

In Chicago he built a water inlet tunnel under Lake Michigan.  They went a couple of miles off-shore,  lowered a large pipe from the surface to the bottom of the lake, lined it with brick and concrete to make it waterproof, then used that to start tunneling down under the lake floor, turning west and tunneling inland, while another crew started inland and tunneled toward the lake.  Part of how Chicago has fresh water from far enough off shore to not be impacted from contamination from the shore.  Part of the project that reverse to flow of the Chicago River from into Lake Michigan, to away from Lake Michigan so it didn't carry the contamination of the river into the water supply.  

In Detroit he worked on the road tunnel under the river to Canada.  It is shallow, only a few feet below the river bottom.  They were working in compressed air, and had a blow-out.  The compressed air blew the crew up through the bottom of the river.  Most of them came up swimming.  Not all returned to work, he did, finishing the job.  He went on to do a couple of water inlet tunnels out under Lake Huron.

I kind of enjoy tunnels.  The one above you can walk or ride a bike through. If you are in the area I can help you find it.   



15 comments:

  1. Interesting indeed. The tunnel in the photo looks like it was once a train tunnel, with perhaps a train travelling above too.

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    1. It was for a train to get down to the Potomac from the top of a probably 50 foot high bluff. It was used through Word War Two when there was a shipyard on the riverfront.

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  2. Fascinating and dangerous technology! I bet a lot of workers died building those underground tunnels, mineshafts, etc.

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    1. Yes, and it cut a lot of lives short

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  3. Your ancestors (and you) have had such a fascinating variety of careers.

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  4. When I was working in Chicago, I took the tour of he water tower and all the information you just talked about was mentioned while we walked past the huge intake pipes. Whenever I've crossed the English Channel via the "chunnel", I always think about the incredible ingenuity and hard work it took to build it.

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    1. I have never taken the tour in Chicago, next trip

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  5. That is a lot of hard working, back breaking work. My mother's mother, my grandmother...her brothers and father, and before them, all worked in tunnels, but not building them...they were coal miners.

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    1. I have never been in a coal mine

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  6. I'm from family of railroad worker. They start back in Michigan, a railroad line called. Michigan Central Railroad.
    Coffee is on and stay safe.

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    1. I grew up in the thumb area

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    2. My dad was born in Jackson. But grew up in Southwest corner of state. Around Dowagiac area.

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  7. I love tunnels and bridges, whether I'm walking or driving.

    Sassybear
    https://idleeyesandadormy.com/

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  8. Love tunnels! They represent a birth of sorts. Go through one into a new world.

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