Florida State University historian Edward G. Gray tells a seldom-told story about Tom Paine, the early American revolutionist (who tried to incite a similar revolution in Britain, and later became a citizen of the first French republic and was jailed under Robespierre), author of "Common Sense," "The Rights of Man," the notorious "Age of Reason" that made his name political poison, and other influential writings including the still-timely "Agrarian Justice."
Gray gives us a detailed account of the innovative work Paine did on bridge design. America was covered with old-growth forests and ample timber for building bridges, but wooden bridges were notoriously vulnerable. Paine imagined a permanent single-arch bridge constructed of iron, and as he traveled to Britain and France and back to America again, he sought the input of trained builders and potential investors wherever he went. His designs earned the admiration of many before his reputation sank, and several important bridges seem to have been inspired by his model of a pre-fabricated design that could be shipped and assembled on site, making architecture and engineering exportable commodities.
It is a welcome story coming at a time when the United States is learning painful lessons about the importance of infrastructure to domestic economy - or, if investment in maintenance and replacement is the measure, perhaps we aren't learning from our bad roads, crumbling tunnels, collapsing bridges, corroded plumbing, and ramshackle ports of entry. When Philadelphia was still the major port city, but seeing competition from Baltimore and New York, Paine looked to the dangerous riverine barriers around them and saw permanent bridges as essential to a United States, economically and politically.
In architecture as with his writings, Paine was tragically loath to monetizing his efforts. He held a patent for his bridge design and sought compensation when others built bridges based on his concept, but Gray shows him repeatedly pulling his focus from bridges to politics, losing political support and networks of friends after the French Revolution and "The Age of Reason" (falsely portrayed in his time and even today as an atheist treatise), plus a harsh attack on George Washington that backfired on Paine.
Gray ends with an intriguing epilogue about corporations and public-private partnerships in the early United States, including some earnest debate about whether "perpetuities and monopolies are contrary to the nature of a republican government," showing once more that the United States is still engaged in some of the same fundamental arguments from our early years.