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Images of America - Al Zampa and the Bay Area Bridges
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The Arcadia Images of America series celebrates the history of neighborhoods, towns, and cities across the country. Using archival photographs, each title presents the distinctive stories from the past that shape the character of the community today. Arcadia is proud to play a part in the preservation of local heritage, making history available to all.
Most of the commuters who daily cross the Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge do not know much about its namesake. Yet Alfred Zampa (1905-2000) lived a remarkable life that touched not only the bridge named in his honor, but many of the other bridges around the Bay Area. An active iron worker from 1925 on, he typified a worker who was hardy and tough, but with the skill to perform extremely precise work under hazardous conditions. He often worked hundreds of feet above the San Francisco Bay with only the spindliest of support, and he fell from the Golden Gate Bridge in 1936. Caught by the safety net, he became a charter member of the ultra-exclusive "Halfway to Hell" club. Zampa died at the age of 95, six weeks after attending the groundbreaking of his namesake Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge, the only bridge named in honor of a building tradesman.
Former iron worker John V. Robinson is the author of Crockett (Arcadia Publishing, 2004) and Spanning the Strait: Building the Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge (Carquinez Press, 2004). Here, Robinson uses vintage and contemporary images to document Al Zampa's contribution to the historic bridges of the Bay Area. Zampa is gone now, but his workmanship touches millions every day.
The book is a new, trade paperback, published in 2005 by Arcadia Publishing. It measures 9" x 6" and weighs 0.65 pounds.
Most of the commuters who daily cross the Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge do not know much about its namesake. Yet Alfred Zampa (1905-2000) lived a remarkable life that touched not only the bridge named in his honor, but many of the other bridges around the Bay Area. An active iron worker from 1925 on, he typified a worker who was hardy and tough, but with the skill to perform extremely precise work under hazardous conditions. He often worked hundreds of feet above the San Francisco Bay with only the spindliest of support, and he fell from the Golden Gate Bridge in 1936. Caught by the safety net, he became a charter member of the ultra-exclusive "Halfway to Hell" club. Zampa died at the age of 95, six weeks after attending the groundbreaking of his namesake Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge, the only bridge named in honor of a building tradesman.
Former iron worker John V. Robinson is the author of Crockett (Arcadia Publishing, 2004) and Spanning the Strait: Building the Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge (Carquinez Press, 2004). Here, Robinson uses vintage and contemporary images to document Al Zampa's contribution to the historic bridges of the Bay Area. Zampa is gone now, but his workmanship touches millions every day.
The book is a new, trade paperback, published in 2005 by Arcadia Publishing. It measures 9" x 6" and weighs 0.65 pounds.