William Howe was an American architect and bridge builder famous for patenting the Howe truss design for bridges in 1840.
Background
William Howe was born on May 12, 1803, in Spencer, Massachusetts, to Elias Junior. and Polly (née Bemis) Howe. His father owned a sawmill, and William was one of nine children. Howe married Azubah Stone, daughter of a Charlton, Massachusetts, farmer (and sister of Amasa Stone) in 1828.
Education
After successfully completing an apprenticeship in carpentry, he enrolled and graduated from Leicester Academy in Leicester, Massachusetts.
Career
The Howe family was an inventive one. Howe"s brother, Elias Howe, patented the first viable sewing machine. William Howe established a career as a construction contractor, building homes and churches.
He was particularly well-known for his churches.
But bridges were his primary interest, and he founded the Howe Bridge Works in 1840. In 1840, Howe was engaged to build a railroad bridge over the Connecticut River in Springfield, Massachusetts.
This famous bridge was of a new, influential design—the Howe truss bridge, which Howe patented in 1840. One of Howe"s workmen, Amasa Stone, purchased for $40,000 ($948,133 in 2016 dollars) in 1842 the rights to Howe"s patented bridge design.
(Amasa Stone received financial backing from Azariah Boody, a Springfield businessman) The rights to the patent extended to bridges and structures erected only in New England.
That same year, the two men formed a bridge-building firm, Boody, Stone & Company, which erected a large number of Howe truss bridges throughout New England. Howe made additional improvements, and patented a second Howe truss design in 1846. William Howe suffered a severe carriage accident and died on September 19, 1852.
He was buried in Springfield.
Personality
He was a hard-working child, and learned carpentry and construction at an early age.