Tower Bridge Sacramento, California

It was our second visit to the California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, and I recognized some previous exhibits and a new one, a field riveting hammer (misidentified as a rivet gun). This museum is surrounded by riveted bridges with thousands of shop-driven rivets. Massive steam engines fabricated with iron, steel, cast iron, and finely crafted riveted steam boilers are on display. Just a few blocks from the museum is the 1935 shop-riveted Tower Bridge that continues to accommodate modern vehicular traffic.

1935 Tower Bridge in Sacramento California
1935 Tower Bridge in Sacramento California
1935 Tower Bridge in Sacramento California
1935 Tower Bridge in Sacramento California
1935 Tower Bridge in Sacramento California
1935 Tower Bridge in Sacramento California

What I would like to see on display is an exhibit with a detailed description of the shop and field riveting processes with historic artifacts and personal records of those craftsmen and women who labored in this country’s large industrial steel mills and fabrication plants, representing an industrial process used in the fabrication of buildings and bridges throughout Untied States.

No major industrial museum in the United States has any exhibits on the industrial rivet processes used in the construction of legendary buildings and bridges in the USA.

California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, field riveting hammer (misidentified as a rivet gun)
Chicago Pneumatic Tool Company standard Boyer Long stroke riveting hammer advisement
Shop riveting pneumatic portable riveter 1953 AISC textbook photo
Hydraulic Fixed Riveter R. D. Wood & Co., Philadelphia P.A. 1902
Sir William Arrol Hydraulic Riveter National Museum of Scotland Edinburgh
1935 Tower Bridge in Sacramento California

Historic Bridge Restoration