Built By Its Own Prisoners: Alcatraz -The Untold Engineering
A bare rock in San Francisco Bay with no fresh water, no soil, and no way onto it except by boat. Yet the United States Army turned it into a coastal fortress, the first lighthouse on the West Coast, and the largest reinforced concrete building in the world, built by the very prisoners it was designed to hold. This is the complete construction history of Alcatraz, told as an engineering story across one hundred and seventy years, from the four mules that hauled the first stone in 1853 to the sixty-five-ton crane that landed on the island in 2023. Every documentary takes days of research. You can help us keep going by leaving a small donation — just click the link and support us: https://buymeacoffee.com/construction... We move through three stages: the army fort and how it tamed a barren rock, the record-breaking 1909 to 1912 cellhouse and the single engine that built it, and the slow saltwater corrosion that forced the prison to close in 1963. Along the way we cover the triple-duty engine that hauled the railway, ran the concrete mixer, and lifted the concrete all at once, the "dungeon" that was really the buried basement of an 1850s fort, the lighthouse that had to grow taller, the well that hit solid granite, and the engineering reason Alcatraz really shut down, which had nothing to do with the famous escape. Most of the hard detail in this video comes from the definitive book on Alcatraz, Michael Esslinger's "Alcatraz: A Definitive History of the Penitentiary Years." If you want to go deeper, you can find it here: https://amzn.to/49yh4H1 (As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.) CHAPTERS 0:00 The rock that fought every builder 1:42 Stage one: the army fort (1853) 10:07 Stage two: the prison built by prisoners (1909 to 1912) 12:24 The engine that did three jobs 27:17 Stage three: the sea fights back 28:49 Why Alcatraz really closed SOURCES & FAIR USE This video is an educational documentary drawing on the National Park Service and Federal Bureau of Prisons historical records, the work of historian Erwin N. Thompson, and Michael Esslinger's history of Alcatraz. Archival imagery is used for historical and educational commentary under fair use. Subscribe for more construction and engineering history every week: / @constructionlegends #alcatraz #constructionhistory #engineering #history #documentary #sanfrancisco #abandoned #civilengineering

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