Stereocard. John was born on June 12 1806, in Mühlhausen, Mühlhausen, Sachsen, Germany. Charles Roebling himself died in 1918 and the age of 69, never having recovered from his son's death. The corner of Columbia Heights and Orange Street, where the Roebling home once stood, was renamed for Emily Roebling in 2018. After Charles’s death, Washington Roebling’s nephew, Karl G. Roebling (Ferdinand’s oldest son) became head of John A. Roebling’s Sons, but he died of a heart attack at age forty-eight in 1921. His namesake, Washington Augustus Roebling II, only son of his brother Charles G. Roebling, went down with the RMS Titanic in 1912. After its completion, he resided for a time in Troy, NY and in 1893 returned to Trenton, NJ, the site of the John A. Roebling's Sons Co. manufacturing business. He died in 1926, after being bedridden for two months, at age 89. 1849) and Sarah Mahon Ormsby (b. Johanna was born on … 1873-1880. He was the son of Charles Gustavus Roebling (b. Son of Charles G. Roebling. Less than a month after the freak accident, Roebling contracted tetanus and died, leaving his 32-year-old son Washington Roebling suddenly in charge of the mammoth project. Died in the sinking of the Titanic. Washington planned to work alongside his father, but the elder Roebling contracted tetanus during a construction accident in 1869 and died less than a month later. He outlived two of his younger brothers, Ferdinand and Charles Gustavus, who died in 1917 and 1918, respectively. 1856) and was named for his father's eldest brother, Washington Augustus Roebling (1837-1926), an American Civil War veteran and civil engineer whose best known work included the Brooklyn Bridge. Brooklyn Bridge under construction, ca. Mr Washington Augustus Roebling II was born in Trenton, Mercer, New Jersey on 25 March 1881. Washington Augustus Roebling was born on month day 1837, at birth place, Pennsylvania, to John Augustus Roebling and Johanna Roebling (born Herting). After his death, and with Washington Roebling in Brooklyn Heights, two of John's younger sons took over the management of the Roebling Wire Rope Works, as it was then known. Nephew of Washington A. Roebling, chief engineer in the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge. After the death of his nephew Karl in 1921, Washington took on the company presidency for the second time, during which he modernized and effectively managed the company. In the wake of this tragic and untimely death, his son Washington A. Roebling, a 32-year-old engineer with some experience helping his father on suspension bridges, took over the project. Washington Augustus Roebling (May 26, 1837 – July 21, 1926) was an American civil engineer best known for his work on the Brooklyn Bridge, which was initially designed by his father John A. Roebling. Following the sudden death of his nephew, Karl Gustavus Roebling, in 1921, Roebling again became president of John A. Roebling's Sons Company at age 84. All of a sudden, at the age of 32, Washington A. Roebling became the Chief Engineer of the Brooklyn Bridge. Emily died of cancer in 1903, and Washington … Laborers–mostly immigrants–earned $2 a day for their very dangerous work.