{{Short description|Scottish civil engineer (1868–1940)}} {{about||the Quebec politician|Louis George Harper|the American football coach|Louis J. Harper}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2018}} {{Use British English|date=April 2018}} [[File:Suspension Footbridge over the River Wye - geograph.org.uk - 462183.jpg|thumb|1895 bridge over the River Wye at Sellack Boat, near Ross-on-Wye]] thumb|Name plate on Sellack Boat bridge '''Louis Harper''' (23 April 1868<ref>''UK, Civil Engineer Records, 1820-1930''</ref> – 26 January 1940) was a civil engineer from the north-east of Scotland who designed a number of suspension footbridges towards the end of the 19th century.<ref name=iar>{{cite journal|author=Harper, D.R., Day, T.M.|title=The 19th-Century Suspension Footbridges of Harpers of Aberdeen|journal=Industrial Archaeology Review|date=2010-05-01|volume=32|issue=1|pages=21–34|doi=10.1179/174581910X12680800821413|s2cid=110390297 }}</ref>
Harper was born in Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire,<ref> ''1901 Scotland Census''</ref> to John Harper and Margaret Ross.<ref>''Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950''</ref> His father came from Turriff in Aberdeenshire, and worked as a fencer in Edinburgh and Glasgow before starting the family firm in Aberdeen in 1856, which became Harpers Ltd in 1885. John Harper patented a mechanism for straining wire, used both to make fences and later also for the cables of bridges. His son John took charge of the business until 1887, while his second son Louis served an apprenticeship with Jenkins & Mar, Civil Engineers.<ref name=iar />
Louis set up his own firm in 1889, later collaborating with the contractors James Abernethy & Co. In addition to his bridge projects, he assisted Aberdeen Council in surveying their town water scheme. He became an Associate Member of the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1893, resigning in 1921.<ref>Archives of the Institution of Civil Engineers, including Louis Harper's application for membership as A.M.I.C.E.</ref>
The firm's early bridges included suspension bridges at Aboyne, spanning {{convert|300|ft}}, and at Shocklach in Cheshire, both built in 1871. Neither bridge exists today. The early bridges had wooden towers, although these were replaced in later bridges by structural steel or cast iron members.<ref name=iar />
He died in Aberdeen in 1940.<ref>''England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1966, 1973-1995''</ref>
==Later bridges== *Monymusk, 1879 over the River Don, Aberdeenshire, {{convert|107|ft|adj=on}} span *Burnhervie, circa 1880, near Kemnay, collapsed 1979 *Birkhall, 1880, Royal Deeside, {{convert|60|ft|adj=on}} span *Cromdale, 1881 over the River Spey, collapsed and replaced by road bridge in 1922 *Nairn, 1887, first bridge by Louis Harper *Crathorne Hall, 1888, {{convert|55|ft|adj=on}} span, collapsed 1930 in flood *Bandon, County Cork, 1890, {{convert|120|ft|adj=on}} span *Larbert, 1893 over the River Carron, {{convert|90|ft|adj=on}} span *Feugh, 1893 near Banchory *Trentham, Staffordshire, 1893, {{convert|70|ft|adj=on}} span, replaced in 1930s *Grimsby, 1894, three bridges *Sellack Boat, 1895, near Ross-on-Wye *Doveridge, 1898, replaced by a bridge by David Rowell & Co. *Keswick, Cumbria, 1898 over River Greta, demolished 1979 *Narva, Estonia, circa 1898, {{convert|260|ft|adj=on}} span *Newquay, 1900, about {{convert|100|ft|adj=on}} span *Chundra Bridge, Chovar Gorge, Nepal, June 1903 (No longer in use) * Sundari Footbridge, Nepal, in current use (2017)
A number of other bridges are proposed as having been designed by Louis Harper at the Harper Bridges website, although in the absence of clear documentary evidence, they are not listed above.
==References== {{Reflist}} *River, Railway and Ravine; foot suspension bridges for Empire. Douglas Harper 2015, The History Press {{isbn|978 0 75096213 1}} 164pp.
==External links== *[http://www.harperbridges.com/ Harper Bridges]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Harper, Louis}} Category:1868 births Category:1940 deaths Category:Engineers from Aberdeen Category:British bridge engineers Category:Scottish civil engineers