The Answer:
Yes. It's named after its inventor, Pittsburgh bridge builder
George Washington Gale Ferris Jr., who unveiled the first Ferris wheel to the world at
the World's Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893. The
exhibition was organized to celebrate the 400th anniversary of
Christopher Columbus' discovery of America.
The wheel Ferris designed for the fair was gigantic and very
popular with visitors. It was 250 feet across and it could hold 2,160
people. It reportedly carried more than a million paying customers
during its 19 weeks of operation.
Tragically, Ferris didn't have long to enjoy the success of his
invention. He died three years later at the age of 37.
For more information about the Ferris wheel and its inventor,
try to find a copy of The Ferris Wheel by Lois
Stodieck Jones, published in 1984.
In the meantime, here is a link to a 19th century newspaper
account of the wheel called 266
Feet in Air. And two Web sites about the fair:World's
Columbian Exposition by Bruce R. Schulman World's
Columbian Exposition: Ideas, Experience, Aftermath
—The Editors
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