John Frank Stevens
200 pages
English

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200 pages
English

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Description

The untold story of a civil engineer extraordinaire


One of America's foremost civil engineers of the past 150 years, John Frank Stevens was a railway reconnaissance and location engineer whose reputation was made on the Canadian Pacific and Great Northern lines. Self-taught and driven by a bulldog tenacity of purpose, he was hired by Theodore Roosevelt as chief engineer of the Panama Canal, creating a technical achievement far ahead of its time. Stevens also served for more than five years as the head of the US Advisory Commission of Railway Experts to Russia and as a consultant who contributed to many engineering feats, including the control of the Mississippi River after the disastrous floods of 1927 and construction of the Boulder (Hoover) Dam. Drawing on Stevens's surviving personal papers and materials from projects with which he was associated, Clifford Foust offers an illuminating look into the life of an accomplished civil engineer.


Preface
Acknowledgements
1. A Boy of West Gardiner
2. Beginnings
3. The Great Northern
4. The Panama Canal: In
5. The Panama Canal: Out
6. Interlude
7. Railroading in Russia
8. The Final Decades
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 23 octobre 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780253010698
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

JOHN FRANK STEVENS

John Frank Stevens
CIVIL ENGINEER
Clifford Foust
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS Bloomington Indianapolis
RAILROADS PAST AND PRESENT
George M. Smerk, Editor
A list of books in the series appears at the end of this volume.
This book is a publication of
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS Office of Scholarly Publishing Herman B Wells Library 350 1320 East 10th Street Bloomington, Indiana 47405 USA
iupress.indiana.edu
Telephone orders 800-842-6796 Fax orders 812-855-7931
2013 by Clifford Foust
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences - Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Foust, Clifford M., [date]-
John Frank Stevens : civil engineer / Clifford Foust.
pages cm. - (Railroads past and present)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-253-01061-2 (cl : alk. paper) - ISBN 978-0-253-01069-8 (eb) 1. Stevens, John F. (John Frank), 1853-1943. 2. Railroad engineers - United States - Biography. 3. Railroad engineering - History. I. Title.
TF140.S755F68 2013
625.10092 - dc23
[B]
2013010495
1 2 3 4 5 18 17 16 15 14 13
To the late
DONALD HENRY STEVENS
who should have been the author of this book
Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments
1 A Boy of West Gardiner
2 Beginnings
3 The Great Northern
4 The Panama Canal: In
5 The Panama Canal: Out
6 Interlude
7 Railroading in Russia
8 The Final Decades


Notes

Bibliography

Index
Preface
All of his adult life John Frank Stevens, in his words, embraced an irresistible urge to engineer. In the beginning it took the form of land surveying, which led to locating railroads in the heroic days of that world-changing transportation mode. In his senior years he contributed to engineering in a wide range of major projects, from railways to waterways and to much more.
While still very much alive and active, John Frank Stevens was called one of the greatest engineers in the world. Had that been literally true, it would have placed him in the company of Bell, Edison, Marconi, and Steinmetz, to name but a few of his time. To be sure, he had to his credit some of the great feats of railway reconnaissance, location, and construction in North America: the discovery of Marias Pass in the Rockies and Stevens Pass in the Cascades made possible the building of James J. Hill s Great Northern westward from Havre, Montana, to Everett and Seattle. To that he added his pivotal Panama Canal contributions: the selection of a high lake and lock canal over a sea-level, tidal dam one, making him the Canal s principal engineering genius. And as an aging man, he presided for more than five years over Manchuria s Chinese Eastern Railway and for a short time over much of the Trans-Siberian Railway. Sandwiched between and around these feats he made an impact as builder and consultant on numerous of the most important engineering projects of his day, not only railroads but also the rescue of the Mississippi from the disastrous floods of 1927 and the building of the Boulder (Hoover) Dam, among others.
For these endeavors and more, he won great acclaim during his lifetime. A statue of him, clad in the rough attire of a field engineer, was erected in 1925 in Marias Pass, a statue still standing near its original siting. In 1962 a traffic circle in Balboa, Panama, with a modernistic monument was named after him posthumously; it is still there, well maintained. The combined engineering societies awarded him their John Fritz Medal, won earlier by all those memorable men - and many more - listed above. He had several postage stamps with his image. He had a goodly handful of foreign and American decorations for his World War I work in Russia and Manchuria. Yet, save for those who knew him and were still alive in 1943, his passing at the age of 90 in the middle of a world war was not much remarked on, except for laudatory obituaries and appreciations buried in the inner pages of many newspapers and professional journals. It took more than sixty years after his death for a book-length biography to be published. 1 Yet in his day he was a larger-than-life figure in the era between the Civil War and the Great Depression, a time of Giants and Titans and of immense and expanding national confidence. It was a time that saw the dramatic growth of the nation s power and sway and wealth, practical materialism and near-complete faith in progress, and the suppression of doubts. The railroad was one of the chief features and driving forces of that expanding power and hubris. John Frank Stevens flourished in that environment.
But along with his feats and superior judgment he also made some notable miscalculations and mistakes that provided him no little embarrassment. The most egregious of these was his decision to found in 1912 his own engineering/construction company in New York City. It didn t take long for it to become apparent to him and others that he was in over his head, and within a year and a half his firm went bankrupt, leading him to undertake to repay all creditors from his own earnings as consultant. And if his judgments on railway and Panama Canal issues seem now to have been little short of gifted, he came out on the minority side a number of times, such as, for example, on control of Mississippi floods and the building of the Boulder (Hoover) Dam.
He was a man of contradiction and of conflicting stimuli. From his unpretentious, rural origins in Maine, he took both muted pride and occasional embarrassment. Late in life he researched his family genealogy deeply enough to satisfy himself (and his sons, he hoped) that they could trace themselves back to the Mayflower, to one Henry Sam(p)son. By his own admission he gave priority to his work, his career, and required all else, including his family, to accommodate to this choice. Throughout much of his life he struggled with self-esteem when in company of the powerful, well educated, and supremely confident. Not a few times did he turn his back on them or lash out petulantly. He both admired and despised them. Though he usually kept his temper, when his wrath mounted and the governor broke, he exploded like a bursting boiler of a steam locomotive.
A quintessential man of America s heroic age, he relied on the strength of will and sharp focus, often seen in the great barons of business and government of his time. He nearly always favored private enterprise and a clearly delineated hierarchical organizational structure under the leadership of a single decision-making individual. Yet at crucial times on major projects he distrusted the free market and non-governmental organizations to accomplish the tasks, most notably in building the Panama Canal. He was a lifelong Republican but by the early years of the twentieth century, as he succeeded in his career, came to distrust many of the GOP s standard bearers, most notably the progressive Theodore Roosevelt.
In his private life he was a devoted husband and father of three surviving sons, but he suffered disappointment with all three, although more often than not he was an absentee father and even when at home was dedicated to his work. At the same time he harbored great expectations for each and every one of them. He would have liked all of them to succeed in a civil engineering course in a distinguished university; none could satisfy his aspirations. Still, as the years went by, he found accommodation with the choices of all three and reveled in grandchildren.
John Frank came to yearn for a high railway office that would carry recognition of his accomplishments and, at the same time, wrestled with inner drives that made him impatient for it yet uncomfortable in campaigning openly for it. Like many of his era he expected that quiet, diligent, and productive work would lead to recognition and reward by the exalted men above him; he need not plead for them. Although raised in a slow-moving and slow-changing countryside, he was peripatetic as an adult; he could not abide long being chained to a desk or, for that matter, a particular locale for more than a few years at most. Much like one of his real-life heroes, Theodore Roosevelt (TR), he grew from a young beanpole to a man almost universally judged to be rugged and strong. Even when he sharply disagreed with him, Stevens did not waver in his very high regard for him as a fearless and stalwart man. (Much the same can be said for his admiration for James J. Hill.) Like Roosevelt he could be decisive, even obstinate, although on occasion profoundly wrong. Like Roosevelt he loved the outdoor life and measured himself by the lives of outdoor men. In most matters his youthful background was a poor predictor of his mature deportment. Unlike Roosevelt, the spoon in his baby mouth was pewter, not silver.
Acknowledgments
To the late Donald Henry Stevens, great-grandson of the subject of this book, and his aunt, the late Virginia Lee Stevens Hawks, John Frank Stevens s favored granddaughter, I owe an immense debt of gratitude. Their joint efforts preserved for posterity the largest cache of Stevens s materia

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