Misplaced Pages

Alfred W. Craven

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Alfred Wingate Craven)
Alfred Wingate Craven circa 1870

Alfred Wingate Craven (20 October 1810 – 27 March 1879) was a chief engineer of the Croton Aqueduct Department, was a founding member—and host of its initial meeting—of the American Society of Civil Engineers and Architects, which later became the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE).

Biography

He was born on 20 October 1810 in Washington, D.C. at the Washington Navy Yard, where his father and maternal grandfather were assigned by the United States Navy. His father was reassigned to Portsmouth, New Hampshire in 1813, where Alfred studied at the Phillips Exeter Academy, the Berwick Academy and then the American Literary, Scientific, and Military Academy from 1824 until September 1825. He graduated from Columbia University with an A.B. degree in 1829, studied law and then civil engineering.

In 1837 he was associated with General George S. Greene on professional work near Charleston and elsewhere. He was a railroad engineer and manager, and rapidly rose to the first rank in his profession.

Craven became engineer commissioner to the Croton Water Board of New York on its organization in 1849, and continued in that capacity until 1868. Among the many works projected and carried out during these years under his supervision were the building of the large reservoir in Central Park, the enlargement of pipes across High Bridge, and the construction of the reservoir in Boyd's Corners, Putnam County. He also caused to be made an accurate survey of Croton River valley, with a view of ascertaining its capacity for furnishing an adequate water supply, and was largely instrumental in securing the passage of the first law establishing a general sewerage system for New York City.

Later he was associated with Allan Campbell as a commissioner in the work of building the underground railway extending along 4th Avenue from the Grand Central Depot to Harlem River.

He was one of the original members of the American Society of Civil Engineers, a director for many years, and its president from November 1869, until November 1871.

He died on 27 March 1879 in Chiswick, England and was buried at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York on 15 April 1879.

Family

Two of his brothers were noted naval officers: Thomas Tingey Craven and Tunis Craven. Thomas Tingey Craven's son Alfred Craven (16 September 1846 – 30 September 1926), also an engineer, graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1867 and worked on design for the New York City Subway. Another relative is John Craven, the former Chief Scientist of Polaris and the Special Projects Office.

References

  1. "The Twelve Society Founders". American Society of Civil Engineers. Archived from the original on 2012-07-09. Retrieved 2012-07-06.
  2. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Craven, Thomas Tingey" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  3. Ellis, William Arba (1911). Norwich University, 1819–1911; Her History, Her Graduates, Her Roll of Honor. Vol. 2. Montpelier, Vermont: The Capital City Press. pp. 86–88. Retrieved 2023-11-22.
  4. Columbia University. Office of the President (1891). Annual report. Columbia University Libraries. .
  5. Finch, James Kip (1929). Early Columbia Engineers: An Appreciation: John Stevens, 1768; James Renwick, 1807; Horatio Allen, 1823; Alfred W. Craven, 1829. Columbia University Press.
  6. "Death of Alfred W. Craven" (PDF). The New York Times. 28 March 1879. p. 2. Retrieved 2023-11-25.
  7. "Funeral of A. W. Craven" (PDF). The New York Times. 16 April 1879. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-11-25.
  8. "Gravesites of Civil Engineers". ASCE Metropolitan Section.
  9. Hager, Willi H. (5 November 2015). Hydraulicians in the USA 1800–2000: A biographical dictionary of leaders in hydraulic engineering and fluid mechanics. CRC Press. p. 1943. ISBN 978-1-138-02828-9. Retrieved 2023-11-25.

External links

Presidents of the American Society of Civil Engineers
1853–1879
1880–1899
1900–1919
1920–1939
1940–1959
  • John Phillip Hogan (1940)
  • Fredrick Hall Fowler (1941)
  • Ernest Bateman Black (1942)
  • Ezra Bailey Whitman (1943)
  • Malcolm Pirnie (1944)
  • John Cyprian Stevens (1945)
  • Wesley Winans Horner (1946)
  • Edgar Morton Hastings (1947)
  • Richard Erwin Dougherty (1948)
  • Franklin Thomas (1949)
  • Ernest Emmanuel Howard (1950)
  • Gail Abner Hathaway (1951)
  • Carlton Springer Proctor (1952)
  • Walter Leroy Huber (1953)
  • Daniel Voiers Terrell (1954)
  • William Roy Glidden (1955)
  • Enoch Ray Needles (1956)
  • Mason Graves Lockwood (1957)
  • Louis Richard Howson (1958)
  • Francis de Sales Friel (1959)
1960–1979
  • Frank Alwyn Marston (1960)
  • Glenn Willis Holcomb (1961)
  • George Brooks Earnest (1962)
  • Edmund Friedman (1963)
  • Waldo Gleason Bowman (1964)
  • Wallace Lacy Chadwick (1965)
  • William Joseph Hedley (1966)
  • Earle Topley Andrews (1967)
  • Richard Henry Tatlow III (1968)
  • Frank Hastings Newnam Jr. (1969)
  • Thomas McMaster Niles (1970)
  • Samuel Serson Baxter (1971)
  • Oscar Simon Bray (1972)
  • John Elmer Rinne (1973)
  • Charles William Yoder (1974)
  • William McCoy Sangster (1975)
  • Arthur Joseph Fox Jr. (1976)
  • Leland Jasper Walker (1977)
  • William Read Gibbs (1978)
  • Walter Emanuel Blessey (1979)
1980–1999
  • Joseph Simeon Ward (1980)
  • Irvan Frank Mendenhall (1981)
  • James Redding Sims (1982)
  • John H. Wiedeman (1983)
  • S. Russell Stearns (1984)
  • Richard W. Karn (1985)
  • Robert Dewey Bay (1986)
  • Daniel Bythewood Barge Jr. (1987)
  • Albert Abraham Grant (1988)
  • William J. Carroll (1989)
  • John A. Focht Jr. (1990)
  • James E. "Tom" Sawyer (1991)
  • Celestino R. "Chuck" Pennoni (1992)
  • James E. McCarty (1993)
  • James W. Poirot (1994)
  • Stafford E. Thornton (1995)
  • Charles A. Parthum (1996)
  • Edward O. Groff (1997)
  • Luther W. Graef (1998)
  • Daniel S. Turner (1999)
2000–present
  • Delon Hampton (2000)
  • Robert W. Bein (2001)
  • H. Gerard Schwartz Jr. (2002)
  • Thomas L. Jackson (2003)
  • Patricia D. Galloway (2004)
  • William P. Henry (2005)
  • Dennis R. Martenson (2006)
  • William F. Marcuson III (2007)
  • David G. Mongan (2008)
  • D. Wayne Klotz (2009)
  • Blaine D. Leonard (2010)
  • Kathy J. Caldwell (2011)
  • Andrew W. Herrmann (2012)
  • Gregory E. DiLoreto (2013)
  • Randall S. Over (2014)
  • Robert D. Stevens (2015)
  • Mark W. Woodson (2016)
  • Norma Jean Mattei (2017)
  • Kristina L. Swallow (2018)
  • Robin Kemper (2019)
  • K.N. Gunalan (2020)
  • Jean-Louis Briaud (2021)
  • Dennis D. Truax (2022)
  • Maria C. Lehman (2023)
Categories: