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William J. McAlpine

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American civil engineer and politician

William J. McAlpine
BornWilliam Jarvis McAlpine
(1812-04-30)April 30, 1812
New York City
DiedFebruary 16, 1890(1890-02-16) (aged 77)
New Brighton, Staten Island
Heightterm =1852–1853
TitleNew York State Engineer and Surveyor
SpouseSarah Learned (c1815-1900)
ChildrenSarah J. McAlpine Pollock
Catherine McAlpine Pollock
Parent(s)John H. McAlpine (1783–1865)
Elizabeth Jarvis (1792–1879)

William Jarvis McAlpine (April 30, 1812 – February 16, 1890) was an American civil engineer and politician from New York. He was New York State Engineer and Surveyor from 1852 to 1853.

Life

William J. McAlpine was born in New York City, the son of John H. McAlpine (1783–1865) and Elizabeth (Jarvis) McAlpine (1792–1879). In 1827, he began civil engineering as a pupil of John B. Jervis, with whom he remained until 1836. He was Assistant Engineer of the Mohawk and Hudson Railroad from 1830 to 1831, and of the St. Lawrence Improvement Company in 1832. From 1833 on, he took part in the construction of the Chenango Canal and the enlargement of the Erie Canal, and succeeded Jervis as Chief Engineer of the Eastern Division of the State canals, and was Resident Engineer from 1838 to 1846. From 1846 to 1849 he was Chief Engineer of the dry dock at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. He also designed and built the Albany water works in 1850 and 1851, and the Chicago water works from 1851 to 1854.

As a Democrat, he was New York State Engineer and Surveyor from 1852 to August 1, 1853, when he resigned.

From 1855 to 1857, he was a New York State Railroad Commissioner. Afterwards he became Chief Engineer and Assistant to the President of the Erie Railroad, and later Chief Engineer and Vice-President of the Galena and Chicago Union Railroad. He was general superintendent of the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad, eastern division, for the years 1861 through 1864.

In 1869, he was a member of the Brooklyn Bridge Design Review Committee. In 1886, he was the first Director of the construction of Washington Bridge over the Harlem River in New York City, but resigned after a few months of planning.

He was a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and its President from 1868 to 1869. He was the first American elected to membership in the Institution of Civil Engineers of Great Britain.

He died in New Brighton, Staten Island on February 16, 1890.

References

  1. "Died" (PDF). New York Times. May 30, 1900. Retrieved October 18, 2012. Suddenly, at the residence of her daughter, in Washington, D.C. Sarah Learned, wife of the late William J. McAlpine of New Brighton, S.I. Funeral services will be held in the chapel of Albany Rural Cemetery ...
  2. Washington Post (April 20, 1893). "Sisters Marry Brothers, Their Cousins" (PDF). New York Times. Retrieved October 18, 2012. Tho brides are sisters, of Sarah Learned and the late Hon. William Jarvis McAlpine, the engineer, who was connected with many famous feats of engineering in ...

Sources

Political offices
Preceded byHezekiah C. Seymour New York State Engineer and Surveyor
1852–1853
Succeeded byHenry Ramsay
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)
New York State Engineers and Surveyors
Surveyors General
State Engineers and Surveyors
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