- William A. Bugge
William Adair Bugge (
July 10 ,1900 -November 14 ,1992 ) was a civil engineer who played a major role in the development of the transportation infrastructure of theWest Coast of the United States during the latter half of the 20th century. He was born inPort Hadlock, Washington to Samuel M. & Amelia (Bishop) Bugge, his father a Norwegian immigrant and his mother the daughter of immigrants from Great Britain and some of the earliest settlers on theQuimper Peninsula . He grew up in Friday Harbor, Port Angeles, and finallyPort Townsend, Washington , where he excelled in sports and graduated from high school. After graduating from Washington State College in 1922, he began work with the Washington Department of Highways engineering department. After holding public sector positions in Port Townsend andJefferson County, Washington , and working in the private sector inOregon andCalifornia , he was recruited by Washington GovernorArthur B. Langlie to head the state's Department of Highways and accepted the appointment. As the Director of Highways in Washington State (1949-1963) he oversaw the design and completion of some of the state's most ambitious transportation projects. In 1953 he was recruited to fill the same position in the state ofCalifornia , but declined, stating his wish to complete projects in Washington. In 1963, however, he resigned his Washington position to become the Project Director in charge of design and construction of theBay Area Rapid Transit project inSan Francisco, California . Bugge retired in 1973 and died inOlympia, Washington nearly two decades later. In 1977 theHood Canal Bridge , one of the projects he oversaw in Washington, was officially renamed the "William A. Bugge Bridge" in his honor.References
*Burows, Alyssa. [http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=7256 "William Adair Bugge assumes duties as Director of Highways on July 1, 1949"] in the HistoryLink.org Timeline Library, Essay 7256. March 5, 2005 (retrieved July 24, 2006).
*Jefferson County Historical Society. "With Pride in Heritage: History of Jefferson County". Portland, Oregon: Professional Publishing Printing, Inc., 1966.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.