- John Edgar Thomson
John Edgar Thomson (
February 10 1808 –May 27 1874 ) was an Americancivil engineer , railroad executive andindustrialist . He was President of thePennsylvania Railroad from 1852 to 1874 and oversaw the railroad's conversion fromwood tocoal as a fuel for itssteam locomotives .Childhood, early experience
Born in
Springfield Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania , nearPhiladelphia , he began his railroad career at age 19 as a rodman working in a survey crew locating thePhiladelphia and Columbia Railroad . Thomson later worked forCamden and Amboy Railroad . He also worked building canals, watching his father, John Thomson, supervise the building of theChesapeake and Delaware Canal .Developing Georgia's railroads
At the age of 26 in 1834, he became the chief engineer of the newly chartered
Georgia Railroad . He located the road, negotiated and oversaw construction contracts, operated portions as they opened, and promoted possible connections to the north and west. By 1845, he had completed the railroad from Augusta to Marthasville (present day Atlanta, Georgia). At 173mile s (278.4 km), it was the longest railroad in the world at the time. Thomson later bought control of theMontgomery and West Point Railroad and helped finance and locate theNashville and Chattanooga Railroad .Also in 1845, he surveyed and designed theAugusta Canal for lawyerHenry Cumming which was completed two years later.Pennsylvania Railroad
After the
Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) was formed in 1846, it entered into an operating arrangement with the state-ownedPhiladelphia and Columbia Railroad , the road Thomson had first worked on. Thomson was named chief engineer of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and went to work locating the railway from Harrisburg to Pittsburgh. In 1852, he became the Pennsylvania Railroad's president, a post he continued in until his death in 1874.Thomson's major projects included completing the road across the
Allegheny Mountains , double tracking its main line, the railroad's conversion fromwood tocoal as a fuel for itssteam locomotives , and reorganizing the company's management structure.After the
American Civil War , Thomson led the PRR on an unprecedented expansion program, controlling over 6,000 miles (9,656 km) of railroad by 1873. Thomson also invested intranscontinental railroad lines,coal companies,iron andsteel works,lumber operations, and land companies.The city of Thomson in
McDuffie County, Georgia was named for him. IndustrialistAndrew Carnegie named theEdgar Thomson Steel Works in Braddock, Pennsylvania after him.References
*Coleman, Kenneth and Charles Stephen Gurr, editors, (1977) "Dictionary of Georgia Biography" (Athens: University of Georgia Press)
*External links
* [http://www.railga.com/georgia.html Georgia Railroad History]
* [http://www.catskillarchive.com/rrextra/abpa01.Html Railroad Extra website]
* [http://www.explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=368 Pennsylvania Historical Marker] ] , birthplace.
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=13231040 John Edgar Thomson's Gravesite]
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