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John Benjamin Henck

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Name
  
John Henck

Role
  
Civil engineer


Died
  
January 3, 1903

Education
  
Harvard University

John Benjamin Henck

Books
  
Field‑book for Railroad, Field‑book for Railroad, Field‑book for Railroad, Field‑Book for Railroad, Field‑book for Railroad

John Benjamin Henck (October 20, 1815 Philadelphia – January 3, 1903 Montecito, California) was a classical scholar and civil engineer.

Contents

Biography

Henck was the son of George Daniel and Caroline (Spiess) Henck. He was prepared for college mainly by home study, and graduated from Harvard University, valedictorian, in 1840. He was principal of Hopkins Classical School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1840-1841, professor of Latin and Greek at the University of Maryland, 1841-1842, and professor of Latin and Greek at Germantown Academy, Philadelphia, where he remained until 1847.

The need to provide for a growing family prompted him to turn his attention to the more lucrative field of civil engineering. He began by studying in the office of Felton and Parker, Charlestown, Massachusetts. From 1848 to 1849, he had charge of the building of a railroad from Charlestown, New Hampshire, to Windsor, Vermont. In 1849 he was in charge of the construction of the Fitchburg Railroad near Boston, after which he established an office in Boston with William S. Whitwell (Whitwell & Henck) and was frequently called upon as an expert to decide on the work of others.

He was appointed engineer to the Massachusetts State Commission on Public Lands, and continued in that position, with an interruption of two or three years, until 1881. (In 1877, the State Commission on Public Lands was abolished and its tasks became those of the Massachusetts Board of Land Commissioners.) He had charge of the laying out and filling up of new lands of the state of Massachusetts and Boston Water Power Company, now known as the Back Bay district in Boston. He was probably the engineer with the most responsibility for that project.

When the Massachusetts Institute of Technology began offering classes in 1865, he was the head of the department of civil engineering, a post he retained until 1881. But meanwhile he continued his oversight of the laying out of streets and lots in the Back Bay. He was engineer for the Metropolitan and other street railroads in Boston and vicinity, 1856-1861.

Works

He wrote numerous poems, mathematical papers, and a Field-Book for Railroad Engineers (1854; revised and enlarged, 1881 and 1896).

References

John Benjamin Henck Wikipedia


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