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William T Rice

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Other names
  
W. Thomas Rice

Occupation
  
railroad executive

Name
  
William Rice


Born
  
June 13, 1912 (
1912-06-13
)
Westmoreland County, Virginia

Known for
  
creation of CSX Transportation

Died
  
February 5, 2006, Richmond, Virginia, United States

Csx 5107 the w thomas rice special commemorative locomotive in southern california


William Thomas Rice (June 13, 1912 – February 5, 2006; aka W. Thomas Rice) was an American railroad executive from Virginia. He worked in railroading throughout his life, and also served in the Army Reserves where he became a major general. Along with Hays Watkins, Rice's work led to the formation of CSX Transportation in 1980.

Contents

Csx q249 meets the w thomas rice special


Career

Rice was born in 1912 in Westmoreland County, Virginia. His career started as a track inspector for the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1934, after graduating at the top of his civil engineering class at Virginia Tech. By 1955, he became president of the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad. In 1957, he was made president of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, succeeding Champ Davis. By 1967, he was named president, director and CEO of the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad, the product of merging the ACL with the Seaboard Air Line Railroad. Rice rose to chairman of SCL parent Seaboard Coast Line Industries, and the Family Lines System which included SCL. In 1980, Rice and Hays T. Watkins guided the creation of CSX Corporation by merging the Chessie System and the SCL. After the merger was complete, he was named chairman emeritus.

Honors

Rice earned many honors, including “Transportation Man of the Year” in 1972 and “Railroad Man of the Year” in 1975. In 1987, CSX's classification yard in Waycross, Georgia, was named for him.

Personal life

William Thomas Rice married Jaqueline Johnston and together they had two children, John Thomas Rice and Jaqueline "Lynn" Rice, over 67 years of marriage. He lost his son to cancer in 2003. Rice, who died in 2006, was survived by his daughter, daughter-in-law Grace, seven grandchildren, and 12 great-grandchildren.

References

W. Thomas Rice Wikipedia


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