Lewis M. Haupt

Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt (21 March 1844, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania – 10 March 1937, Cynwyd, Pennsylvania) was a United States civil engineer. His career emphasized work on waterways.

Biography

His parents were railroad engineer Herman Haupt and Ann Cecilia Keller. He attended the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) as a freshman for the 1861/2 academic year. He continued his undergraduate education at the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard University, and finally graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, in 1867. After graduation, he served as a lieutenant in the United States Army Corps of Engineers, 1868-1869. He worked on lake surveys and as engineer officer for the 5th military district of Texas. He resigned from the Corps in August 1869.

After his Corps service, Haupt worked as a topographic engineer at Fairmount Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He spent a short time working in the United States Patent Office as a patent examiner, and then joined the faculty of UPenn as an instructor in mathematics and engineering in September 1872. He quickly became an assistant professor in 1873, becoming full professor in 1875, and remaining on the faculty until 1892. In 1873, he married Isabella Christiana Cromwell. They had five children. In 1885/6, he edited the American Engineering Register.

In 1897, President William McKinley appointed him to the Nicaraguan Canal Commission, which studied the possibility of a canal connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. A route through Panama was finally selected, and Haupt was appointed to the Panama Canal Commission. He was president of the Colombia-Canea Arbitration (1897), and was chief engineer of the survey for ship canals across New Jersey, and was consulting engineer on the construction of the Ohio-Lake Erie ship canal.

In April 1886, Haupt patented an automatic system for improving rivers and harbors, and for maintaining channels by an adjustable deflecting shield, suspended by buoys, floats, or barges. He patented devices for reclaiming eroded beaches (1911) which were installed in New Jersey and New York. He also invented a “Reaction Breakwater” for creating channels through ocean bars.

Writings

He also wrote many other pamphlets and contributions to engineering journals.

Notes

    References

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