Frank K. Hain
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Franklin Kintzel Hain (July 22, 1836 – May 9, 1896), often called "Colonel Hain" during his lifetime, was the general manager of the Manhattan Railway Company from 1880 until his death.


Early life and career before New York

Hain was the eldest of five children of Pennsylvania German parents, Samuel Hain and Margaret Fitzenberger Kintzel. He was born in Stouchsburg, where he was educated at Tulpehocken Academy. Around 1850, the family moved to
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, where he started work at 17 in 1853 as an apprentice machinist with the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. He left in 1857 to join the
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as an assistant engineer, and served aboard USS ''Colorado'' from January to August 1858. He then returned to Pennsylvania and opened a leather business in Danville. The month after the outbreak of the
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, in May 1861, Hain re-enlisted in the Union Navy. He served aboard USS ''Iroquois'' until she was decommissioned in October 1862; he was then assigned to USS ''Sangamon'' but because of persistent ill health—during his time on the ''Iroquois'' he had been in sickbay for adynamia,
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, and
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and also been wounded—he did not join the ship and his resignation was accepted in January 1863. In 1863–64, he worked as a draftsman for the
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad (also known as the DL&W or Lackawanna Railroad) was a U.S. Class 1 railroad that connected Buffalo, New York, and Hoboken, New Jersey (and by ferry with New York City), a distance of . Incorporated in ...
in Scranton. During this time he also served for about a month as a captain in the Pennsylvania Infantry Militia, commanding 102 men; his nickname of "Colonel" dates from this service, although he never held that rank or, apparently, saw action. In March 1864, he became a master mechanic for the
Philadelphia and Erie Railroad The Philadelphia and Erie Railroad was a railroad that operated in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania between 1861 and 1907. It was subsequently merged into the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR). History The Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company (also known a ...
; on January 1, 1865, he was promoted to superintendent of motive power. Two years later, in January 1867, he became a lead draftsman at the
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in Philadelphia, where he lived in company housing with his brother George, who was a foreman machinist. The company used a system of standardized interchangeable parts to design locomotives to fit the needs of a variety of customers, many foreign; Hain was responsible for designing the first
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-burning locomotives for Russia, and traveled there in 1871 to meet with government representatives. He then became Supervisor of the Susquehanna Depot of the
Erie Railroad The Erie Railroad was a railroad that operated in the northeastern United States, originally connecting New York City — more specifically Jersey City, New Jersey, where Erie's Pavonia Terminal, long demolished, used to stand — with Lake Erie ...
from 1874 to 1876, and general superintendent and purchasing agent for the Keokuk & Des Moines Railroad, then following its purchase by the Rock Island Railroad, superintendent of the Keokuk & Des Moines division of the Rock Island Railroad. In 1880, after the railroad changed its name to the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (CRI&P RW, sometimes called ''Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway'') was an American Class I railroad. It was also known as the Rock Island Line, or, in its final years, The Rock. At the end ...
, he accepted an offer from Jay Gould—a board member of the Rock Island Railroad and former president of the Erie Railroad—to become general manager of the Manhattan Railway Company.


General Manager of the Manhattan Railway Company

Hain was first master mechanic and then general manager of the Manhattan Railway Company, which operated the elevated lines in Manhattan and the Bronx, from March 1880 until his death; in 1891 he became second vice-president. Despite financial difficulties so severe that the company was in receivership for three months in 1881, and continuing problems with labor unions, he succeeded in cutting costs and making the company profitable. Although no passengers were killed on the trains, there were numerous accidents that killed workers and people getting off and on, and the company was constantly attacked as mercenary and uncaring by the newspapers, especially ''
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''. Yet after his death, Hain was eulogized by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers as "a true friend and almost a father" to his employees, with "a strict sense of justice in administering between his company" and them, in the ''
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'' as "regard ngthe company otas a commodity or speculation, but as a public agency", and by ''The New York Times'' as chiefly responsible for the fact the elevated railroad had, " nthe practical side", been "admirably handled", and as having been "a stranger to the stock jobbing and the litigation of its owners".


Sickness and death

Hain showed increasing signs of nervous breakdown in his last two years on the job, and finally took a vacation in Washington, D.C., and Virginia early in 1896. On his doctor's insistence, he was then persuaded to enter
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in
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for a complete rest. His wife accompanied him and reported that he appeared to be recovering well, but on May 9 he took his life by crawling under a
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freight train. An editorial in ''The New York Times'' three days later called it "a martyrdom to duty." 4,000 employees of the Manhattan Railway Company raised $2,500 to erect a granite monument 7 feet high and 9 feet wide at his burial place in the Presbyterian Cemetery in Danville, Pennsylvania. It was dedicated on May 26, 1897; "thousands" of railroaders, including approximately 200 from the company, attended.


Personal life

Hain married Annie McWilliams of
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, on January 23, 1861. She was a suffragist and a member of the Portia Club, which advocated the appointment of a female judge; she studied law in a special women's program at
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. In New York, they lived in the Navarro Apartments or "Spanish Flats" on 58th St. They had one child, Rebecca McWilliams Hain, born while Hain was at sea on the ''Iroquois''; she died in 1866 aged four and a half. Hain was convinced he was descended from the Dutch admiral Piet Pieterszoon Hein, probably incorrectly since his ancestors were from the Palatinate.Hain, p. 140.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hain, Frank K 1836 births 1896 deaths 19th-century American railroad executives People from Berks County, Pennsylvania Suicides by train 1890s suicides