Leonard H. Eicholtz
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Leonard Henry Eicholtz (April 23, 1827 – January 3, 1911) was a leading 19th-century American
railroad engineer A train driver, engine driver, engineman or locomotive driver, commonly known as an engineer or railroad engineer in the United States and Canada, and also as a locomotive handler, locomotive operator, train operator, or motorman, is a pers ...
and
civil engineer A civil engineer is a person who practices civil engineering – the application of planning, designing, constructing, maintaining, and operating infrastructure while protecting the public and environmental health, as well as improving existing ...
.


Early life and career

Eicholtz was born in the city of
Lancaster, Pennsylvania Lancaster, ( ; pdc, Lengeschder) is a city in and the county seat of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. It is one of the oldest inland cities in the United States. With a population at the 2020 census of 58,039, it ranks 11th in population amon ...
, on April 23, 1827, being the oldest son of Henry and Elizabeth Eicholtz. The family was of German origin, his great grandfather, Jacob Eicholtz, left the Palatinate, Germany, and coming to Pennsylvania, where he settled in Lancaster county, in 1733. Eicholtz studied civil engineering at the Moravian Academy at Lititz, Lancaster county, Pennsylvania.Ferril, William Columbus. Sketches of Colorado: Being an Analytical Summary and Biographical History of the State of Colorado as Portrayed in the Lives of the Pioneers, the Founders, the Builders, the Statesmen, and the Prominent and Progressive Citizens who Helped in the Development and History Making of Colorado. Western Press Bureau Company, 1911.


Pennsylvania railroad

In 1852, Eicholtz joined the corps of engineers working on the railroad until 1854 when he started working on 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 ...
. Eicholtz remained on the project until the railroad experience financial problems due to the
Panic of 1857 The Panic of 1857 was a financial panic in the United States caused by the declining international economy and over-expansion of the domestic economy. Because of the invention of the telegraph by Samuel F. Morse in 1844, the Panic of 1857 was ...
. Eicholtz left the railroad at that time only to return in 1858.


Interoceanic Railway Company

In 1857, he went to
Honduras Honduras, officially the Republic of Honduras, is a country in Central America. The republic of Honduras is bordered to the west by Guatemala, to the southwest by El Salvador, to the southeast by Nicaragua, to the south by the Pacific Oce ...
to work with John C. Trautwine of Philadelphia who was chief engineer of a party surveying a line from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean for the Honduras Interoceanic Railway.


Kansas Pacific Railway

In 1866, Eicholtz left the military railroads and was a resident engineer of the
Kansas Pacific Railway The Kansas Pacific Railway (KP) was a historic railroad company that operated in the western United States in the late 19th century. It was a federally chartered railroad, backed with government land grants. At a time when the first transcontine ...
Company, with headquarters at
Wyandotte, Kansas The Huron Indian Cemetery in Kansas City, Kansas, also known as Huron Park Cemetery, is now formally known as the Wyandot National Burying Ground. It was established circa 1843, soon after the Wyandot had arrived following removal from Ohio. T ...
(today part of
Kansas City, Kansas Kansas City, abbreviated as "KCK", is the third-largest city in the U.S. state of Kansas, and the county seat of Wyandotte County. It is an inner suburb of the older and more populous Kansas City, Missouri, after which it is named. As of the ...
). The US Congress had approved and Act on July 3, 1866, authorizing the railway to extend the railroad westward along the Smoky Hill River to Denver, Colorado. The Act also required the railroad to join the Union Pacific railroad no more than fifty miles west of Denver, a distance of 394 miles. The railroad was completed by the end of 1867.Crippen, Waldo. The Kansas Pacific Railroad; a Cross Section of an Age of Railroad Building. Diss. The University of Chicago, 1932.


Union Pacific Railway Company

In 1868, Eicholtz became superintendent of bridge-building and remained with the project until its completion at Promontory Point and the Golden Spike event on May 10, 1869. Eicholtz is in the
Andrew J. Russell Andrew Joseph Russell (March 20, 1829 – September 22, 1902) was a 19th-century photographer of the American Civil War and the Union Pacific Railroad. Russell photographed construction of the Union Pacific (UP) in 1868 and 1869. Early life A ...
photograph titled " Engineers of U.P.R.R. at the Laying of Last Rail Promentory (sic).Pattison, William D. "The Pacific Railroad Rediscovered." Geographical Review 52.1 (1962): 25-36.


Civil War

Soon after the beginning of the war with Fort Sumter, Eicholtz volunteered as an assistant engineer for military railroads in the Military Division of the Mississippi. Eicholtz worked to reconstruct railroads destroyed by the two armies during Sherman's campaign in Tennessee and Georgia and Sherman march from Chattanooga to Atlanta. Eicholtz left the Army in 1866 as acting chief engineer of military railroads of the Division of the Mississippi.


Family and death and

Eicholtz married Ellen Inslee Smith in 1871 and they had five children: four daughters and one son, Leonard H. Eicholtz, Jr.Leonard H. Eicholtz Civil War letter, MSS 101f, Kenan Research Center at the Atlanta History Center. Accessed April 2, 2020. Eicholtz died on January 3, 1911.


References

Books * Manuscript Collections * Leonard H. Eicholtz Collection (MSS #1023), Colorado Historical Society, Denver, Colorado. * Inventory of the Leonard Eicholtz diaries, 1838–1910, University of Wyoming. American Heritage Center. Sources {{DEFAULTSORT:Eicholtz, Leonard H. 1827 births 1911 deaths Engineers from Pennsylvania American railway civil engineers People from Lancaster, Pennsylvania