Wilhite Nusz (1882-1968) was a civil engineer with the Illinois Central Railroad, and during his long career he rose to the position of Office Engineer with the Chicago Division. After his retirement he wrote a long and very detailed autobiography, which has now been donated to IRM by his great-nephew. This will be delivered to the Strahorn, but first I thought you might want to see some of the material.
The narrative includes amazing detail, with descriptions of people he worked with and conditions at the various locations, and is quite well written. And fortunately it was all typed up, so we don't have to try to read his microscopic handwriting! At the bottom of this post I have included a brief sample of the narrative.
Mr. Nusz worked on several major projects over the years, such as relocation of the main line from Nashville to Chattanooga, grade separation at Mattoon, and construction of several branchlines. But probably the most important part of his career was that he was largely responsible for drafting many of the engineering details in the Chicago Lake Front Ordinance, or Electrification Ordinance of 1919 which led to the electrification of suburban service and made possible the development of a large part of Chicago's modern lakefront. He was also responsible for constructing the original IC part of the railroad hall at MSI, although this has now been replaced.
Another amusing section of the narrative tells how he was asked to make a study of the Chicago Tunnel. He quickly decided that the entire project had been a foolish mistake -- if they had built a tunnel that could handle standard freight cars it might have been profitable, but as it was, the investment was nearly a dead loss.
Sample of the Narrative
4 comments:
You almost wish that you could go on Amazon and buy the whole book. It reads pretty well.
C Kronenwetter
Actually, I have a longer sample of the narrative in pdf, pgs 30-75, that Leverett Nelson made for us, but it's more than 4MB. Maybe I can compress it and post it. But that's still only a small part of the whole.
Sorry, I take that back. That IS the compressed size.
My grandfather worked for the Illinois Central down south of you in Kentucky. It was quite a railroad in its day. And I am glad that IRM has such a good sample of locos and cars. I hope the heavyweight diner gets restored some day. Or at least in its modernized state.
Ted Miles, IRM Member
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