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Collection Reference Number GLC03804.30
From Archive Folder John Grimes Walker's naval correspondence 
Title Lewis Haput Muhlenberg to John G. Walker with whom he was working on the feasibility of creating a canal in Nicaragua
Date 9 September 1898
Author Haupt, Lewis Muhlenberg (1844-1937)  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Written by Haupt, who was working with Walker in Nicaragua (see GLC03804.25 -- he is referenced as one of the guests on the receipt) on the feasibility of creating a canal there. Says he heard that "Menocal has been 'pardoned'" and assigned to duty "on the Commission." (see GLC03804.25 and .26). Also reports that "Ehle" has returned to the United States without any data, which is withheld at Greytown, Nicaragua, and that "parties are still in the field." Says he has been advised that Mr. Huntington has such control over Congress that no canal bill can be passed inside of two years. Haupt believes the statements to be unfounded. Says that after a month's delay he got the "solar transit," borrowed for the government from Mr. Loring, through the custom house. Wants to know the rate and method of payment to the canal commissioners. Says he has had to liquidate some securities to defray his current expenses. Says he is still at work on "the estimates of Greytown and the divide cut." Would like to hear his suggestions on the preliminary report he sent in the spring. Says no definite decisions have been made on dimensions and that the estimates are held up as a result. Note on the margin mentions photographs that were sent (not included here). Edges of the letter have been repaired.
Subjects Mississippi  Progressive Era  Union General  Navy  Latin and South America  Canals  Global History and Civics  Military Law  Congress  Law  Science and Technology  Surveying  Finance  Infrastructure  Photography  
People Walker, John Grimes (1835-1907)  
Place written Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Theme Naval & Maritime; Science, Technology, Invention
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1860-1945
Additional Information Haupt studied at the Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard before graduating from West Point in 1867. After service as a lieutenant in the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers from 1868 to 1869, he returned to Philadelphia to work as a topographical engineer on Fairmount Park. After a short period in 1872 as an Assistant Engineer at the U. S. Patent Office, he became an instructor in math and engineering at the University of Pennsylvania. Haupt was promoted to assistant professor of civil engineering in 1873 and to full professor of civil engineering in 1875, a post he would hold until 1892. Haupt wrote many tracts on the subject of engineering, and served for a period as an editor of the American Engineering Register. In 1897 he was appointed by President McKinley to study the feasibility of a Nicaraguan canal linking the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. When the Panama site was finally chosen, he served on the Panama Canal Commission.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945