Fayette Bartholomew Tower: Difference between revisions
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'''Fayette Bartholomew Tower''' (1817-1857), civil engineer; mayor. Tower was Born in [[Waterville, New York]] on June 29, 1817. Tower was educated as a civil engineer. In 1837, he was appointed on the [[Croton Aqueduct]] and he continued on that work until its completion in 1842. During the ensuing five years he made Waterville his residence, and at the time prepared his "Illustration of the Croton Aqueduct" consisting of a series of twenty-one plates with text (New York, 1843). About 1848 his health led him to seek a milder climate, and he settled in [[Cumberland, Maryland]]. He was chosen to the Maryland, legislature and was later elected |
'''Fayette Bartholomew Tower''' (1817-1857), civil engineer; mayor. Tower was Born in [[Waterville, New York]] on June 29, 1817. Tower was educated as a civil engineer. In 1837, he was appointed on the [[Croton Aqueduct]] and he continued on that work until its completion in 1842. During the ensuing five years he made Waterville his residence, and at the time prepared his "Illustration of the Croton Aqueduct" consisting of a series of twenty-one plates with text (New York, 1843). About 1848 his health led him to seek a milder climate, and he settled in [[Cumberland, Maryland]]. He was chosen to the Maryland, legislature and was later elected mayor of Cumberland (1853-1854). His health continued to fall, and in 1856 he returned to Waterville and died soon afterward on Febuary 16,1857.<ref>James Grant Wilson, John Fiske, 'Appleton's Encyclopaedia of American Biography', D. Appleton and Company, 1889, page 146</ref> |
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Revision as of 01:22, 24 April 2007
Fayette Bartholomew Tower (1817-1857), civil engineer; mayor. Tower was Born in Waterville, New York on June 29, 1817. Tower was educated as a civil engineer. In 1837, he was appointed on the Croton Aqueduct and he continued on that work until its completion in 1842. During the ensuing five years he made Waterville his residence, and at the time prepared his "Illustration of the Croton Aqueduct" consisting of a series of twenty-one plates with text (New York, 1843). About 1848 his health led him to seek a milder climate, and he settled in Cumberland, Maryland. He was chosen to the Maryland, legislature and was later elected mayor of Cumberland (1853-1854). His health continued to fall, and in 1856 he returned to Waterville and died soon afterward on Febuary 16,1857.[1]
Reference
<reference/>
External Links
- ^ James Grant Wilson, John Fiske, 'Appleton's Encyclopaedia of American Biography', D. Appleton and Company, 1889, page 146