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German civil engineer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ernst Kuhl (February 9, 1843 – December 29, 1911) was a German civil and mechanical engineer.
Ernst Kuhl was born in Saarlouis. At the age of 18 he graduated from the gymnasium in Trier, and in 1865 he graduated the course of civil engineering in Karlsruhe. He worked for many years as a manager of a smelting works on the river Rhine, and worked as an engineer on a North German Lloyd steamer.
In 1872 Ernst Kuhl immigrated to the Unites Stated and settled in Buffalo, New York. Beginning of 1873 he started working at the office of the Tenth Light-House District.[1] From 1876 to 1878 he was self-employed and manufactured special devices for power transmission.
In 1878 he went back to Government service. Until 1900 he was as mechanical engineer and draftsman for the improvement of the Missouri River.[2] He designed the machinery for the towboats Arethusa and Atalanta, and for the snagboats Wright and Suter.[3]
From 1900 to 1910 he was superintendent of the department of mechanical engineering of the United States Engineer Office at Pittsburgh, under Major William L. Sibert.[4] He designed steamboats, dredges, structural steel and operating machinery for many locks and dams in Monongahela River.
In 1910 he was transferred to the United States Engineer Office in St. Louis. He died December 29, 1911[5]—roughly one your after his wife passed away.
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