
Crozet
Benoit Claudius Crozet (December 31, 1789 –
January 29, 1864) was an
educator and
civil engineer.
He was born in
France
.
After
serving in the French military, in 1816, he immigrated to the
United
States
. Crozet taught at the
U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, New York
, and helped found Virginia
Military Institute
at Lexington, Virginia
. Crozet was Principal Engineer for the
Virginia Board of Public
Works and oversaw the planning and construction of canals, turnpikes, bridges and railroads in
Virginia
, including
the area which is now West Virginia
. He become widely known as the "Pathfinder
of the Blue Ridge," and many of his maps and other work are on
display at the
Library of
Virginia in Richmond.
Early life, family
Claudius Crozet was born in
Villefranche on December 31, 1789. He
attended a special engineering school and graduated as
sub-lieutenant on October 1, 1807. Crozet studied bridge building,
and graduated from the Imperial Artillery School as a second
lieutenant on June 9, 1809. Crozet resigned from military duty on
April 11, 1816.
On June 7,
1816, in Paris
, Crozet
married Agathe Decamp.
Immigration to United States
Late in
fall of 1816, Crozet and his bride headed for the United States
. Almost immediately after arriving, Crozet
began work as a professor of engineering at the
U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, New York
.
While at West Point, Crozet is credited by some as being the first
to use the chalkboard as an instructional tool. He used the
"Elementary Course of Civil Engineering", translated from the
course of M. J.
Sganzin at the École
Polytechnique
. He also designed several of the buildings
at West Point.
Thomas Jefferson
referred to Claudius Crozet as "by far the best mathematician in
the United States."
Virginia Board of Public Works
In 1823, Crozet was elected Principal Engineer and Surveyor for the
Virginia Board of Public
Works.
He resigned from his duties at West Point,
and brought his wife and two children (a boy and a girl) with him
to live in Richmond,
Virginia
.
Virginia's Board of Public Works was very active in promoting the
development of canals, roads, and railroads. His work included
approving various proposals and determining their engineering
feasibility.
At the time, Virginia extended all the way
from the Atlantic
Ocean
to the Ohio River and was
the largest state east of the Mississippi River. It included what is
now the State of West
Virginia
.
Crozet worked on hundreds of transportation projects, such as the
Northwestern Turnpike.
Typical of his many projects of this nature was the
Chesterfield Railroad, the first in
Virginia, the plans of which he examined before Board of Public
Works funds were approved. It began operations in 1831.
In 1832,
Crozet left Virginia to work in Louisiana
. However, he returned to his old job in
Virginia in 1837 to work on roads, canals, railroads and other
points of necessity for the state. By this time, some railroads
were already under construction and the canal system had reached
its potential. He left office in 1843 after losing support of canal
owners when he correctly forecast the future advantages railroads
would hold for Virginia. Authoring textbooks on highway, railroad
and aqueduct design, his 1848 map of the entire state was the first
since the one prepared by
Peter
Jefferson, father of
Thomas
Jefferson, over a century earlier.
Virginia Military Institute, Blue Ridge Tunnels

The North Entrance to the Blue Ridge
tunnel
Crozet
was one of the founders of Virginia Military Institute
(VMI) at Lexington, Virginia
, a major training institution for engineers and
militia officers for Virginia and the South. When VMI opened
in 1839, Crozet was the architect of the college's academic program
and military organization. At its first meeting, the members of the
VMI Board of Visitors elected Crozet president of the Board, a
position he held for six years (while remaining the state's Chief
Engineer).
In 1839,
Crozet surveyed the Blue Ridge
Mountains and determined that the best way to allow the
Blue Ridge Railroad,
an extension of the Virginia
Central Railroad, to cross the mountain would be through a
series of four tunnels near Rockfish Gap
at Afton Mountain. The long Blue Ridge
Tunnel was opened in 1856, although rail service did not begin
until April 1858. At that time, it was the longest tunnel in the
United States and one of the longest in the world. Dug a decade
before the invention of
dynamite it was
considered to be an "engineering wonder of the world" and was less
than a half-foot (15.2 centimetres) off perfect alignment, as
construction had proceeded from either end. Upon completion of the
tunnels in 1858, the
Blue Ridge Railroad ceased
to exist, becoming a part of the
Virginia Central Railroad. In
1868, the
Virginia Central
Railroad was merged with the
Covington and Ohio Railroad to
create the
Chesapeake and
Ohio Railway; the original tunnel served until it was replaced
with a different alignment in 1944. Perhaps as mute testament to
Crozet's extraordinary skills, despite advances in technology from
the 1850s, the "new" mid 20th century tunnel was off-center, in
comparison with only 6 inches in Crozet's earlier
project.
During
the American Civil War,
Confederate General Thomas
Stonewall Jackson, a former instructor at VMI, used Crozet's
tunnel to transfer his "foot cavalry"
(in modern times, this would be known as a rapid deployment
force) from the Shenandoah Valley
to the east side of the Blue Ridge quickly, to the
puzzlement and consternation of Union military
leaders.
Crozet died in 1864. Hundreds of plans and drawings which he
oversaw have been retained in the archives of the
Library of Virginia.
The town
of Crozet,
Virginia
was named in his honor. The original Blue Ridge
Tunnel
is now proposed for a "rails-to-trails" project sponsored by Nelson
County. When completed, it will be the third-longest
pedestrian tunnel in the nation.
External links