Dewitt Clinton Haskin

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Col. Dewitt Clinton Haskin (circa 1824 – July 17, 1900) was an American engineer who developed the initial methods for construction of the first tunnels under the Hudson River between New Jersey and Manhattan.

California Pacific Railroad: D. C. Haskin, effective October 18, 1869

In the late 1860s, Haskin gained experience in California on the construction of the California Pacific Railroad.[1]

For the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad project, he founded the Hudson Tunnel Company in 1873, and began construction in 1874 by digging a shaft in Jersey City, New Jersey.[2] He had patented a compressed air method for reducing cave-ins, but in 1880, 20 workers were killed in a blowout. Another blowout in 1881 and a gradual loss of funding halted the project in 1887. After a British firm worked on the project from 1889-1891,[3] the lawyer William Gibbs McAdoo completed the project in 1908.[4] (See Uptown Hudson Tubes.)

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