Leif J. Sverdrup

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Leif Johan Sverdrup (b. 1898 – d.1976) was a Norwegian American civil engineer and military officer with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He served during World War II as Chief Engineer under General Douglas MacArthur and in the U.S. Army Reserve from 1947 to 1958. He co-founded a civil engineering firm which designed and oversaw construction of many major U.S. projects, including the 17 mile-long Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, named one of the Seven Engineering Wonders of the Modern World after its completion in 1964.

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[edit] Youth, education

Leif Sverdrup was born in Norway and immigrated with his family to Minnesota at the age of 17. He served in the U.S. Army as a private in World War I. After the war, he earned a degree in civil engineering from the University of Minnesota.

[edit] Sverdrup & Parcel

In 1928, he joined with his college engineering professor John I. Parcel in the formation of Sverdrup & Parcel, a civil engineering firm with a specialty field of bridges. Many of the company's projects were located in the St. Louis, Missouri area near the company's headquarters. Some well known projects of Sverdrup and Parcel include:

[edit] World War II and post-war

During World War II, Leif Sverdrup returned to military service, and initially served as a colonel in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Promoted to Major General, in 1945 he was put in charge of the Engineering Construction Command for the Pacific Theater of War as chief engineer to General Douglas MacArthur. He received the Distinguished Service Cross and was described by MacArthur as "the engineer soldier at his best." Also in 1945, General MacArthur presented Sverdrup with his personal Gold Castles insignia, which MacArthur had worn for over 40 years (since his graduation from the U.S. Military Academy (West Point).

In 1947, the 102d Infantry Division of the U.S. Army Reserve was activated as part of the Organized Reserve, with General Sverdrup in command. On January 31, 1958, General Sverdrup retired from the service (for the third time!).

On May 2, 1975, long-retired General Sverdrup attended the Engineer Dinner at Fort Belvoir, Virginia which marked the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' 200th anniversary. At that time, he presented Chief of Engineers General William C. Gribble Jr. with the Gold Castles insignia, which he had saved for 30 years. Later the same night, a new Corps tradition began. (See also article Gold Castles)

[edit] Death, legacy

Leif J. Sverdrup died in 1976. After full military honors, he was interred in Valhalla Cemetery located in Hanley Hills, Missouri.

In 2006, 30 years after his death, many of Sverdrup's accomplishments continue to serve their missions, a silent testimony to his engineering skills. A number of professional organizations also began annual award programs in his honor and memory.

  • His business continued after his retirement, first as Sverdrup & Parcel, later as Sverdrup Civil, and most recently, as Jacobs Sverdrup, a portion of one of the world's largest civil engineering groups.
  • In the 1990s, Sverdrup Civil oversaw the successful design and construction of the additional "parallel trestles" of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel (CBBT), doubling the non-tunnel sections, adding the capacity of two more lanes and adding emergency turnouts to the bridge-tunnel facility. The CBBT was still the longest in the world 30 years after Leif Sverdrup and his company completed the original project.
  • Since 1980, The Sverdrup Medal of the Society of American Military Engineers has been awarded annually in his memory.
  • At Augsburg College, the annual Gen. Leif J. Sverdrup Visiting Scientist Program is endowed by the Sverdrup family and by NASA through the Minnesota Space Grant Consortium.
  • The business/technology complex at Webster University's main campus is named after Sverdrup. The building houses the School of Communications and the School of Business and Technology, as well as the May Gallery of art.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hey, don't blame me for collapse. Daily News. Retrieved on 2007-08-04.
  2. ^ Brittain, William (1976). The spirit of scouting '76: Challenge and triumph: 65 years of St. Louis area Scouting: The story of the St. Louis Area Council, Boy Scouts of America. St. Louis Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, 181. 

[edit] Additional reading

  • Franza, Gregory M., and Ely, William J.; (1980); Leif Sverdrup: Engineer Soldier At His Best; Gerald, Missouri; Patrice Press; ISBN 0-935284-12-5

[edit] External links