Arthur Mellen Wellington (December 20, 1847 – May 17, 1895)[1] was an American civil engineer who wrote the 1877 book The Economic Theory of the Location of Railways. The saying that An engineer can do for a dollar what any fool can do for two is an abridgement of a statement made in this work (see below). Wellington was involved in the design and construction of new railways in Mexico. He was chief engineer of the Toledo and Canada Southern Railroad. He was the editor of the Engineering News.[2][3]
The pioneering effort of Wellington in engineering economics in the 1870s was continued by John Charles Lounsbury Fish with the publication of Engineering Economics: First Principles in 1923 and the first publication of the Principles of Engineering Economy in 1930 by Eugene L. Grant.
Early life and works
He was born on December 25, 1847, in Waltham, Massachusetts.[1] In 1878,[4] he married Agnes Bates, and they had two children. Wellington was a descendant of Roger Wellington, an early settler of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1636 and Benjamin Wellington.[4] In 1863, Wellington graduated from the Boston Latin School and then studied engineering with John Benjamin Henck, a prominent civil engineer practicing in Boston.[5] While his work with Henck took place during the American Civil War, he studied mechanical engineering and passed the examination for an assistant engineer in the United States Navy but with the end of the War, never received an appointment.[5]
The famous quotation, 'An engineer can do for a dollar what any fool can do for two," is a shortened version of this statement below, which appears in the introduction to his magnum opus, "The Economic Theory of the Location of Railways," published in 1877:
"It would be well if engineering were less generally thought of, and even defined, as the art of constructing. In a certain important sense it is rather the art of not constructing; or, to define it rudely but not inaptly, it is the art of doing that well with one dollar, which any bungler can do with two after a fashion."[7]
Wellington; Drummond, Victor. "Report respecting railways and trade in Mexico". Great Britain House of Commons Sessional papers 1881 LXXXIX 390 401 Cd 2944.[9]
"The American line from Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico via Jalapa". American Society of Civil Engineers Transactions. XV: 791–829. 1886. Wellington was chief engineer in charge of the 1881 survey. See also "(unspecified)". Engineering News. XVIII: 165–6, 182–3 and 202–3. 1887.[9]
Rudolph, Hering; Wellington, A.M. (1893). Piles and pile-driving. Engineering News Publishing Co. being a reprint of some of the articles which have appeared in Engineering News on pile driving and the safe load of piles and of the pamphlet.
In 1979, the then-named American Institute of Industrial Engineers, (now Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers or IISE) created the Wellington Award in honor of his work in engineering economy to recognize "...contributions and service in the field of engineering economy that enhance the visibility of the engineering economy division of IISE."[12]
Its first four recipients were Eugene L. Grant (1979), Arthur Lesser Jr (1980), W. Grant Ireson (1981) and H.G. Thuesen (1982).
His book The Economic Theory of the Location of Railways was first published in 1877 by the Railroad Gazette and John Wiley New York. The subtitle was An analysis of the conditions which govern the judicious adjustment of gradients, curvature, and length of line to each other, and the character and volume of traffic. The 5th edition had the subtitle An analysis of the conditions controlling the laying out of railways to effect the most judicious expenditure of capital. He indicated the importance of the ruling gradient and its effect on train loads and running costs. By 1910 it was in its 6th edition and had also been printed in London.
^ ab"Obituary Notes: Arthur M. Wellington". Chicago Tribune. May 18, 1895. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com. Arthur M. Wellington died at New York after a prolonged illness. Mr. Wellington was chief engineer of the Toledo and Canada Southern railway, ...
^ abcdefg"Wellington Obituary". Engineering News and American Railway Journal. 33 (21): 886–888. May 23, 1895. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^"Obituary: Arthur Mellen Wellington". Transactions of the Canadian Society of Civil Engineers. s. 9-10. Canadian Society of Civil Engineers. 1895. Retrieved January 2, 2018 – via Google Books. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^US 549981, A.M. Wellington, Dec'd. A.B. Wellington, Executrix, "Art of and Apparatus for Converting Heat into Work by Agency of Vapor Pressure", issued November 19, 1895