Charles H. Sharman

Charles H. Sharman
Sharman at UPRR Golden Spike ceremony
Born1841 (1841)
Ireland
DiedJanuary 7, 1938 (1938-01-08) (aged 96)
Resting placeFayetteville, Arkansas, US
NationalityAmerican
Educationcivil engineering
SpouseAnna Sharman (-1923)
ChildrenFlorence S. Altizer (1876-1946)
Engineering career
DisciplineCivil
InstitutionsIowa central college
Employer(s)Union Pacific railroad
ProjectsFirst transcontinental railroad
Significant designGrand Island and Dale creek bridges
Russell photograph of the "Engineers of U.P.R.R. at the Laying of Last Rail Promentory" Sharman is fourth from the left.

Charles H. Sharman (1841-1938) was a civil engineer who was part of the effort to build the Union Pacific railroad to Promontory Point, Utah in 1869. Sharman was present at the Golden spike ceremony on May 10, 1869, connecting the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroads at Promontory Summit, Utah Territory. Sharman was also in the Russell photograph of the same date [1]

After the Union Pacific was built to Promontory, Sharman worked with a number of midwest railroads and in 1920, retired to Fayetteville, Arkansas. Sharman's 1929 manuscript of his work on building the Union Pacific railroad provided the source material for Western fiction author Ernest Haycox to write a story called the "troubleshooter" in Collier's magazine in 1936.[1] "Trouble Shooter," told the story of Frank Peace, nominally a (civil) engineer working with (Samuel) Reed but mostly as (Grenville) Dodge's hired gun on the line. As such, Peace was frequently confined to those iniquitous siding towns, of which Sharman knew little. The novel first appeared in serial form in Collier's magazine in 1936 and was the basis of the Cecil B. DeMille motion picture epic Union Pacific, released in 1939.[1]

  1. ^ a b c Haycox Jr, Ernest. "'A very exclusive party'." Montana; The Magazine of Western History 51.1 (2001): 20.