Frederick J. Kimball

Frederick J. Kimball

Infobox Person
name=Frederick J. Kimball


caption=
birth_date=birth date|1844|3|6|mf=y
birth_place=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
death_date=death date and age|1903|7|27|1844|3|6|mf=y
death_place=

Frederick James Kimball (March 6 1844 – July 27 1903) was a civil engineer. He is credited as the president of the Norfolk and Western Railway during its early development years and for the development of Pocahontas coalfields in Virginia and West Virginia.

Kimball was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. At 18, he went to work for the Erie Branch of the Pennsylvania Railroad as a rodman, a menial worker. After a short time he went to England for two years, where he studied English railroading by working in the system. His return to the United States marked several job changes, each of which was a promotion. In 1878, he became the prime mover behind construction and growth of the Shenandoah Valley Railroad which was building up the Shenandoah Valley.

At an 1881 foreclosure auction, the Atlantic, Mississippi & Ohio Railroad (AM&O), an east-west railroad across Virginia controlled by William Mahone was purchased by E.W. Clark and Co., a private banking firm in Philadelphia which controlled the Shenandoah Valley Railroad then under construction.

Kimball, who was a partner in the Clark firm, headed the new line, which was renamed Norfolk & Western Railway, and consolidated it with the Shenandoah Valley Railroad. For the junction for the Shenandoah and the Norfolk & Western, Kimball and his board of directors selected a small Virginia village called Big Lick, on the Roanoke River. The small town was later renamed Roanoke, Virginia.

Under the Kimball era, the Norfolk & Western became famous for manufacturing steam locomotives in-house at its Roanoke, Virginia shops. Kimball, whose interest in geology was responsible for the opening of the Pocahontas coalfields in western Virginia and West Virginia, pushed N&W lines through the wilds of West Virginia, north to Columbus, Ohio and Cincinnati, Ohio, and south to Durham, North Carolina and Winston-Salem, North Carolina. This gave the railroad the route structure it was to use for more than 60 years.

In 1885, several small mining companies representing about 400,000 acres (1,600 km²) of bituminous coal reserves grouped together to form the coalfields' largest landowner, the Philadelphia-based Flat-Top Coal Land Association. Norfolk and Western Railway bought the Association and reorganized it as the Pocahontas Coal and Coke Co., which it later renamed Pocahontas Land Corp, now a subsidiary of Norfolk Southern.

Transported by the N&W and neighboring Virginian Railway (VGN), Pocahontas coal fueled half the world's navies during the 20th century and today stokes steel mills and power plants all over the globe.

Kimball died in 1903, and was succeeded as president of the Norfolk and Western Railway by Lucius E. Johnson.


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