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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Address at the 42d Annual Convention, Chicago, Illinois, June 21st, 1910, By John A. Bensel
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Transactions of the American Society of
+Civil Engineers, Vol. LXX, Dec. 1910, by John A. Bensel
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Vol. LXX, Dec. 1910
+ Address at the 42d Annual Convention, Chicago, Illinois,
+ June 21st, 1910, Paper No. 1178
+
+Author: John A. Bensel
+
+Release Date: July 8, 2006 [EBook #18795]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sigal Alon and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[464]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS</h2>
+
+<h3>INSTITUTED 1852</h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<h1>TRANSACTIONS</h1>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<h3>Paper No. 1178</h3>
+
+<h1><span class="smcap">ADDRESS AT THE 42d ANNUAL CONVENTION,
+CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, JUNE 21st, 1910.</span></h1>
+
+<h2><span class="smcap">By John A. Bensel, President, Am. Soc. C. E.</span>
+</h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+
+<p>I know that to some of my audience a satisfactory address at a
+summer convention would be like that which many people regard as
+a satisfactory sermon&mdash;something soothing and convincing, to the
+effect that you are not as other men are, but better. While I appreciate
+very fully, however, the honor of being able to address you, I
+am going to look trouble in the face in an effort to convince you that, in
+spite of great individual achievements, engineers are behind other professional
+men in professional spirit, and particularly in collective effort.</p>
+
+<p>Whether this, if true, is due to our extreme youth as a profession,
+or our extreme age, is dependent upon the point of view; but I think
+it is a fact that will be admitted by all that engineers have not as
+yet done much for their profession, even if they have done considerable
+for the world at large.</p>
+
+<p>Looking backward, our calling may properly be considered the
+oldest in the world. It is older, in fact, than history itself, for man
+did not begin to separate from the main part of animal creation, until
+he began to direct the sources of power in Nature for the benefit, if
+not always for the improvement, of his particular kind. In Bible
+history, we find early mention of the first builder of a pontoon. This
+creditable performance is especially noted, and the name of the party
+principally concerned prominently mentioned. The same thing cannot
+be said of the unsuccessful attempt at the building of the first sky-scraper,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[465]</a></span>
+for here the architect, with unusual modesty, has not given
+history his name, this omission being possibly due to the fact that the
+building was unsuccessful. If an engineer was employed on this particular
+undertaking, the architect had, even at that early stage of his
+profession, learned the lesson of keeping all except his own end of the
+work in the background.</p>
+
+<p>The distinctive naming of our profession does not seem, however,
+to go back any farther than the period of 1761, when that Father of
+the Profession, John Smeaton, first made use of the term, "engineer,"
+and later, "civil engineer," applying it both to others and to himself,
+as descriptive of a certain class of men working along professional
+lines now existing and described by that term.</p>
+
+<p>Remarkable progress has certainly been made in actual achievements
+since that time, and I know of nothing more impressive than
+to contemplate the tremendous changes that have been made in the
+material world by the achievements of engineers, particularly in the
+last hundred years. This was forcibly impressed upon me a short time
+ago, while in the company of the late Charles Haswell, then the oldest
+member of this Society, who, seeing one of the recently built men-of-war
+coming up the harbor, remarked that he had designed the first
+steamship for the United States Navy. The evolution of this intricate
+mass of mechanism, which, from the very beginning of its departure
+from the sailing type of vessel, has taken place entirely within the
+working period of one man's life, is as graphic a showing of engineering
+activity as I think can be found.</p>
+
+<p>Our activities are forcibly shown in many other lines of invention
+and in the utilization of the forces of Nature, particularly in the
+development of this country. We, although young in years, have
+become the greatest railroad builders in history, and have put into
+use mechanical machines like the harvester, the sewing machine, the
+telephone, the wireless telegraph, and almost numberless applications
+of electricity. Ships have been built of late years greatly departing
+from those immediately preceding them, so that at the present time
+they might be compared to floating cities with nearly all a city's conveniences
+and comforts. We have done away with the former isolation
+of the largest city in the country, and have made it a part of the main
+land by the building of tunnels and bridges. In all our work it might
+be said that we are hastening, with feverish energy, from one problem
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[466]</a></span>
+to another, for the so-called purpose of saving time, or for the enjoyment
+of some new sensation; and we have also made possible the
+creation of that which might be deemed of doubtful benefit to the
+human race, that huge conglomerate, the modern city.</p>
+
+<p>There has been no hesitancy in grappling with the problems of
+Nature by engineers, but they seem to be diffident and neglectful of
+human nature in their calculations, leaving it out of their equations,
+greatly to their own detriment and the world's loss. We can say that
+matters outside of the known are not our concern, and we can look
+with pride at our individual achievements, and of course, if this satisfies,
+there is nothing more to be said. But it is because I feel that
+engineers of to-day are not satisfied with their position, that I wonder
+whether we have either fulfilled our obligations to the community, or
+secured proper recognition from it; whether, in fact, the engineer can
+become the force that he should be, until he brings something into his
+equations besides frozen figures, however diverting an occupation this
+may be.</p>
+
+<p>One may wonder whether this state of affairs is caused from a fear
+of injecting uncertain elements into our calculations, or whether it is
+our education or training which makes us conservative to the point of
+operating to our own disadvantage. We may read the requirements
+of our membership and learn from them that in our accomplishments
+we are not to be measured as skilled artisans, but the fact remains that,
+to a great extent, society at large does so rate us, and it would seem
+that we must ourselves be responsible for this state of affairs. Our
+colleges and technical schools are partly to blame for the existence of
+this idea, on account of the different degrees which they give. We
+have a degree of civil engineer, regarded in its narrowest sense, of
+mining engineer, mechanical engineer, electrical engineer, and by
+necessity it would seem as if we should shortly add some particular
+title to designate the engineer who flies. In reality there should be but
+two classes of engineers, and the distinction should be drawn only
+between civil engineers and military engineers. As a matter of fact,
+fate and inclination determine the specialty that a man takes up after
+his preliminary training, and so far as the degrees are concerned, the
+only one that has any right to carry weight, because it is a measure
+of accomplishment, is that which is granted by this Society to its
+corporate members. The schools, in their general mix-up of titles,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[467]</a></span>
+certainly befog the public mind. It is as if the medical schools, for
+instance, should issue degrees at graduation for brain doctors, stomach
+doctors, eye and ear doctors, etc. Very wisely, it seems to me, the
+medical profession and the legal profession, with histories far older
+than ours, and with as wide variations in practice as we have, leave
+the variations in name to the individual taste of the practitioner, in a
+manner which we would do well to copy. The Society itself has
+adopted very broad lines in admission to membership, classing as civil
+engineers all who are properly such; and there is good reason for the
+serious consideration of the term at this time, as we cannot fail to
+recognize a tendency in State and other governments to legislate as
+to the right to practice engineering. It was owing to the introduction
+of a bill limiting and prescribing the right to practice in the State of
+New York, that a committee was recently appointed to look into this
+matter and report to the Society. This report will be before you for
+action at this meeting.</p>
+
+<p>As to the manner in which engineers individually perform their
+work, no criticism would properly lie, and in fact it is fortunate that
+our work speaks for itself, for, as a body, we say nothing. We are
+no longer, however, found working for the greater part of the time
+on the outskirts of civilization, and it becomes necessary, therefore,
+for us to change with changing conditions, and to use our Society
+not only for the benefit of the profession as a whole, but for the
+benefit of the members individually. Whether one of our first steps
+in this direction should be along legislative lines is for you to
+determine. For myself, having been confronted with legislation
+recently attempted in New York, I am convinced that we shall have
+legislation affecting our members, and this legislation should properly
+be moulded by some responsible body like our own Society. If we do
+not take the matter up ourselves it is likely to be taken up by other
+associations, and from past experience, it would seem as though it
+might be carried on along lines that would tend to ridicule our desire
+for professional standing.</p>
+
+<p>The Society is to be congratulated on its present satisfactory
+status. The reports show a very satisfactory financial condition, and
+you may note a continuing increase in membership that is extremely
+gratifying. This, after having nearly doubled in the last seven years,
+still shows no sign of diminishing in its rate of increase. It may be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[468]</a></span>
+said, also, that we have in the Society an excellent publishing house,
+where the members have an opportunity to secure technical papers published
+in the highest style of the art. We have in general in the officers,
+a number of men, who, within the prescribed limits, labor for the benefit
+of the members, but we also have constitutional limitations to the activity
+of our governing body, so that the voice of the Society is never
+heard, or, at least, might be compared to that still, small voice we call
+"conscience," which is not audible outside of the body that possesses it.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in these days, when the statement that two and two make four
+is accepted from its latest originator as a newly discovered truth, a
+little extension of our mathematics, to take into our estimate people as
+well as things, is what we principally need, and it would be a good
+thing, regarded either from the point of view of what the world needs
+or the more selfish view of our own particular gains. At the present
+time it would seem as though our world had thrown away the old gods
+without taking hold of any new ones. Private ownership as it formerly
+existed is no longer recognized; individual action in almost any large
+field is to-day hampered and curtailed in a manner undreamed of
+twenty years ago. In fact, our whole scheme of government seems
+to be passing from the representative form on which it was founded,
+to some new form as yet undetermined. Whether all this is, in our
+opinion, for good or for evil, is of no particular concern. The matter
+that concerns us is, that we have left our old moorings, and that, to
+secure new ones, new limits are to be set to the activities of men along
+lines which concern us, and that, therefore, it is necessary that those
+who by education and training are best fitted to consider facts and
+not desires, should guide society as much as possible along its new lines.
+I consider that we as a profession are particularly trained to do this by
+our consideration of facts as they exist, and I think it will be recognized
+by all that we are not in our work or activities bound by any precedent,
+even if we do learn all that we can from the past; and that we are by
+nature and training of a cool and calculating disposition, which is surely
+a thing that is needed in this time of many suggested experiments.</p>
+
+<p>To be effective, however, we must be cohesive, and thus be able to
+take our part not as the led, but as leaders, convincing the people, if
+possible, that all the ills of our social system cannot be cured by remedies
+which neglect the forces of creation, and that the best doctors for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[469]</a></span>
+our troubles are not necessarily those whose sympathies are most
+audibly expressed.</p>
+
+<p>In the recent discoveries of science our ideas as to the forces of
+Nature must be greatly enlarged and our theories amplified. Recent
+discovery of radium and radio-active substances shows at least that
+much of our old knowledge needs re-writing along the lines of our
+greater knowledge of to-day.</p>
+
+<p>With this increase of knowledge it would seem as though those
+who devote their lives to the exploitation of natural forces should take
+a position in the future even more prominent than in the past, and it
+will undoubtedly become our function to help the world to that ideal
+state described by our greatest living poet of action, when he speaks
+of the time to come, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"And no one shall work for money,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And no one shall work for fame;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But each for the joy of working,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And each in his separate star;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall draw the thing as he sees it,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">For the God of the things as they are."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Transactions of the American Society
+of Civil Engineers, Vol. LXX, Dec. 1910, by John A. Bensel
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Transactions of the American Society of
+Civil Engineers, Vol. LXX, Dec. 1910, by John A. Bensel
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Vol. LXX, Dec. 1910
+ Address at the 42d Annual Convention, Chicago, Illinois,
+ June 21st, 1910, Paper No. 1178
+
+Author: John A. Bensel
+
+Release Date: July 8, 2006 [EBook #18795]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sigal Alon and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS
+
+INSTITUTED 1852
+
+
+TRANSACTIONS
+
+Paper No. 1178
+
+
+ADDRESS AT THE 42D ANNUAL CONVENTION,
+CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, JUNE 21ST, 1910.
+
+BY JOHN A. BENSEL, PRESIDENT, AM. SOC. C. E.
+
+
+
+
+I know that to some of my audience a satisfactory address at a summer
+convention would be like that which many people regard as a satisfactory
+sermon--something soothing and convincing, to the effect that you are
+not as other men are, but better. While I appreciate very fully,
+however, the honor of being able to address you, I am going to look
+trouble in the face in an effort to convince you that, in spite of great
+individual achievements, engineers are behind other professional men in
+professional spirit, and particularly in collective effort.
+
+Whether this, if true, is due to our extreme youth as a profession, or
+our extreme age, is dependent upon the point of view; but I think it is
+a fact that will be admitted by all that engineers have not as yet done
+much for their profession, even if they have done considerable for the
+world at large.
+
+Looking backward, our calling may properly be considered the oldest in
+the world. It is older, in fact, than history itself, for man did not
+begin to separate from the main part of animal creation, until he began
+to direct the sources of power in Nature for the benefit, if not always
+for the improvement, of his particular kind. In Bible history, we find
+early mention of the first builder of a pontoon. This creditable
+performance is especially noted, and the name of the party principally
+concerned prominently mentioned. The same thing cannot be said of the
+unsuccessful attempt at the building of the first sky-scraper, for here
+the architect, with unusual modesty, has not given history his name,
+this omission being possibly due to the fact that the building was
+unsuccessful. If an engineer was employed on this particular
+undertaking, the architect had, even at that early stage of his
+profession, learned the lesson of keeping all except his own end of the
+work in the background.
+
+The distinctive naming of our profession does not seem, however, to go
+back any farther than the period of 1761, when that Father of the
+Profession, John Smeaton, first made use of the term, "engineer," and
+later, "civil engineer," applying it both to others and to himself, as
+descriptive of a certain class of men working along professional lines
+now existing and described by that term.
+
+Remarkable progress has certainly been made in actual achievements since
+that time, and I know of nothing more impressive than to contemplate the
+tremendous changes that have been made in the material world by the
+achievements of engineers, particularly in the last hundred years. This
+was forcibly impressed upon me a short time ago, while in the company of
+the late Charles Haswell, then the oldest member of this Society, who,
+seeing one of the recently built men-of-war coming up the harbor,
+remarked that he had designed the first steamship for the United States
+Navy. The evolution of this intricate mass of mechanism, which, from the
+very beginning of its departure from the sailing type of vessel, has
+taken place entirely within the working period of one man's life, is as
+graphic a showing of engineering activity as I think can be found.
+
+Our activities are forcibly shown in many other lines of invention and
+in the utilization of the forces of Nature, particularly in the
+development of this country. We, although young in years, have become
+the greatest railroad builders in history, and have put into use
+mechanical machines like the harvester, the sewing machine, the
+telephone, the wireless telegraph, and almost numberless applications of
+electricity. Ships have been built of late years greatly departing from
+those immediately preceding them, so that at the present time they might
+be compared to floating cities with nearly all a city's conveniences and
+comforts. We have done away with the former isolation of the largest
+city in the country, and have made it a part of the main land by the
+building of tunnels and bridges. In all our work it might be said that
+we are hastening, with feverish energy, from one problem to another,
+for the so-called purpose of saving time, or for the enjoyment of some
+new sensation; and we have also made possible the creation of that which
+might be deemed of doubtful benefit to the human race, that huge
+conglomerate, the modern city.
+
+There has been no hesitancy in grappling with the problems of Nature by
+engineers, but they seem to be diffident and neglectful of human nature
+in their calculations, leaving it out of their equations, greatly to
+their own detriment and the world's loss. We can say that matters
+outside of the known are not our concern, and we can look with pride at
+our individual achievements, and of course, if this satisfies, there is
+nothing more to be said. But it is because I feel that engineers of
+to-day are not satisfied with their position, that I wonder whether we
+have either fulfilled our obligations to the community, or secured
+proper recognition from it; whether, in fact, the engineer can become
+the force that he should be, until he brings something into his
+equations besides frozen figures, however diverting an occupation this
+may be.
+
+One may wonder whether this state of affairs is caused from a fear of
+injecting uncertain elements into our calculations, or whether it is our
+education or training which makes us conservative to the point of
+operating to our own disadvantage. We may read the requirements of our
+membership and learn from them that in our accomplishments we are not to
+be measured as skilled artisans, but the fact remains that, to a great
+extent, society at large does so rate us, and it would seem that we must
+ourselves be responsible for this state of affairs. Our colleges and
+technical schools are partly to blame for the existence of this idea, on
+account of the different degrees which they give. We have a degree of
+civil engineer, regarded in its narrowest sense, of mining engineer,
+mechanical engineer, electrical engineer, and by necessity it would seem
+as if we should shortly add some particular title to designate the
+engineer who flies. In reality there should be but two classes of
+engineers, and the distinction should be drawn only between civil
+engineers and military engineers. As a matter of fact, fate and
+inclination determine the specialty that a man takes up after his
+preliminary training, and so far as the degrees are concerned, the only
+one that has any right to carry weight, because it is a measure of
+accomplishment, is that which is granted by this Society to its
+corporate members. The schools, in their general mix-up of titles,
+certainly befog the public mind. It is as if the medical schools, for
+instance, should issue degrees at graduation for brain doctors, stomach
+doctors, eye and ear doctors, etc. Very wisely, it seems to me, the
+medical profession and the legal profession, with histories far older
+than ours, and with as wide variations in practice as we have, leave the
+variations in name to the individual taste of the practitioner, in a
+manner which we would do well to copy. The Society itself has adopted
+very broad lines in admission to membership, classing as civil engineers
+all who are properly such; and there is good reason for the serious
+consideration of the term at this time, as we cannot fail to recognize a
+tendency in State and other governments to legislate as to the right to
+practice engineering. It was owing to the introduction of a bill
+limiting and prescribing the right to practice in the State of New York,
+that a committee was recently appointed to look into this matter and
+report to the Society. This report will be before you for action at this
+meeting.
+
+As to the manner in which engineers individually perform their work, no
+criticism would properly lie, and in fact it is fortunate that our work
+speaks for itself, for, as a body, we say nothing. We are no longer,
+however, found working for the greater part of the time on the outskirts
+of civilization, and it becomes necessary, therefore, for us to change
+with changing conditions, and to use our Society not only for the
+benefit of the profession as a whole, but for the benefit of the members
+individually. Whether one of our first steps in this direction should be
+along legislative lines is for you to determine. For myself, having been
+confronted with legislation recently attempted in New York, I am
+convinced that we shall have legislation affecting our members, and this
+legislation should properly be moulded by some responsible body like our
+own Society. If we do not take the matter up ourselves it is likely to
+be taken up by other associations, and from past experience, it would
+seem as though it might be carried on along lines that would tend to
+ridicule our desire for professional standing.
+
+The Society is to be congratulated on its present satisfactory status.
+The reports show a very satisfactory financial condition, and you may
+note a continuing increase in membership that is extremely gratifying.
+This, after having nearly doubled in the last seven years, still shows
+no sign of diminishing in its rate of increase. It may be said, also,
+that we have in the Society an excellent publishing house, where the
+members have an opportunity to secure technical papers published in the
+highest style of the art. We have in general in the officers, a number
+of men, who, within the prescribed limits, labor for the benefit of the
+members, but we also have constitutional limitations to the activity of
+our governing body, so that the voice of the Society is never heard, or,
+at least, might be compared to that still, small voice we call
+"conscience," which is not audible outside of the body that possesses
+it.
+
+Now, in these days, when the statement that two and two make four is
+accepted from its latest originator as a newly discovered truth, a
+little extension of our mathematics, to take into our estimate people as
+well as things, is what we principally need, and it would be a good
+thing, regarded either from the point of view of what the world needs or
+the more selfish view of our own particular gains. At the present time
+it would seem as though our world had thrown away the old gods without
+taking hold of any new ones. Private ownership as it formerly existed is
+no longer recognized; individual action in almost any large field is
+to-day hampered and curtailed in a manner undreamed of twenty years ago.
+In fact, our whole scheme of government seems to be passing from the
+representative form on which it was founded, to some new form as yet
+undetermined. Whether all this is, in our opinion, for good or for evil,
+is of no particular concern. The matter that concerns us is, that we
+have left our old moorings, and that, to secure new ones, new limits are
+to be set to the activities of men along lines which concern us, and
+that, therefore, it is necessary that those who by education and
+training are best fitted to consider facts and not desires, should guide
+society as much as possible along its new lines. I consider that we as a
+profession are particularly trained to do this by our consideration of
+facts as they exist, and I think it will be recognized by all that we
+are not in our work or activities bound by any precedent, even if we do
+learn all that we can from the past; and that we are by nature and
+training of a cool and calculating disposition, which is surely a thing
+that is needed in this time of many suggested experiments.
+
+To be effective, however, we must be cohesive, and thus be able to take
+our part not as the led, but as leaders, convincing the people, if
+possible, that all the ills of our social system cannot be cured by
+remedies which neglect the forces of creation, and that the best doctors
+for our troubles are not necessarily those whose sympathies are most
+audibly expressed.
+
+In the recent discoveries of science our ideas as to the forces of
+Nature must be greatly enlarged and our theories amplified. Recent
+discovery of radium and radio-active substances shows at least that much
+of our old knowledge needs re-writing along the lines of our greater
+knowledge of to-day.
+
+With this increase of knowledge it would seem as though those who devote
+their lives to the exploitation of natural forces should take a position
+in the future even more prominent than in the past, and it will
+undoubtedly become our function to help the world to that ideal state
+described by our greatest living poet of action, when he speaks of the
+time to come, as follows:
+
+ "And no one shall work for money,
+ And no one shall work for fame;
+ But each for the joy of working,
+ And each in his separate star;
+ Shall draw the thing as he sees it,
+ For the God of the things as they are."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Transactions of the American Society
+of Civil Engineers, Vol. LXX, Dec. 1910, by John A. Bensel
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS ***
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