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Walter P. Chrysler
"Practical industry wisely and vigorously applied never fails of success.
It carries a man onward and upward, brings out his individual character
and acts as a powerful stimulus to the efforts of others. The greatest
results in life are often attained by simple means and the exercise of the
ordinary qualities of common sense and perseverance. The every-day life,
with its cares, necessities and duties, affords ample opportunities for
acquiring experience of the best kind and its most beaten paths provide a
true worker with abundant scope for effort and self improvement. Among the
energetic and successful citizens of Oelwein, none holds a higher position
in the regard of those who know him than does Walter P. Chrysler
superintendent of motive power for the Chicago Great Western railroad.
Mr. Chrysler was born in Wamego, Kansas, April 2, 1871, and is a son of
Henry and Mary (Breyman) Chrysler. Henry Chrysler was a locomotive
engineer on the old Kansas Pacific (now Union Pacific) railroad, whose
termini were Kansas City and Denver, though at that time Wamego was the
western end. Mr. Chrysler was on construction work and when the road was
completed as far as Ellis, Kansas, he moved to that point and remained
there until the subject was twenty-one years of age. The latter received
his preliminary education in the public schools, graduating from the high
school at the age of seventeen years.
When ready to take up the active duties of life, Walter Chrysler became a
laborer in the shops of the Union Pacific railroad. Eight months later he
entered the machine shops as an apprentice, serving two years there and
completing his apprenticeship at Omaha, Nebraska. In the meantime he was
attending night school and taking a course in mechanical drawing and
mechanical engineering, and he also took a course in mechanical and
electrical engineering from the International Correspondence Schools of
Scranton, Pennsylvania, in which course he was graduated and granted a
diploma. Leaving the Union Pacific he went to Wellington, Kansas, and
entered the employ of the Santa Fe system as a machinist, but eight months
later he was transferred to the general shops at Topeka, Kansas, where he
became foreman of the erecting shops. Two years later he entered the
employ of the Rio Grande Western at Salt Lake City. He entered the employ
of this road as a machinist, but five months later he was promoted to the
position of foreman of the roundhouse, which position he retained two
years. At the end of that time he accepted the position of general foreman
for the Colorado Southern, at Trinidad, Colorado, where he remained about
two years. He then went to Childress, Texas, as master mechanic for the
Fort Worth & Denver City railroad, which position he retained until 1906.
In that year he came to Oelwein as a master mechanic in the shops of the
Chicago Great Western railroad, and on December 21, 1907, he was promoted
to the position of superintendent of motive power for the entire system of
that road. This responsible position he is now filling to the entire
satisfaction of his superiors. His intimate knowledge, both practical and
theoretical, of mechanics, admirably qualifies him for almost any position
in the mechanical department of a great railroad system and in his present
position he is giving the best of satisfaction. The duties of the office
are multitudinous and of the greatest responsibility, but Mr. Chrysler has
been able to handle the operation of the road with ease and dispatch. He
is extremely popular with both his superiors and the men under him, who
recognize his sterling qualities and his practical worth, and in the
community no citizen stands higher in popular regard.
On June 4, 1900, Mr. Chrysler was married to Della Forker, who was born at
Ellis, Kansas, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Forker, natives of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. To the subject and wife have been born three
children, Thelma, Bernice and Walter P. In politics Mr. Chrysler is a
stanch Republican, but is not an aspirant for public office, though he
takes an intelligent interest in public affairs. Fraternally he is a
member of the Masonic order, in which he has taken the Scottish-Rite
degrees up to and including the thirty-second, belonging to the consistory
at Salina, Kansas. He is also a member of Isis Temple, Ancient Arabic
Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, at Salina. The Woodmen of the World
also claim his membership."
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