Andrew McCulloch (civil engineer)


Andrew McCulloch was a civil engineer with the Canadian Pacific Railway.

Biography

After graduating from the Dominion Business College in Kingston, Ontario in 1888, McCulloch moved to the West Coast of North America. There he got a job as an axeman on the Great Northern Railway.
Several other jobs followed, and in 1884 he was employed by the CPR on bridge repair work. He eventually became a Resident Engineer on the construction of the Lake Superior and Ishpeming Railroad, and this was followed in turn by work for the Nakusp and Slocan Railway in British Columbia, for the CPR's line through the Crowsnest Pass, for the Columbia and Western Railway and for the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway.
He returned to work for the CPR as Divisional Engineer of Construction, Eastern, based in Montreal.
In early 1910, McCulloch was appointed Chief Engineer for the Kettle Valley Railway in British Columbia, a project which was to be the most challenging of his career. Following completion of the line in 1916 he was appointed Superintendent of Operations.
He retired in 1933 and continued as a consultant for many years up to his death in 1945.
Andrew McCulloch is buried in the Lakeview Cemetery in Penticton overlooking the Kettle Valley Railway that was such an important part of his life. His gravestone, which is laid flush with the ground, can be found in section D, about 20 m south of the main entrance and about 5 m to the west of a fire hydrant on the adjacent Lower Bench Road.
McCulloch's name lives on as McCulloch Station and McCulloch Lake on the Kettle Valley Railway, and as McCulloch Road in the nearby city of Kelowna.