Edward Burton Hughes


Edward Burton Hughes was Acting Commissioner of New York State Department of Transportation in 1969, Executive Deputy Commissioner of New York State Department of Transportation from 1967-1970, and Deputy Superintendent of New York State Department of Public Works from 1952-1967. Hughes worked over 45 years in public service at the DOT. Upon his retirement in 1970 he founded the E. Burton Hughes Achievement Award.

Biography

Edward Burton Hughes was born in Lansingburgh, Troy, New York in 1905. Edward and his parents, Edward B. Hughes and Susan, resided at 693 Third Avenue, Troy, New York, and it was here Edward Jr.'s brother John was born in 1909. Edward’s father worked as a bookkeeper at a local grocery store in Troy, New York. Edward Jr. attended Lansingburgh High School and furthered his education at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute from which he graduated.

Career

E. Burton Hughes joined the New York State Department of Public Works in 1925 as a junior civil engineer in the Bureau of Bridges and Grade Crossings in the main office at Albany. From 1949, Burton Hughes was appointed Director of the Department of Rights of Way and Claims, on a yearly salary of $19,500. For four years prior to that he had been Assistant Director. In 1952, Burton Hughes became Deputy Superintendent of New York State Department of Public Works, a post he served continuously until Governor Nelson Rockefeller assigned him the newly created post of Executive Deputy Commissioner of the New York State Department of Transportation in 1967.
In 1942, during WWII, E. Burton Hughes served as a Captain assigned to the Division of the United States Army Corps of Engineers at Baltimore. In 1944, Hughes was promoted to Major E. Burton Hughes. He returned to state service in 1945 and resumed his post as Assistant Director of the Rights of Way and Claims Bureau.
During Hughes' post as Deputy Superintendent of New York State Department of Public Works he worked alongside the Superintendents Bertram Dalley Tallamy, John W. Johnson, and John Burch McMorran.
In 1953, at the New York State Conference of Mayors and Other Municipal Officials, Burton Hughes gave his ‘Good Roads for All’ speech, the title of which became associated with him. ‘I suspect all of you, having arrived in Monticello, now are instilled with that insistent Catskill Mountain slogan: ‘We want good roads.’ All of us in the Public Works Department concur, and are doing everything possible to bring more and more good roads to every corner of our great Empire State. It is a tremendous task, and I appreciate this opportunity to outline for you what is being done…etc.’ In May 1953, Governor Thomas Edmund Dewey appointed E. Burton Hughes as Chairman of the nine-member Advisory Board to help the State Safety Division’s Bureau of Safety and Accident Prevention. The Advisory Board was formed to draft accident prevention policies and programs.
In 1954, E. Burton Hughes announced during a speech he gave at the Annual Convention of the State Association of Highway Engineers that the State was '20 years behind in essential road work. $4 Billion is needed just to catch up on the backlog of essential highway construction." Understandably, the news came as a complete shock to everyone at the convention.
When Nelson Rockefeller became Governor of New York State in 1959 Burton Hughes and Rockefeller became close working colleagues. In 1967, when Rockefeller created the New York State Department of Transportation, Rockefeller assigned E. Burton Hughes as the Executive Deputy Commissioner of the New York State Department of Transportation. Through their working association their respective families also became friends. An original etching by actor/artist Lionel Barrymore gifted to Nelson Rockefeller by E. Burton Hughes is housed at the Rockefeller family home Kykuit in Pocantico Hills, in Westchester County, New York.
In 1962, as representatives of the Department of Public Works, J. Burch McMorran and E. Burton Hughes accompanied Governor Nelson Rockefeller on a tour of the Niagara Frontier for a series of inspections and dedication ceremonies involving, power, bridge, arterial and park facilities. The trip included the dedication ceremony of the new South Grand Island Bridge, which was part of the Niagara Power Project.
When John Burch McMorran retired from his post as Commissioner of New York State Department of Transportation on 31 July 1969,
Governor Rockefeller appointed E. Burton Hughes the top-level post of Acting Commissioner of the New York State Department of Transportation for the interim period of two months until the new Commissioner, Theodore W. Parker, could take office.
E. Burton Hughes was a popular choice. Congressman Robert Cameron McEwan, in the U.S. House of Representatives, hailed the selection of E. Burton Hughes to be Acting Commissioner of Transportation for the State of New York: ‘I am well acquainted with Mr. Hughes,’ said McEwan, ‘during my 12 years in the New York State Senate, I recognize his ability as an engineer and administrator.’
In a telegram from Congressman Robert Cameron McEwan to congratulate Hughes upon being selected for the post, McEwan wrote: ’Your experience, knowledge and understanding of the Department, and the transportation needs of our state, eminently qualify you for this position. The Governor is to be congratulated for his excellent choice.’
Some newspaper reports rumored Burton Hughes was to have been made the Commissioner full-time, but as happened, Burton Hughes planned to retire from public office several months later after serving 45 years in public service. During his long career, Hughes served under 7 Governors of New York: Al Smith, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Herbert H. Lehman, Charles Poletti, W. Averell Harriman, and Nelson Rockefeller.
During Hughes' time as Acting Commissioner some of the works he introduced and proposed included a 60-mile-an-hour speed limit on Route 20, proposed the reconstruction of 4.2 miles of the Shore Airport Road in the village and town of Ticonderoga, Essex County, and announced the proposal of the construction of 2.66 miles of the Susquehanna Expressway, to be known as Interstate Route 88, plus allied connector roads at Oneonta in Otsego county,
Edward Burton Hughes was a member of the University Club of Albany and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.
Edward Burton Hughes, aged 82, passed away on Saturday 6 June 1987 at his home in Delmar, New York. His burial took place at the Albany Rural Cemetery.

Family

Edward Burton Hughes married the former Jane Williams on 2 July 1930 at Rensselaer, New York. They resided for most of their married life in Delmar at 26 Wiltshire Drive, Albany County, New York, 12054. Prior to living in Delmar, Edward and Jane had lived at 534 Second Avenue and at 10A Second Avenue, Troy, New York.
Jane Williams is the cousin of the writer and poet Rev. Aeneas Francon Williams. Jane's mother Grace Williams was the sister of the renowned Welsh writer and geographer John Francon Williams. In 1885, Grace married Welsh-born Robert William Williams in Bethesda, North Wales, hence Grace and her children retained the Williams surname. In late 1891, Grace and Robert and their two young children, Robert Henry and William John emigrated to the USA arriving in New York City in January 1892. The family settled in Granville, Washington, New York. Robert worked as a slate quarryman. Grace and Robert went on to have five more children all born in America: John Francon, Mary, Jean, Robert C. and Jane. In the mid-1910s Robert Henry Williams became a reporter in Lynn, Massachusetts and an assistant editor on the Lynn Daily Item, and during the 1920s he was a reporter on the Lynn Telegram News.

The E. Burton Hughes Achievement Award

The prestigious E. Burton Hughes Achievement Award was given annually to an outstanding Department employee of the New York State Department of Transportation, and was named in honour of Edward Burton Hughes, who retired in 1970 as Executive Deputy Commissioner after 45 years of Department service. All the recipients of the award receive a silver bowl and an inscribed plaque, as well as a monetary check.

Recipients of the E. Burton Hughes Achievement Award