This relief of William Frederick Allen by A. G. Newman is part of a plaque in main hall of Union Station in Washington, DC.
William Frederick Allen
1846 ̶ 1915
For more than fifty years in the service of the railways of America as civil engineer secretary of the southern and general time conventions and general secretary of the American Railway Association.
By his zeal wisdom devotion and integrity he won a commanding position in the administrative counsels of American railways.
He maintained continuity of the American Railway Association through which railway officers for many years were enabled to take counsel together on problems of common interest and to improve standardize and codify the methods of railway operation.
As a member of the permanent commission of the International Railway Congress he aided by his technical knowledge and administrative ability in advancing the science of railway operation in foreign countries.
He devised and through the instrumentality of the American railway managers in 1883 put into effect first in the united states the system of standard time which has since been extended throughout the civilized world.
This tablet is erected in memory of his life and services by the American Railway Guild of which he was founder.
The American Railways Guild
Hank Burchard in the Washington Post, January 21, 2000, describes Allen this way.
Allen (1846-1915) is the guy who brought chronological order out of chaos in this country. In 1881 Allen was tasked with making sense out of the hodgepodge of 50 existing railroad time standards, which caused not just irritating but deadly confusion as trains supposedly running at different times simultaneously found themselves on the same stretch of track. On Nov. 18, 1883, Allen's system of four east-west time zones went into effect, and since then everyone has known what time it is.
This photo of W. F. Allen appeared in Leslie's Popular Monthly Vol. XVII, No. 4, April 1884 in an article entitled How Uniform Standard Time Came About.
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