Rex W. Maneval Papers, 1939-1974
Munuscript Collection No. 128
Introduction
The papers of Rex W. Maneval were donated to the K ansas State Historical
Society by his wife in two groups: the first, included in museum artifacts
and library materials, on December 29, 1979; and the second on January
29, 1980. The collection consists of one document box containing primarily
correspondence and drawings of his inventions. There are no restrictions
on access to these papers.
Biographical Sketch
Rex W. Maneval was born in Centralia on April 30, 1890. He attended
public schools there and later went to business school in Kansas City
to learn the fundamentals of banking. At an early age he developed a
keen interest in engineering, which became a lifelong obsession. His
banking career took him to banks in Centralia and Topeka and to the
First National Bank in Frankfort which he managed. In the early 1920s
he established a chick-hatchery business which became so successful
that he resigned his bank position in 1926. He used his engineering
talents to invent mechanical devices to improve the efficiency of his
hatchery. In the early 1940s he acquired a locker plant and ice-cream
store.
In his spare time Maneval collected books on mechanical engineering
and designed aircraft. He developed a helicopter in the same year that
Igor Sikorsky developed a similar craft (1939), and Maneval began constructing
his flying machine three years later. Lack of adequate testing facilities
prevented him from correcting stability problems, although the craft
flew successfully. Retiring from his hatchery firm in 1947, he sold
the locker plant and ice-cream store six years later to devote all of
his time to the helicopter and other projects. In 1957 he designed,
built, and tested a vertical-takeoff-and-landing (VTOL) craft which
later was destroyed by fire. After that setback he resumed work on the
helicopter which he again tested successfully.
In the mid-1960s he turned his attention to a high-speed passenger
train, and by 1967 he had designed a low-slung, streamlined train with
innovative flanges, couplings, and brakes. He included in his plans
the provision for substituting a jet-turbine engine as future technology
increased the feasibility of a non-piston engine. Although he attempted
to secure a patent and acceptance of his proposal by railroads and manufacturers,
he was rejected by both the Patent Office and the rail industry. He
then invented a jet-powered helicopter and completed drawings and a
jet engine prior to his death in December, 1974.
Scope and Content
The papers of Rex Maneval consist primarily of correspondence relating
to his streamlined passenger train, although other activities and inventions
are included. Virtually no personal correspondence appears in the collection
apart from letters sent and received relating to his inventions.
Although one item in his correspondence file deals with an unexplained
automobile safety device, the rest of the file is concerned with his
proposal for a high-speed, streamlined passenger train. The correspondence
shows that he initially tried to interest the Atchison, Topeka &
Santa Fe Railway in his idea, but when they declined interest he sent
a letter describing his project to the executive officers of most major
railroads. Most of the rail lines replied that they did not have the
interest of capital to invest in a new type of passenger train. His
letters to the U.S. Department of Transportation and leading railroad
equipment manufacturers similarly elicited little positive response.
His application for a patent was returned because his drawings lacked
detail and did not fulfill the technical requirements of the Patent
Office. His Patent Office correspondence and documents are included
in the correspondence series, as are letters to and from a patent-research
firm.
Other papers relating to his passenger train include drawings, specifications,
and clippings. Maneval made a side-view cross-section of the train which
he included with his promotional materials. Other drawings are of propellers,
flanges, and cars; none of the sketches are greatly detailed. He also
created a specification sheet comparing a passenger car of his proposed
“speedliner” to a standard Santa Fe passenger coach and
a promotional sheet to be mailed to railroads and other interested parties.
Included are clippings from magazine articles relating to passenger
train service and experimental passenger trains.
Papers pertaining to his two helicopter projects include drawings
made in 1959 of his refined 1939 craft and drawings of his jet-propelled
helicopter proposal done in 1968. Neither set of drawings is by any
means complete, although the plans drawn in 1959 give a more integrated
scheme than those done nine years later. Both sets of drawings focus
on specific components. The collection also includes an assortment of
magazine and newspaper clippings on hovercraft, VTOL craft, and “flying
saucers.”
The only significant amount of non-invention papers in the collection
are those documents relating to his activities as a pilot: his pilot’s
license and log books of four airplanes that he owned or used.
Other Maneval-related items in the Manuscript Department include a
biography of Rex W. Maneval written by Carroll J. Jones and tracings
of Maneval’s drawings done by Ms. Jones. Both of these items are
in the Miscellaneous—C. Jones collection.
Photographs originally included in this collection have been transferred
to the society’s Photograph Section. These consist of aerial photographs
of Frankfort and vicinity and pictures of prizes won by the Maneval
chick hatchery in various competitions. Other items donated by Mrs.
Maneval, including the helicopter designed and built in the 1940’s,
are in the society’s museum collections.
Bob Knecht
February, 1980
Rex W. Maneval Papers
Collection 128
First National Bank of Centralia, 1911 [letter of promotion]
Newspaper Clippings, 1912 & 1942 [change in jobs and death of his
son Weldon]
Pilot’s License, 1929
Log Books, 1941-1955
Helicopter Clippings, 1955-1968
Helicopter Drawings, 1959-1968
Correspondence (Inventions), 1966-1969
Railroad Drawings, 1968 (Jet-powered Speedliner)
Railroad Speedliner – Statistics, 1968
“Train”, 1968 [packet of promotional materials and previous
patents]
Railroad Clippings, 1968-1969
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