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Roger E. Broggie

Roger E. Broggie (1908-1991) was an creative American mechanical engineer who worked with Walt Disney and the Walt Disney Company. Inducted as a Disney Legend in 1990, he was one of the most influential imagineers to ever work with Walt Disney. His background and early work experience was technical rather than artistic. It was Broggie's mechanical ability that blended well with the visual imagineering that Walt Disney needed to build the Disney Empire.

Contents

Early life, working in films

Roger E. Broggie was born in 1908, in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. He graduated from Mooseheart High School in the western suburbs of Chicago, Illinois in 1927. With vocational machine shop training, he moved to Los Angeles, California where he worked for companies such as Technicolor and Bell and Howell . He worked at General Services Studios with film industry pioneers including David O. Selznick and Charlie Chaplin.

A Disney Legend

In 1939, he joined the Disney Studios as a precision machinist. Broggie's initial assignments included installing the infamous "multiplane camera" at the new Burbank studio, working with Ub Iwerks on special effects. In 1949, Roger Broggie worked with Walt Disney to create model trains for Disney's 1/2 mile-long Carolwood Pacific Railroad located in his backyard. Broggie is credited with building the Lilly Belle, a miniature working steam locomotive named for Disney's wife Lillian.

Promoted to head of the Disney Studios Machine Shop in 1950, Roger Broggie became the transportation specialist. He created the special effects for the film 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea and as the plans for Disneyland were developed in the early 1950s, he oversaw development of the Disneyland and Sante Fe Railroad, the Disneyland Monorail, and the Matterhorn Bobsled at Disneyland.

Broggie's mechanical genius touched many other acclaimed attractions at Disneyland and the 1964 New York World's Fair. He and his machine shop coworkers developed the first fully functioning audio-animatronic human figure in the form of a seated Abraham Lincoln. Between 1973 and 1975, Broggie worked on the Epcot project at Walt Disney World in Florida.

Roger Broggie was named a Disney Legend in 1990. He passed away on November 4, 1991.

Heritage

On October 21, 2003, Walt Disney World Railroad Steam Engine #3, the Roger E. Broggie was re-dedicated in honor of the late Roger Broggie, who was named a "Disney Legend" in 1990. It was longtime Disney imagineer Roger Broggie who had built the original Lilly Belle for Walt's backyard Carolwood Pacific Railroad, where much of the fun began over 50 years ago.

Roger Broggie's son Michael Broggie, founded the Carolwood Railroad Historical Society when he was 12 years old and in 1997, wrote a book about his father and Walt Disney, Walt Disney's Railroad Story: The Small-Scale Fascination That Led to a Full-Scale Kingdom.

References

  • Broggie, Michael, (1997) Walt Disney's Railroad Story: The Small-Scale Fascination That Led to a Full-Scale Kingdom Pentrex Media Group: Pasadena, California ISBN 1563420090.

External links

10-26-2009 08:16:03
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