On October 19, 1909, he married Jessie Lewis Weller. He had one daughter, Mary Lewis Finch, born June 9, 1912, in Albany, New York
Mr. Finch in 1908 joined what was then the New York Department of Engineering and was subsequently promoted to chief clerk of the New York State Engineer and Surveyor office. In 1919 was appointed deputy state engineer to replace William B. Landreth.[4]
He was the Chief Engineer for a number of bridges in NY State, including the Troy-Cohoes Bridge,[5] also known as the 112th Street Bridge, Lansingburgh neighborhood of Troy built in 1922, demolished in 1995 and rebuilt in 1996.
He was State Engineer and Surveyor from 1925 to 1926, elected on the Republican ticket in 1924.[2] In 1925, he published The Story of the New York State Canals: Historical and Commercial Information.[7] By 1926 he was a member of the New York State Water Power Commission.[8]
In 1929 he was awarded the Arthur M. Wellington prize for his pamphlet on the Story of the New York State Barge Canal and Its Operation.[9]
On April 30, 1930, he was appointed to the Interoceanic Canal Board.[10]
In November 1950 he was appointed, as the RPI Board of Trustees representative, to "The RPI Athletic Council," a ten-man council created in recognition of the important part played by athletics in the training of the well-rounded engineer.,[11]Troy, New York
^ abcManual for the Use of the Legislature of the State of New York. 1926. Roy G. Finch, State Engineer and Surveyor, was born August 17, 1884, at Eagle Bridge, N. Y., receiving his early schooling in the public schools of Granville, Washington county. He entered Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute at ...
^ abc"Roy G. Finch". Political Graveyard. December 15, 1926. Retrieved 2012-10-18. Finch, Roy G. (b. 1884) โ of Albany, Albany County, N.Y. Born in Eagle Bridge, Rensselaer County, N.Y., August 17, 1884. Son of George Nelson Finch and Helen (Hunt) Finch. Republican. Engineer; New York state engineer and surveyor, 1925-26. Episcopalian. Member, Freemasons; Knights Templar; Shriners; American Society of Civil Engineers; Delta Kappa Epsilon. Burial location unknown.
^"Roy G. Finch". Engineering News-Record. McGraw-Hill. 1919. Roy G. Finch, who for some years has been chief clerk of the New York State Engineer's office, has been appointed deputy state engineer to succeed William B. Landreth, who has been appointed chief of the board of consulting engineers ...
^"Finch Objects to More Delay". New York Times. 15 December 1926. Retrieved 2012-10-18. State Engineer Roy G. Finch, a member of the New York State Water Power Commission, said today that he was disappointed in Governor Smith's speech on water ...