Civil engineers, Architects, etc
The arrangement is alphabetical (surnames beginning):
| Ba | Br | Ca | Co | Da | E | F | Ga | Gr | Ha | Ho | I | J | K | L | M | Mi | N | O | P | Ra | Ro | Sa | Sm | T | U | W | Wo |
Note: there are 45 articles written by Mike Chrimes, Librarian of the Instiution of Civil Engineers in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: the majority relate to key civil engineers associated with the railway industry.
Addison, John
Born in Liverpool on 12 April 1820. Died Maryport on 22 March 1903.
Articled to Stephen Robinson of Hartlepool. Involved in civil engineering
on many lines. In December 1857 he became Manager of the Maryport & Carlisle
Railway until he retired in 1884 when he joined the Board.
Marshall.
Adie, Alexander James
Born in Edinburgh on 16 December 1808 and died near Linlithgow on
3 April 1879. Eductaed at Edinburgh High School and Edinburgh University.
apprenticed to James Jardine. Resident engineer on the Bolton and Preston
Railway under Rastrick where his works included flying arches at Chorley
and a skew bridge over the Lancaster Canal. Between 1847 and 1863 he was
civil engineer and manager of the Edinburgh & Glasgow Railway.
Marshall. .
Arrol, Sir William
Marshall: Born Houston,
Renfrewshire, on 15 (13 in ODNB) January 1839 and died in Ayr on 20 February
1913. Civil engineering contractor and bridge builder. He was the son of
Thomas Arrol, a cotton spinner. William started work at 14 with a Paisley
blacksmith . After several years as journeyman smith he obtained employment
in 1863 with Blackmoor & Gordon of Port Glasgow. By the age of 29 he
had saved £85, half of which he spent on a boiler and engine, and in
1868 started a small works of his own near Glasgow. This prospered and in
1871 he began the Dalmarnock Works. He had added bridge building to his work
and his first contract was on the Caledonian Railway's Hamilton branch, including
a multi-span bridge over the Clyde at Bothwell. {is this fully correct?}.
The CR then entrusted him with the first portion of the bridge over the Clyde
at Glasgow in 1875. Two years earlier Arrol had undertaken construction of
a railway suspension bridge over the Forth to designs by T. Bouch. Work began
but, after the Tay Bridge collapse on 28th December 1879, the project was
stopped and a new cantilever design was produced by John Fowler and Benjamin
Baker for which Arrol was again given the contract. In the meantime he
constructed the NBR bridge over the South Esk on the Arbroath to Montrose
line, gaining experience which became useful when he built the second Tay
Bridge, designed by W.H. Barlow. This was begun in 1882 and completed in
1887; the longest R bridge in Europe. The Forth Bridge was begun in 1882
and completed in 1890. For his work Arrol was knighted by Queen Victoria.
While engaged on the Forth Bridge. Arrol was also busy with the steelwork
for the Tower Bridge in London. Besides these Arrol constructed the Redheugh
Bridge, Newcastle, three bridges over the Nile at Cairo, the Queen Alexandra
Bridge, Sunderland (1909), the Scherzer lifting bridge at Barrow, and the
second section of the Clyde bridge into Central Station, Glasgow.
ODNB biography by Michael S. Moss..
Austen, W.H.
Engineer and Locomotive Superintendent of Festiniog Railway from late
1931 (Boyd).
Baker, [Sir] Benjamin
Marshall: Born Keyford, Frome,
Somerset on 31 March 1840 and died in Pangbourne, Berks, on 19 May 1907.
He was civil engineer and designer of the Forth Bridge. Educated Cheltenham
Grammar School. Between 1856 and 1860 was apprenticed to H.H. Price at Neath
Abbey Ironworks in Wales. In 1860 he went to London as assistant to W. Wilson
on the construction of Grosvenor Road railway bridge across the Thames, and
Victoria station. In 1861 he joined the staff of John
Fowler and became his partner in 1875. From 1861 he was engaged with
Fowler on the Metropolitan (Inner Circle) line in London, and the St John's
Wood extension. In 1869 he became Fowler's chief assistant on the construction
of the District Railway from Westminster to the City. With Fowler, Baker
was consulting engineer for the first of the London tube railways, the City
& South London, opened in 1890, and with J. H. Greathead they were joint
engineers for the Central London tube, opened in 1900. In the construction
of this Baker put into effect a scheme he had suggested 25 yrs earlier of
making the line rise in entering a station and dip on leaving it to reduce
braking and starting power. Fowler and Baker undertook many overseas works
including railways in Australia and Souhern Africa. In England Baker was
responsible for docks at Avonmouth and Hull, in association with
Sir James Wolfe Barry. In 1877 Baker designed the wrought
iron cylinder used to transport Cleopatra's Needle from Egypt to London arriving,
after being lost at sea, in 1879. From 1869 he was engaged with Fowler on
the Nile dams in Egypt. Following the Tay Bridge disaster in December1879
(see T. Bouch) Baker designed the great cantilever bridge to span the Firth
of Forth which was begun in 1883 and opened on 4th March1890. In the same
year Baker was knighted. (See also W. Arrol and
Fowler). Elected AICE 1867, Member 1877, FRS 1890.
Also MIME. ODNB entry by W.F. Spear revised
and organised by Mike Chrimes.
Baker, William
William Baker was probably born on 19 May 1817 and died about 20 December
1878. Eventually Chief. engineer of the LNWR. Between 1834 and 1839 he was
articled to George Watson Buck, engineer, then engaged
on the London & Birmingham Railway between London and Tring. In October1837
Baker went with Buck to work on the Manchester & Birmingham Railway,
completed in 1842. Later he became engineer of the MSJ&AR, at the same
time being engaged on the Shrewsbury & Birmingham and Shropshire Union
Railways, opened in 1849. Baker was then appointed engineer of the Stour
Valley Railway, Birmingham to Wolverhampton, and whilst there, in 1852, he
was appointed by the LNWR as engineer of the Southern Division to succeed
R. B. Dockray. On the death of Robert Stephenson in 1859 Baker was appointed
chief engineer of the LNWR. Works carried out under his supervision included
the Runcorn Bridge; stations at London, Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham,
Preston, Bolton, Crewe, Warrington and Stafford; widening works, and many
miles of new lines. In addition he acted as consulting engineer to the West
London Extension Railway from 1859 to 1863; the North London Railway between
1863 and 1866; and was engineer to various railways built jointly with the
LNWR. In Ireland he was responsible for the construction of the Dundalk,
Newry & Greenore and North Wall Extension Railways (satelite actvities
of the LNWR). Elected MICE .1848.
Baldry, James Danford
Baldry was born in London sometime in 1816 and died in France on 10th
February 1900 aged 83. He had been articled to Edward Lomax and later entered
into the service of Joseph Cubitt. From 1848 to 1852
he was assistant engineer for the construction and maintenance of the East
Lincolnshire Railway. In 1853 he joined staff of John
Fowler, and was engaged on constructing the Oxford, Worcester &
Wolverhampton Railway. From then until 1881 he worked with Fowler, taking
charge of many large engineering works, including the Severn Valley Railway,
Craven Arms-Much Wenlock Railway, Coalbrookdale line, and the Isle of Wight
Railway. In 1881 he became a partner of Fowler and Benjamin
Baker . Became MICE 5. December. 1865. (
Marshall.). Obituaries: Min Proc ICE
V 143 1900 1 p 309; Engg V 69 23.2.1900
Barber, E.S.
Engineer Monmouthshire Canal & Railway Co. until 1848: devised
a tramplate and wheel that could be used on both trams and edge rails.
Rutherford Backtrack, 2008,
22, 368..
Barlow, Peter William
Brother of William Henry (below): born Woolwich 1 February 1809 and
died in London on 20 May 1885.
(Marshall).
Author of paper on atmospheric
railways. Improver of the shield methods of tunnelling and lining tunnels
with cast iron segments: system was exploited on Tower Subway under the Thames.
See Charles E. Lee Railway Magazine
Volume 89 page 331.
Barlow, William Henry
Born in Woolwich on 10 May 1812 and died Greenwich on 12 November
1902. (Marshall). First Engineer of
the Midland Railway and had been Resident Engineer of the North Midland Railway,
and before that of the Midland Counties Railway. Held the post until 1857.
Parkhouse, N. Bridge improvements on the Midland in the 1880s. Rly
Archive, 2004 (8), 43. Excellent concise
biography: Backtrack, 2006, 20, 404.
Mike Chrimes: excellent ODNB entry (with
portrait).
Behr, Fritz Bernhard
Pioneer of monorail systems: from 1885 he tok over the
Lartigue railway interests outside France. Born Berlin
on 9 October 1842. Educated in Paris and then trained as an engineer in Britain,
firstly as a pupil to Wentworth Shields and Sir John Fowler. In 1876 he became
a naturalised British subject. He died on 25 February 1927.
Hennessey, R.A.S. One track
to the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19, 437-41. and
Tucker, D.G.. F.B. Behr's
development of the Lartigue Monorail: from country crawler to electric express.
Trans. Newcomen Soc., 1983/4, 55, 131-49. Disc.:
149-52.
Bidder, George Parker
Born in Mortonhampstead on 14 (13 according to ODNB) June 1806 and
died in Dartmouth on 20 September 1878. Brilliant child mathematician. Civil
engineer who worked with Robert Stephenson (who clearly exploied Bidder's
remarkable calculating ability) on the London & Birmingham Railway. Designed
the swing bridge over the Wensum in Norwich. In later life became involved
in the flow of water. Marshall.
See also ODNB biography by H.T. Wood, revised
E.F. Clark
Birkinshaw, John
Principal agent of Bedlington Ironworks: patented malleable iron
fish-bellied rail.
Bouch, [Sir] Thomas
According to Marshall born
in Thursby, Cumbria on 22 February 1822. Burton
calls Bouch "the hapless designer of the Tay bridge [who ended] his life
in disgrace. With a year of the disaster he was dead, broken in body and
spirit. [at Moffat on 30 October 1880]. His crime was to cut his costs to
the limit..." He was also responsible for the graceful Deepdale and Belah
viaducts on the South Durham & Lancashire Union Railway. He had been
knighted by Queen Victoria on 26 June 1879. His
brother, William, was Locomotive Engineer of the Stockton & Darlington
Railway. The sole remaining reminders of Bouch's endeavours are the stumps
of the old Tay Bridge and some of the girders incorporated into the newer
structure. One of the greatest might-have-beens was Bouch's Forth Bridge..
See biographical feature by Earnshaw Backtrack (5 p232)
As innovator of train ferries (Granton to Burntisland) see Bruce: Backtrack, 2001, 15, 40.
Brassey, Thomas
Major railway builder. Born Bruerton, Cheshire on 7 November 1805;
died St Leonards on Sea on 8 December 1870
(John Marshall). See for instance:
Anthony Burton: The railway builders.
1992 and David Gilks' feature on Locke
in Backtrack, 2005, 19, 496. Neil Parkhouse in a reviw
of an "interesting aside for most historians", namely Tom Stazcey's Thomas
Brassey (Archive, 2005,
(48), 52) notes that Charles Walker's Thomas Brassey, railway
builder remains the standard work. David Brooke:
Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography. See also P.J.G. Ransom's
The Mont Cenis Fell Railway. 1999 (Brassey was the largest
shareholder)..
Brennan, Louis
Irishman from Galway: inventor of gyroscopically-controled monorail:
information from Hennessey, R.A.S.
One track to the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19, 437-41; and
references therein
Brereton, Robert Pearson
Born on 4 April 1818 into a Norfolk family. Died 1 September 1894.
Worked for Brunel on Royal Albert Bridge at Saltash and on Cornwall Railway.
Dates from Wikepedia.
Bretland, Arthur
Chief Engineer Midland Great Western Railway. See
Andrew Dow: Steam Wld, 2007
(237), 26 et seq
Brogden, Alexander
1825-1892: from the Furness area. Brogden & Sons promoted and
largely built the Ulverston & Lancaster Railway with its crossings of
the Kent and Leven estuaries. Used narrow gauge steam locomotives supplied
by Fletcher Jennings to serve coalmines owned by family in Ogmore Valley,
South Wales. Deeply involved in Mont Cenis Fell Railway
(see Ransom). Family firm (John Brogden
& Sons) contracted to build 200 miles of railway in New Zealand, but
not involved in Rimutaka Incline. See
Ransom.
Brotherhood, Rowland (or possibly
Roland)
Son of William Brotherhood, who was a contractor on Sonning Cutting
(see Backtrack, 2008, 22,
317: letter from Michael R. Bailey) and wass thrown from his horse and
killed whilst performing preparatory workds for Wharncliffe Viaduct. His
son Rowland took over these works and worked well with Brunel. In 1842
he established a works at
Chippenham to supply the railway industry and between 1857 and 1867 locomotives
were manufactured thereat. Rowland was born in Middlesex in 1813 and
died in Bristol on 4 March 1883. See Leleux
Brotherhoods.
Bruce, [Sir] George
Born in Newcastle upon Tyne on 1 October 1821 and died in St Johns
Wood, London on 25 August 1908. Engineer of the Royal Border Bridge at Berwick.
Winner of Telford Medal. Most of work performed in India. Consulting engineer.
See Marshall and
ODNB entry by W.F. Spear revised
by Ralph Harrington.
Bruff, Peter Schuyler
Born Portsmouth (Baptised Portsea on 23 July 1812); died Ipswich 24
February 1900 (Marshall). Civil engineer
and manager for Eastern Union Railway which linked the depths of East Anglia
with London. Also responsible for other railways and civil engineering works
in East Anglia. Published Treatise on engineering fieldwork in London:
Simpkin Marshall, 1838 (BLPC).
Ellis's chapter on the development
of railway engineering in Singer notes that Bruff was the inventor (and
patentee) of fish-plates. See Moffat, Hugh.
East Anglia's first railways: Peter Bruff and the Eastern Union Railway.
1987
Brunlees, [Sir] James
Born Kelso 5 January 1816, died Wimbledon 2 June 1892
(Marshall). Outstanding civil engineer:
notable works with which he was associated included the viaducts across the
Leven and Kent estuaries, the Mersey Railway; the Solway Viaduct and the
Mont Cenis Railway. Mike Chrimes has written
an excellent biography for the
ODNB..
Buck, George Watson
Resident engineer on some of the sections of the London & Birmingham
Railway and responsible for training William Baker and Robert Jacomb-Hood
(from other Marshall entries!). Responsible for Stockport Viaduct
(M.C. Reed).
Carpmael, Raymond
Chief Civil Engineer, Great Western Railway. Member of the Indian
Pacific Locomotive Committee, but may not have pulled his weight according
to Cox Locomotive panorama v.
2.
Clarke, William
Engineer to the Tenbury and Bewdley Railway. Developer of standard
buildings: see Beale article in Br. Rly
J. 1985, (8) 266 and subsequent
letter from Keith Beddoes on page 41 of Issue 10 which notes that Dowles
Bridge across the River Severn was his finest work. In 1873 he was associated
with a proposed railway near Cleobury Mortimer.
Collins, A.J.
Chief Engineer Cambrian Railways from January 1898. Previously with
L&YR and NER; also some time spent in Australia.
See G.A. Sekon. Rly Mag
3 313-28.
C.C. Green's Cambrian Railways portrait
page 58 called him "Collin" without terminal "s"
Colson, Henry
Engineer of the Monmouthshire Railway & Canal Co. from 1848 until
sacked: drew up specification for locomotive supplied by
Grylls.
See Rutherford Backtrack, 2008,
22, 368.
Cowper, Edward Alfred
Born London 10 December 1819; died Weybridge, Surrey on 9 May 1893.
Biography by Ronald M. Burse in ODNB, but
noted by Foster as serious omission from DNB.
Apprenticed John Braithwaite:for seven years.
In 1837 he invented the detonating fog signal for railways and this was
used on the London & Croydon Railway. In 1841 he joined Fox & Henderson
where he invented a method for casting railway chairs, and was involved in
the cast iron roof for Birmingham New Street. He was involved in the design
work for the Crystal Palace. In association with C.W. Siemens he designed
the hot-blast stove for steelworks. The wire-spoked bicycle wheel is
not mentioned by Burse:. see Foster
Trans Newcomen Soc., 1967, 40, 147.
Crossley, John Sidney
Born Loughborough 25 December 1812 and died Barrow on Soar on 10 June
1879. Marshall includes an extensive
biography. See also Neil Parkhouse (Rly
Archive, 2004, (8) 43) who notes that he was Engineer of the Midland
Railway between 1857 and 1875, a period which included the Settle & Carlisle
Line.
Dalrymple Hay, Sir Harley Hugh
Marshall records that was born
in Bengal on 6 October 1861 and died in Chorley Wood on 17 December
1940. He was educated privately in Edinburgh and by army tutors. He was articled
as pupil to the chief engineerr of the MR, working on sections of line in
South Wales. He then entered the drawing office of the LSWR. In 1894 he was
appointed resident engineer on the Waterloo & City Rilway. This was the
start of his long connection with tube railways, for which he devised a new
type of shield which was an improvement on that of W
R Galbraith. Experience he gained on the Waterloo & City line was
utilized in the construction of the Bakerloo, Harnpstead and Piccadilly lines,
now a part of the London Underground system. He was also consulting engineer
to the 2ft gauge Post Office underground Railway completed in 1928. After
WWl he undertook an extensive programme of station reconstruction on the
surface works of the London Underground system. This included the replacement
of many lifts with escalators, and the provision of large sub-surface circulating
areas. Some of these works, particularly at Piccadilly, involved much alteration
of sewers and other services. He was awarded the Telford Gold Medal for his
paper of the Waterloo & City tube. ODNB
biography by A.Y. Dalrymple-Hay, revised by Mike Chrimes.
Dargan, William
Born near Carlow in Queen's County (Leix) on 28 February 1799. Died
in Dublin on 7 February 1867. Worked under Telford on Shrewsbury to Holyhead
Road. In 1831 he worked on Dublin & Kingstown Railway, then on Ulster
Canal, and Dublin & Drogheda Railway. He organized the Dublin International
Exhibition in 1853 and the Irish National Gallery was built as a monument
to him. See Marshall and
Rutherford: Backtrack, 2001,
15, 652 et seq.who calls him one of Ireland's greatest
benefactors. ODNB biography by G.C. Boase,
revised by Mike Chrimes..
Dixon, John
See Marshall
Donkin, Bryan
Born Sandoe near Hexham on 22 March 1768 and died in London on 27
February 1855. Eminent scientist (FRS) and civil engineer.
Co-author of ICE paper on locomotive
trials on GJR. Newcomen Society
paper presumably written by a relative. ODNB
biography by Roger Lloyd-Jones.
Donkin, Bryan junior
Son of John Donkin, 1802-1854, (and grandson of Bryan Donkin): born
in London on 29 August 1835. Educated University College, London and École
Centrale des Arts at Métiers in Paris. Became interested in cylinder
jacketing and superheaters and devised glass appartus to inspect interior
of cylinders. Died Brussels on 4 March 1902. ODNB
biography by Mike Chrimes.
Doyne, William Thomas
See Horne Backtrack
13 296
Dredge, James
Born Bath 29 July 1840; died Pinner 18 August 1906. Civil engineer
who worked with D.K. Clark and John
Fowler (with latter on Metropolitan Distrct Railway). Succeeded
Zerah Colburn as Editor and eventual
proprietor of The Engineer. See
Marshall and
ODNB biography by W.F. Spear revised
Ralph Harrington.
Druitt, E.
Lt. Col. in Royal Engineers who conducted the accident enquiry into
Quintishill disaster of 22 May 1915.
See Nock's Historic railway
disasters (portrait p. 287)
Earle, John B.
Resident engineer Leek & Manifold: portrait in
Lindsey Porter's Leek & Manifold Valley
Light Railway. 2002. Also one locomotive named J.B.
Earle..
Edgeworth, Richard Lovell
Irish aristocrat who won Royal Society of Arts Gold Medal for development
of railways and/or trains. Possible claimant to the inventor of the "train"
for carrying loads across soft ground on wooden railways.
See letter by Foulkes in
Backtrack Volume 10 page 165, and feature by
Rutherford in Backtrack Volume 10
beginning page 33 actually on page 34.
Ellson, George
Born Ripley, Derbyshire on 2 June 1875. Educated Ripley College.
Apprenticed at Butterley Co. and studied at Nottingham University College.
In 1896 appointed draughtsman at E.C. & J. Keay, but in 1898 moved to
Engineering Dept of SECR. In 1923 became Deputy Chief Engineer of Southern
Railway and succeeded A.W. Szlumper as Chief Engineer. Retired in 1944: died
Seaford 29 September 1949. Involved in the vast electrification works and
in train ferry terminal at Dover.
Marshall. In addition he had a major
influence on steam locomotive design, following the Sevenoaks accident where
he considered that pony trucks were at fault: see for instance:
H.A.V. Bulleid Bulleid of the
Southern..
Contribution to Other's paper
Cox, E.S. of locomotive reciprocating parts.
J. Instn Loco. Engrs., 1943,
33, 221-2. (Paper No. 432)
A class 5 locomotive was deliberately slipped on greased rails at a speed
equivalent to 100 mile/h to establish the effect of coupled wheel lifting
at speed. This paper was also published in Proc. Instn mech. Engrs,
1941, 146 148-62 and J. Instn civ. Engrs, 1941/42, 17,
221-50. Ellson (219) commented
upon the Merchant Navy class which had been designed without balance weights
and to experiments conducted on the a member of the two-cylinder H15 class
from which the balance weights had been removed. He also commented upon the
Raworth electric locomotive.
Errington, John Edward
Marshall records born in Hull
on 29 December 1806 and died in London on 4 July 1862. Civil engineer, associated
with Locke, Training received on public works in
Ireland, then worked on railway surveys in England under Padley. He was then
engaged by Rastrick on plans for Grand Junction
Railway on which he met Joseph Locke, where Errington became resident engineer.
He then took charge of the Glasgow, Paisley & Greenock Railway, opened
in 1841, and Greenock Harbour works. Further work with Locke as joint engineer
on the Lancaster & Carlisle Railway, the Clydesdale Junction Railway,
Scottish Central Railway; Scottish Midland Junction, and Aberdeen Railway,
later these lines became part of the Caledonian Railway. In 1856 he began
work on the Yeovil-Exeter section of the LSWR, which he completed shortly
before his death.
See also David Gilks' feature on Locke in Backtrack, 2005, 19, 496 and Biddle's Britain's historic railway buildings.
Findlay, [Sir] George
Born at Rainhill on 18 May 1829 whilst father was engaged on construction
of skew bridge over Liverpool & Manchester Railway. Eductaed at Halifax
Grammar School whilst father working on Halifax branch of Manchester &
Leeds Railway. Then worked under his brother James for Brassey in construction
of Trent Valley Line. Marshall gives
a long list of works for which he was responsible in his own right. In 1864
he became Goods Manager of the LNWR and in 1880 General Manager. See
Reed The London & North Western
Railway. Knighted in 1892. Author of The working and management
of an English railway (Ottley 3737, etc and Supplement 6583
for reprint with Introduction by Jack Simmons).
Son Robert briefly Locomotive Superintendent
Belfast & Northern Counties Railway. The
ODNB entry by E.I. Carlyle revised
by Ralph Harrington. notes that "In his later days Findlay was the most prominent
figure among railway managers in Britain. He had an admirable talent for
organization and direction, and was capable of intense labour".
Firbank, Joseph
Born near Bishop Auckland in 1819: died on 29 June 1886. Son of a
miner. Railway contractor. Firbank's first large contract was with the
Monmouthshire Railway and Canal Company in 1854, to transform the company's
mineral tramways and canals into passenger railways. He was recommended by
Charles Liddell, the company's engineer, with whom
he had worked on a contract for the LNWR.. Firbank established his home at
Newport (Mon), where he formed a close friendship with Crawshaw Bailey, the
ironmaster, who supported him financially in his early undertakings. He was
employed in South Wales for thirty years. In 1856 Firbank undertook a contract
for the widening the LNWR near London, and between 1859 to 1866 was engaged
upon a number of contracts for the LBSCR. He was engaged on the Midland's
London extension from 1864 until 1868 where Liddell was the consulting engineer.
At the height of constructional activity in 1866, Firbank was employing 2000
men.. In 1870 Firbank was engaged as contractor on the Smardale to Newbiggin
section of the Settle and Carlisle extension of the Midland Railway, a stretch
of line noted for its impressive physical features and isolation. In the
face of appalling weather conditions and difficulties of access at least
one contractor retired from the project. Firbank completed his work, however,
having taken on further responsibilities involving a junction with the North
Eastern Railway. After completing this contract Firbank was engaged in the
construction of the Birmingham west suburban section of the Midland Railway..
In 1884 Firbank built the Midland Railway's St Pancras goods depot. His last
contract was for the Bournemouth direct line from Brockenhurst to Christchurch.
It proved to be the most troublesome of all his undertakings, and was finally
completed by his son. In all, forty-nine lines were constructed by Firbank
from 1846 to 1886. ODNB (M.W. Kirby)
and Marshall
Fitzgibbon, Abraham Coates
Born Lilworth, County Cork in 1823. Worked as assistant engineer on
several Irish railways, and then as agent for William Dargan. Engaged by
Charles Fox to report on Illinois Central Railroad, where he must have seen
timber versions of Pratt and Howe trusses, Then went to Ceylon and New Zealand
before becoming chief engineer to Queensland Railways in 1863. where extensive
use was made of Pratt trusses. Sir Charles Fox was the
London agent for the QR.
Fowler, [Sir] John
Marshall: Born Sheffield on
15 July 1817 and died Bournemouth on 20 November.1898. His major engineering
achievements were the Metropolitan Railway and the Forth Bridge. He was educated
privately and trained under J.I. Leather, engineer of Sheffield waterworks;
then under J.U. Rastrick on the London to Brighton Railway. In 1839, under
Leather, he became resident engineer on the Stockton & Hartlepool Railway,
on the completion of which in 1841 he was appointed engineer, general manager
and locomotive superintendent. In 1844 he set up for himself as a consulting
engineer in London and was engaged on lines east of Sheffield which became
part of the MS & L. During the Railway Mania Fowler took an active part
with the numerous bills then before Parliament.
He designed the Pimlico bridge, completed in 1860, the first railway bridge over the Thames in London. In 1860 he became enginerr of the Metropolitan Railway, an exceedingly difficult project involving the underpinning of buildings, and the diversion of sewers and other services. For this he designed a fireless 2-4-0T, known as Fowler's Ghost, but it was not a success. Zerah Colburn (Plate 36) also credits John Fowler with the 4-4-0T design. The first section of the Metropolitan Railway was opened on the 9th January1863. Of the 13 mile Inner Circle line Fowler was responsible for the construction of over 11 miles and also over 4 miles of branches. In 1869 he advised on railways in Egypt, and in 1870 in India.
In 1875 Fowler took into partnership Benjamin Baker and together they designed the Forth Bridge, the greatest railway bridge in the world. (See also W. Arrol) It was begun in 1883 and opened on 4th March1890. Fowler and Baker were consulting engineerss for the first London tube Railway, the City & South London opened in 1890, and with J. H. Greathead they were joint engineers for the Central London tube railway opened in 1900.
On 17th April1890 Fowler received a baronetcy and retired soon after. He became MIME in 1847, the year the Institution was founded, and MICE in 1849 and was President in 1866-7. On 2nd July1850 he married Elizabeth Broadbent of Manchester and they had 4 sons.
Very good reproduction of illustration of him with William Gladstone on inspection train on Metropolitan Railway: p. 95: Christopher Awdrry's Brunels' broad gauge railway. See also Appendix 13 in Vaughan's Railwaymen..ODNB biography by Mike Chrimes..
Sources: DNB 22 Supplement pp 658-60; Mackay, T., Life of Sir John Fowler. 1900.
Fox, Sir Charles
Charles Fox was born in Derby on 11th March 1810 and died Blackheath,
Greater London on 14th June 1874. He was a civil engineer and contractor.
He was the youngest of four sons of Francis Fox, MD. When 19, Charles abandoned
medical training for engineering and was articled to
John Ericsson of Liverpool, working
with him and J. Braithwaite on the
Novelty locomotive, which entered the Rainhill trials. His abilities
attracted Robert Stephenson who, in 1837, appointed him as one of the engineers
on the London & Birmingham Railway where Fox was responsible for the
Watford tunnel and the incline down from Camden Town to Euston. He presented
an important paper on the correct principles of skew arches before the Royal
Institution. He then entered into partnership with the contractor Bramah
upon whose retirement the firm became Fox, Henderson & Co, specialising
in railway equipment: wheels, bridges, roofs, cranes, tanks and permanent
way materials. The firm was responsible for many important station roofs
including Liverpool Tithebarn Street, 1849-50, and Bradford Exchange, 1850,
Paddington and Birmingham New Street. In 1850-1 the firm erected the Crystal
Palace in Hyde Park for the Great Exhibition, and later dismantled it and
reerected it on Sydenham Hill. For this Fox was knighted (together with Joseph
Paxton and William Cubitt) on 22 October1851. From 1857 Fox practised in
London as a civil and consulting engineer, and in 1860 took his two sons
Charles Douglas and Francis into
partnership: Sir Charles Fox & Sons. Fox made a special study of narrow-gauge
railways and in conjunction with G. Berkley he built the first narrow-gauge
line in India, and later built narrow-gauge lines in other parts of the world.
But he was opposed to breaks of gauge where avoidable, and recommended first
reduced axle loads, second reduced weight of structures and third reduced
speeds, in that order, to achieve economies. His works included the Medway
bridge at Rochester, three bridges over the Thames, a swing bridge across
the Shannon in Ireland, a bridge over the Sahône at Lyons and many
bridges on the GWR. Railways upon which he was engaged included the Cork
& Bandon, Thames & Medway, Portadown & Dungannon, East Kent,
Lyons & Geneva (eastern section), Macon & Geneva (eastern section)
and the Wiesbaden and Zealand lines in Denmark. He was engineer to the
Queensland; Cape Town; Wynberg (Cape of Good Hope) and the Toronto 3ft 6in
gauge lines. Fox & Sons instigated the complex scheme of bridges at Battersea
for the LBSCR, LC & DR and LSWR and the approach to Victoria Station,
London, including the widening of the bridge over the Thames. Fox was MICE
and for many years a member of the council of the IME. He was an original
life member of the British Association, member of the RSA and a fellow of
the Royal Asiatic and Royal Geographical Societies. He was noted for his
urbanity and generosity. Marshall..
ODNB Biography by Robert Thorne.
Fox, [Sir] Charles Douglas
Eldest surviving son of Sir Charles Fox. Born Smethwick on 14 May
1840 and died in London on 13 November 1921. Educated King's College School
and King's College, London then articled to father. Upon the death of his
father the firm became Sir Douglas Fox & Partners. Major works included
Mersey Tunnel, Hawarden Swing Bridge, Liverpool Overhead Railway, Snowdon
Mountain Railway. southern part of Great Central London Extension, and early
tube lines in London. Author of several ICE papers.
Marshall...
ODNB Biography by Ralph Freeman.
Fox, Francis (b. 1818)
Born in Plymouth on 12 September 1818. Died in Teignmouth on 13 March
1914. Educated at Friends' Schools at Croydon and Sidcot. In October 1835
became pupil of Edwin O. Tregelles. In 1839 assocaited with Cornwall Central
Railway project. In 1846 joined Brunel as assistant engineer on South Wales
Railway. In 1854 appointed engineer of Bristol & Exeter Railway. Resigned
when BER taken over by GWR, but GWR placed specific works under his care,
such as the Weston-super-Mare Loop.
Marshall....
Fox, Francis (b. 1844)
Son of Sir Charles Fox: born at Bellefield, near Birmingham on 29
June 1844. Educated Cavendish House School and Brighton College followed
by pupilage under his father. Became a partner in the firm on the death of
his father when firm became Sir Douglas Fox & Partners. Major works included
Mersey Tunnel (with James Brunless, Hawarden Swing Bridge, Liverpool Overhead
Railway, Snowdon Mountain Railway. southern part of Great Central London
Extension, and early tube lines in London and Simplon Tunnel where he gained
experience of rack railways which aided the Snowdon project. HHe was a deeply
religeous man and it is appropriate that his expertise saved Winchester Cathedral
from possible collapse. He contributed to the Encyclopedia Britannica.
He died in Wimbledon on 7 January 1927.Not in Marshall:
excellent biography in ODNB by Mike
Chrimes..
Fox, Samson
Born at Bowling, near Bradford on 11 July 1838. Died Walsall 24 October
1903. Apprenticed Smith, Beacock & Tannett. He established a tool making
business in Leeds and in 1874 established the Leeds Forge Co. Ltd. He
designed corrugated fireboxes for marine boilers and in 1887 and 188 took
out patents for pressed steel frames for railway freight wagons. In 1888
he started a works at Joliet, near Chicago, which he later sold. He helped
to finance the Royal College of Music in 1883 and was three times mayor of
Harrogate. Marshall..
Froude, William
Born at Dartington parsonage on 28 November 1810. Died in
Simonstown, on 4 May 1879. Educated at Westminster School and Oriel College,
Oxford, where he graduated BA with first-class honours in mathematics in
1832. His tutors were his eldest brother, Hurrell, and John Henry Newman,
who together with I.K. Brunel were, he wrote, the greatest influences on
his life. He worked on the survey for the South Eastern Railway in 1833 as
a pupil of the engineer Henry Palmer. In 1837 he joined the staff of Brunel,
when he managed the last section of the Bristol to Exeter line. He demonstrated
his ability by developing a new design of skew bridge, a mathematical approach
to reducing the sideways force on a train entering a curve, and a theory
of the expansion of steam. In 1856 Brunel persuaded Froude to undertake a
study of rolling in waves. This led to his 1861 paper to the Institution
of Naval Architects which provided the first correct theory of the behaviour
of a ship in a seaway. Over the next decade gaps in his theory were filled
and empirical methods developed for the solution of aspects where the mathematics
were too difficult. This work was enthusiastically followed by the Admiralty
and influenced the design of subsequent warships; it also led to Froude's
election in 1870 as a fellow of the Royal Society. It marked the beginning
of a partnership with Brunel's second son, Henry. In 1869 Froude was a member
of a British Association committee to improve estimates of the power required
to drive a ship. The committee's report recommended a number of full-scale
trials but Froude dissented, reporting the results of a series of tests of
three models, of different scale, representing two very different ship forms,
the Swan and the Raven. These tests showed firstly that there was no universal
optimum form, as was generally believed; Raven was better at low speeds,
Swan at the highest speeds. He also demonstrated that, when tested at the
corresponding speed (now defined as the Froude number), the resistance per
unit immersed volume of the three models of each form was the same and hence
it should be possible to obtain ship resistance from models tests; this is
now known as Froude's law. Froude's approach, which was opposed by most engineers
of the day, was validated by an elaborate trial in 1871, in which HMS
Greyhound was towed and her resistance measured over a range of speeds.
He proposed to Edward Reed, chief constructor of the navy, that a special
tank should be built close to Froude's house at Chelston Cross, Torquay,
in which models could be run and their resistance measured accurately so
as to develop improved hull forms for the navy. He offered his own services
free to superintend the work. His proposal was approved in February 1870:
the tank was 270 feet long, 38 feet wide at the water surface, and 10 feet
deep. The model, shaped in paraffin wax, was drawn along the tank by a carriage
running on rails, which was itself pulled by an endless rope, worked by a
steam engine. A dynamometer on the carriage recorded speed, resistance, and
the trim of the model. This was the first ship tank and there were innumerable
problems in developing apparatus, including governors to ensure that the
model ran at a constant speed, but by May 1872 the tank was operational.
The first task was to obtain data on frictional resistance, which had to
be treated differently from the remaining residuary resistance. In 1873 Froude
designed a dynamometer which would measure the performance of model propellers
both in isolation and in the disturbed flow behind a ship. This machine gave
good service until 1938 and later became the centrepiece of the Froude's
Museum. He was awarded the gold medal of the Royal Society in 1876 and received
the degree of LLD from Glasgow the same year. From
ODNB biography by David K. Brown and Andrew
Lambert
Fulton, Hamilton Henry
His father, Hamilton Fulton, had been State Engineer to South Carolina,
but returned to England where his son was born in 1813. The father train
trained the son as a civil engineer. He worked on the Newcastle & Carlisle
Railway and in 1846 set up his own practice in London. He was involved in
many major projects including Penge Tunnel, the Ryde to Ventnor line, and
the Manchester & Milford Railway. He was also involved in three major
paper projects: a bridge across the Severn Estuary, a similar endeavour across
the Mersey and a tidal Manchester ship canal.
Marshall states that he died on 10 August
1886: this invalidates what Marshall states about James Szlumper (when Marshall
implies Fulton's death being in 1861).
Galbraith, William Robert
Marshall states
that born Stirling 7 July 1829 and died in London on 5 October 1914. Educated
Stirling Academy and Glasgow College. In 1846 he was articled to
John Errington and worked in the London office and
on railways in England and Scotland, including the Aberdeen Railway; the
Scottish Central Railway; LNWR (Crewe-Shrewsbury) and LSWR. From 1855 Galbraith
was mainly employed on LSWR extensions west of Yeovil. On the death of Errington
in 1862 he was appointed engineer for new works on the LSWR with supervision
of parliamentary business. He built most new LSWR lines during the next forty
years in Middlesex, Surrey, Hampshire, Dorset, Devon and Cornwall and, with
his partner and former pupil R F Church, branches promoted independently
and later acquired by the LSWR, to Swanage, Chard, Seaton, Sidmouth, Ilfracombe
and the extns from Exeter to Okehampton, Plymouth and Devonport, Holsworthy
and the North Cornwall Railway to Bodmin and Padstow. In 1892 the LSWR became
owners of Southampton docks which were greatly extended under Galbraith's
supervision. Between 1880 and 1890 he was consulting engineer to the NBR
in charge of parliamentary work. He also laid out and built the NBR Inverkeithing
& Burntisland and Glenfarg lines in continuation northwards from the
Forth Bridge and he prepared and carried out parliamentary plans for the
alteration and enlargement of Waverley station at Edinburgh. From 1892 he
was engineer with Greathead and later Alexander
Kennedy on the Waterloo & City Railway and with
Benjamin Baker and R.F. Church on the Bakerloo line,
and with Douglas Fox on the Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway,
altogether 14 miles of tube railways. He retired in 1907.
Graham, George
Long serving Engineer to the Caledonian Railway. Subject of a
Railway Magazine (1, p.
411) Illustrated Interview: He started the first CR train from Carlisle
to Baettock when a young man on Locke's staff and had been the Engineer of
the CR since 1853. He had started in the mechanical engineering works of
Robert Napier in Glasgow and had worked on Cunard engines, but his health
failed when he went to Annandale to recover and in 1845 started to work for
Locke. He noted the difficulties experienced in surveying. Amongst the new
lines completed under Graham were the lines to Lesmahagow and Strathaven,
the Gourock extension and the bridge over the Clyde into Glasgow Central.
Greathead, James Henry
Born Grahamstown, Cape Colony, 6 August 1844; died Streatham, London,
21 October 1896. Civil engineer who invented the Greathead tunnelling shield.
In 1859 he went to England to complete his education and in 1864 began a
3 year pupilage under Peter W. Barlow (qv), followed in 1867 by a year as
assistant engineer on the Midland Railway's extension from Bedford to London
under W. H. Barlow (qv) and C. B. Baker (qv). At about this time his former
master Peter W. Barlow was proposing a system of underground railways in
London in tubes lined with cast iron segments. In 1869-70 Greathead worked
with Barlow on the pioneer scheme, the Tower Subway under the Thames. The
difficulties encountered by Marc Brunel (qv) in building the Thames Tunnel
at Wapping were such that 26 years later no contractor was willing to undertake
the Tower Subway. Greathead, then only 24, tendered for the construction
of the shafts and tunnel for £9400, devising a cylindrical wrought iron
shield forced forward by 6 powerful screws as the material was excavated
in front of it. In 1870 Greathead began to practice on his own account and
in 1873 he returned to railway construction.1873-7 he was resident engineer
on the Hammersmith extesion railway and the Richmond extension of the
Metropolitan District Railway. About this time he devised plant for tunnelling
under the Thames at Woolwich in water-bearing strata, incorporating an air
lock in the front of the shield to act as a trap to prevent loss of air in
the event of a blow in the strata. It was insufficiently tried and the tunnelling
attempt, at a lower level without its use, was abandoned in 1876. He assisted
in the preparation of several projects: Regents Canal Railway, 1880; Dagenham
Dock, and Metropolitan Outer Circle Railway, 1881; a new London-Eastbourne
line, 1883; and various light railways in Ireland in 1884. Also in 1884 Greathead
was engaged as engineer on the London (City) & Southwark Subway, later
called the City & South London Railway, begun in 1886 and opened 18.12.1890,
the world's first electrical underground railway. In 1884 he patented further
improvements in his shield. In 1888 he became joint engineer with Sir Douglas
Fox (qv) on the const of the Liverpool Overhead Railway, opened in 1893.
With W.R. Galbraith (qv) he tunnelled the Waterloo & City Railway, opened
in 1898, and began the Central London Railway in conjunction with
Sir John Fowler and Sir Benjamin
Baker shortly before his death. Elected MICE 1881.
Min Proc Instn Civ. Engrs., 1896, 127, 365-8; The Eng V 82 30.10.1896 p 448 (portrait); Jackson, A.A., & Groome, D.F., Rails through the clay. 1962.
Gregory, Sir Charles Hutton
Born Woolwich on 14 October 1817 and died on 10 January 1898. Civil
Engineer: worked under Robert Stephenson on Manchester & Birmingham Railway;
in 1840 Resident Engineer on London & Croydon Railway; 1846 Chief Engineer
on Bristol & Exeter Railway. Much work on overseas railways. In 1841
erected first semaphore signal.
(Marshall).
Deakin (Trans. Newcomen
Soc, 1929, 9, 1)
Grierson, William Wylie
Born in London on 9 December 1863. Educated at Rugby School. Pupil
of William Dean. In 1887 entered Engineering Department of GWR. Involved
in several major new works, notably Sodbury Tunnel and was appointed Chief
Engineer of GWR in July 1916. Retired in 1918, but
President of the Civils in 1929-30
(Presidential Addresss), Died in San Remo on 14 March 1935.
Marshall.
Grove, George
Born on 13 August 1820 and died 28 May 1900
(Marshall) into an Evangelical,
free-thinking ('Clapham Sect'), attended Clapham Grammar School, where Charles
Pritchard encouraged teaching a wide range of subjects, including music and
science. Groves was apprenticed to Alexander Gordon, the Scottish civil engineer
and expert on lighthouse construction. Gordon took Groves to Malines in 1837/8
to negotiate a railway contract. Groves was admitted to the Institution of
Civil Engineers as a graduate on 26 February 1839. He worked under Robert
Napier in Glasow for two years, and then joined the staff of C.H. Wild during
the time of the Railway Mania and worked on Chester & Holyhead Railway.
With the encouragement of Robert Stephenson, Brunel and Sir Charles Barry
he applied for the Secretaryship of the Royal Society of Arts, previously
held by another engineer, John Scott Russell. He was successful: he is of
course far better known for his Dictionary of Music and Musicians.
An odd omission from the Oxford Companion
to British Railway History
Rutherford: Backtrack, 2001, 15, 228
Hallade, Emile
The Swiss-born Emile Hallade had been employed. by the Eastern Railway
of France as a senior track engineer, and was engaged in raising speeds and
improving curve alignments on this railway in the early years of the twentieth
century. He developed a method of measuring versines or off-sets from the
curve to mid chord points on standard chord lengths at regular intervals
round that curve. The larger the versine was, then the sharper the curve
was. In other words versine value relates directly to the severity of the
curvature. He also arranged for clearances to fixed structures such as platforms,
bridge parapets, tunnel walls and so forth, to be measured. Curve calculations
were then computed by the technical staff to smooth out the versines and
to provide specification for the desired track slews needed to give 'best
fit' past adjoining tracks and structures and to keep the track on the existing
formation, if possible.
Whilst the resultant curve amendments could be measured from drawings, it was more usual for calculations to be done in a tabular form. In this table, changes in slew at a particular point could be followed forward and back to see the effect of that slew at the adjoining points. After much pencil and eraser work, the final 'best fit' slews could be teased out. Much skill, practice and patience was needed, and the procedure cried out for a modern computer programme, which was to come many years later. The desired slews were marked up on the track and pegs installed to set the final track position. All that remained was to do the actual slew. The Great Northern Railway was the first British railway company to exploit the technique and most others followed. Hallade also invented the eponymous track recorder. LMS Journal, (13) p. 63.
Handyside, Andrew
Born on 25 July 1805 in Edinburgh. Died 9 June 1887 in Derby. As a
young man he followed the example of his brother William Handyside
(17931850) by going to work with his uncle Charles Baird at his iron
foundry and engineering works in St Petersburg. Handyside returned from Russia
about 1846 and took over the Britannia ironworks in Duke Street, Derby. This
works had been established over thirty years earlier by Weatherhead and Glover
and had a wide reputation for its ornamental cast ironwork known as Derby
castings. Under Handyside, the scope of its output was considerably
extended, and the firm became a leader in the manufacture of iron products
for export. During the continued development of the English railway system
in the mid-nineteenth century, Handysides supplied bridges, railway equipment,
and the ironwork of station buildings, including the roofs of Broad Street,
London (18645), Liverpool Central (18723), and Manchester Central
(187680) stations. The same range of products was exported for railways
throughout the world, notably bridges for India and Australia and the 120
foot span roof of the main station in Amsterdam. The firm retained its reputation
for traditional castings such as for lamp-posts, pillar boxes, plus the
manufacture of steam engines, pumps, and mining machinery. Handyside was
a town councillor (18558), and was a director of both the Derby water
works and the Derby and Derbyshire Banking Company. The firm which carried
his name continued to flourish and was employing about 1000 people in the
1890s, but from that height of success it plunged to failure and was wound
up in 1910. From ODNB biography by Robert
Thorne
Hawkshaw, Sir John
Chrimes magnificent entry in
the ODNB notes that Hawkshaw was born in Leeds (son of a publican) on
9April 1811 and died in London on 2 June 1891. Marshall is incorrect concerning
place and date of birth. Educated at Leeds Grammar Shool and apprenticed
to Charles Fowler, road surveyor. Civil engineer of Manchester & Leeds
Railway (LYR), Severn Tunnel, completed Brunel's Clifton Suspension Bridge
and converted Thames Tunnel for railway use. Also great engineer of harbours
(Fleetwood) and canals (Amsterdam Ship Canal). Closely associated with the
Manchester & Leeds Railway/Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway until his
death. Chrimes succinctly notes that Hawkshaw championed the use of steam
locomotives on steep gradients in the Pennines. Reported to the Directors
of the Great Western Railway on the broad gauge (Ottley 6021/2) and on Brunel's
permanent way in 1838. Brief biography by Mike Chrimes in
Oxford Companion to British Railway
History. and superb entry
in ODNB. Strong views on folly of
broad gauge (Rly Mag., 2, 518).
Henderson. [Sir] Brodie Haldane
Born 6 March 1869; died Braughing on 29 Septeber 1936. Pupil with
Beyer Peacock, then with James LIvesey. For a time worked in Civil Engineer's
Dept of LYR. In 1891 entered into partnership James Livesey. Livesey &
Henderson responsible for Lower Zambezi Brisge and Transandine Railway summit
tunnel. Marshall..
Herbert, Luke
Proposer of early Brighton to London monorial to be wind-powered and
to convey fish. Information from
Hennessey, R.A.S. One track to
the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19, 437-41; and references
therein
Hughes, John Sylvester
General Manager Festiniog Railway: Hughes who was a Civil Engineer
wiith an interest in moutain railways to the summmits of Ben Lomond, Skiddaw,
Snaefell and Snowdon.
Illustrated interviews. No. 34Mr.
John Sylvester Hughes, General Manager Festiniog Railway. Rly Mag.,
1900, 7, 97-110.
Portrait on facing page: mainly an account of th railway, its civil
engineering works, traffic, motive power (ntably the Fairlies) and rolling
stock. Brief details of man.
Hutchinson, Charles Scrope
Major General. in Royal Engineers who conducted the accident enquiry
into Armagh disaster of 12 June 1889. Born 1826: died 29 February 1912. Inspector
of Railways 1867-1895 (Who Was Who)..
See Nock's Historic railway
disasters (Chapter 5 and portrait p. 287). Nock notes that he. had
an elder Sapper brother who was responsible for demolition of Round Down
cliff at Dover for Sir William Cubitt during construction of South Eastern
Railway.
Inglis, Sir Charles Edward
Born 31 July 1875 at Worcester. Educated Cheltenham College and King's
College, Cambridge. Classed as 22nd wrangler in the mathematical tripos and
gained first-class honours in mechanical sciences tripos. Became a pupil
of Sir John Wolfe-Barry & Partners, consulting engineers: worked under
Alexander Gibb, Wolfe-Barry's resident engineer for the extension of the
Metropolitan Railway from Whitechapel to Bow: designed and supervised nine
bridges crossing the railway. Began to study mechanical vibration. In 1901
made a fellow of King's College. Subject of his thesis was The balancing
of engines. Under Bertram Hopkinson, Inglis was appointed to a lectureship
in engineering in 1908 and continued his work on vibration. In 1913 he published
a seminal paper on stresses in a plate due to the presence of cracks and
sharp corners. During WW1 he served in the Royal Engineers. Designed a light
tubular bridge, readily transportable and easy to erect, which the War Office
adopted. From 1916 to 1918 he was in charge of the department responsible
for the design and supply of military bridges; for this work he was appointed
OBE. His bridge came to the fore when the army was faced in 1917-18 with
the tank bridging problem. He played a highly prominent part in the work
of the Bridge Stress Committee, set up in 1923 to determine the behaviour
of railway bridges under moving loads, providing all the mathematics and
much of the impetus which kept the experimental work going. Elected FRS in
1930, and knighted in 1945. He died in Southwold on 19 April 1952.
ODNB: J.F. Baker, rev. Jacques Heyman
Publications
Impact in railway-bridges. Minut. Proc. Instn civ. Engrs,
1931/32, 234, (2), 358-403. Disc.: 404-44. 22 diagrs., 13 tables.
(Paper No. 4870).
A mathematical treatise on vibrations in railway bridges. Cambridge,
C.U.P., 1934. xxvi, 203 p. 65 diagrs., 39 tables.
The vertical path of a wheel moving along a railway track. J. Instn civ.
Engrs, 1938/39, 11, 262-77. Disc.: 278-88: 12, 450-2 + folding
plate. 13 diagrs. 3 tables. (Paper No. 5201).
Inglis, [Sir] Robert John Mathison
Born 5 May 1881; died in Helesburgh on 23 June 1962. Educated Bennington
Park and Edinburghh University. Civil engineer working for NBR, then LNER
in Scotland. Became Engineer Scottish Area in 1936 and Divisional General
Manager in 1943. During 1943 he spent four months in India investigating
Indian railways for the government. In 1945-9 he was Chief Transport Officer
for the British Zone in Germany. In 1949 he was appointed Chairman of the
Glasgow & District Transport Committee which led to the Inglis Report
(1951) recommending electrification of railways in the Glasgow area. He received
a knighthood in 1947.
Marshall.
Jacomb-Hood, John Wykeham
1859-1914. Chief Engineer LSWR. Went with Fay to USA in 1901. Instigated
low pressure pneumatic signalling initially at Grately then on four-track
Woking Junction to Baingstoke section. Killed in a hunting accident. Who
Was Who.
Jacomb-Hood, Robert
Born Risley, Beds on 25 January 1822. Died Tunbridge Wells on 10 May
1900. Educated Chist's Hospital and Trinity College, Cambridge. Articled
to George Watson Buck who was working on London &
Birmingham Railway. Later worked with both Baker and
Barlow. In 1846 he became resident engineer on many
of the LBSCR In 1860 he set up in private practice in Westminster.
In 1883 he joined the Board of the LBSCR.
Marshall
Jessop, William
Born in Devonport in January 1745 and died at Butterley Hall, Derbyshire,
on 18 November 1814. Jessop was a significant engineer of canals, tramways
and railways, notably the Surrey Iron Railway
(see Backtrack 17 314).
He had been the son of Josias Jessop, a foreman shipwright in the Devonport
naval dockyard and a pupil of John Smeaton (Jessop's father had worked on
the Eddystone lighthouse), working with him on the Calder & Hebble and
Aire & Calder navigations in Yorkshire. Jessop's first major work was
the Grand Canal across Ireland, begun in 1753 but not completed until 1805.
Another important work was the Cromford Canal to link Arkwright's mills at
Cromford with the Derbyshire coalfield. It included the 2966yd Butterley
tunnel, and it led to the creation of the Butterley Co in 1790. He was an
early user of cast iron as a structural material and was involved in the
Surrey Iron Railway..
Rolt, L. T. C., Great Engineers 1962; R. Angus Buchanan: biography ODNB
Johnson, Richard
Born in Spalding in 1827. In 1840 he was apprenticed to a builder
and contractor as a carpenter. In October 1847 he was appointed to the staff
of Brydone & Evans, engineers to the GNR. In 1855 he was appointed District
Engineer to the GNR loop line with an office in Boston and in 1859 he became
responsible for the direct Peterborough to Doncaster line. In June 1861 he
became Engineer for the GNR when Mr Walter Marr Brydone retired (with Joseph
Cubitt as Consulting Engineer). He observed the Welwyn tunnel accident and
fire. He was in charge of constructing the Derbyshire Extension Railways,
notably the viaduct at Ilkeston over old coal workings, the curved viaduct
at Gilbrook, and the long Kimberley cutting. He was also invollved in the
Newark Dyke bridge, the Don bridge, the Copenhagen tunnels, and the bridge
over the GER at Peterborough. His son T.R. Johnson was also an engineer and
was responsible for moving a new bridge into position at Peterborough. Richard
Johnson was a teetotaller and was involved in missionary work.
Kearney, Chalmers
1881-1966: born in Australia. Advocate of the monorail: Kearney High
Speed Railway Attempted to popularise his ideas via fiction: Eróne
(1943) which introduces a "Monoway" and makes oblique reference to his
nearly successful system between North and South Shields.
Hennessey, R.A.S. One track to
the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19, 437-41.
Kennard, Robert Willaim
Born (18 January 1800) and died (10 January 1870) in London. Manufacturer
of ironwork for bridges, acquiring Falkirk Ironworks and Blaenavon Ironworks.
In 1839 became a director of thew Northern & Eastern Railway, in 1843
of the Norwich & Brandon Railway and later of the Eastern Counties Railway.
He was joined by his sons, James William (1825-1893) and Henry Martyn (1833-1911)
and they were involved in erecting the Crumlin Viaduct on the Newport,
Abergavenny & Hereford Railway.
Marshall
Langdon, William
Telegraph superintendent of the Midland Railway: gave his name to
telegraph insulators: Langdons.
Michael Dunn: letter Br. Rly J.,
1985, 1, 263. Presented paper on electric lighting to Institution
of Civil Engineers: On railway-train
lighting. Proc. Instn Civ. Engrs,
1891, 106, 127-50. Discussion 150-65.
Lardner, Dionysius
Whereas Marshall does not mention Lardner Simmons found room for this
vaguely absurd character in the Oxford
Companion (probably because he was an "Academic"). Many of his hypotheses
were deeply flawed, such as the ridiculous speeds claimed for trains running
away on the down grade in Box Tunnel. He lived from 1793 to 1859 and was
born like James Joyce in Dublin. Brunel was able to discredit Lardner.
J.B. Snell was better qualified to
assess Lardner's achievements..
Lartigue, Charles François
Marie-Thérèse
Born in 1834: developed elevated monorail systems to assist in harvesting
esparto grass in Spain and Algeria. System developed by
Behr.. Information from Hennessey,
R.A.S. One track to the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19,
437-41; and references therein including
A.T. Newham. The Listowell
& Ballybunion Railway (1967). Lartigue's first venture was a
long line in Algeria. Further
Backtrack (2008, 22, 295) material in article on Listowel
and Ballybunion line .
Latham, John Herbert
Son of a priest, born 30 July 1832 at Little Eaton: brought up in
Cambridge; educated at Harrow and St John's College, Cambridge, where he
obtained a Degree in mathematics. Wrote a book on girder design
(Construction of wrought iron bridges). He became Assistant Engineer
to the Madras Irrigation & Canal Company in 1863 and Chief Engineer in
1865. He farmed in New Zealand from 1887 and died in Auckland on 10 July
1910. Horne hints that the book may have been more influential and might
have been read by J.W. Murphy of The Lehigh Valley Railroad.
See Horne in Back Track and book on bridge design.
La Touche, James Norman Digges
Born on 19 July 1857 at Wistanstow near Craven Arms where father
(Huguenot) was vicar of Stokesay Church. Educated at Marlborough College
and Royal Indian Engineering College at Cooper's Hill. From 1880-2 he was
a pupil of Stroudley and was then under Hugh Reid at Hyde Park Works in Glasgow.
He joined the Indian Public Works Department in 1882 and was sent to work
with his uncle Henry Christopher Digges La Touche where he worked on several
lines with difficult bridges. He became Deputy Consulting Engineer for the
Calcutta District in 1895, and in 1898 for the Bombay District, finally going
to the Secretariat in Bombay until he retired in 1912. He eventually moved
to Stokesay Cottage and died there on 25 November 1939. He invented a strain
gauge to measure stresses in small span
bridges.See Horne
Backtrack 16 283.
Laws, William George
Born inn Rynemouth on 18 April 1836 and died in Newcastle upon Tyne
on 22 December 1904 (Marshall). Educated Durham University and articled to
James Burnett of Thompson & Boyd. Worked on Border Union, Border Counties
and NBR Wansbeck Valley railways. Later Chief Assistant to
T.E. Harrison of NER. In 1881 appointed City Engineer
of Newcastle where responsible for electric tramways construction.
Marshall.
Leather, John Towlerton
Marshall states
born Kirkham Gate Wakefield on 30 August 1804 and died at Leventhorpe Hall
near Leeds on 6 June 1885. Civil engineer and contractor who put up the finance
for the Hunslet Engine Co. on behalf
of his son Arthur
Leather, John Wignall
Born near Leeds on 26 April 1810 and died in Leeds on 31 January 1887.
Early work on reservoirs, drainage works and canals. Later worked on railways:
tockton & Hartlepool Railway including Greetham viaduct; Birmingham,
Wolverhampton & Dudley Railway; North Midland and Manchester & Leeds
Railways. Marshall.
Liddell, Charles
Born Easington, County Durham in 1813: son of the Rector. Died London
on 10 August 1894. Became a pupil of George Stephenson and was involved in
most of the Stephensons' railway projects including the Grand Junction and
London & Birmingham railways. Went into partnership with L.D.B. Gordon
and was engineer in chief of the Newport, Abergavenny & Hereford Railway
which included the wrought iron Crumlin Viaduct. He was a great enthusiast
for railway construction and his later work included involvement in both
the Midland and MSLR London extensions. He was also involved in cable
manaufacture and installation.
Marshall.
Lindley, Peter
Together with Hirst of Metalastik, he probably did more to make rubber
an acceptable engineering material than any other person. He was a graduate
of Sheffield University and whilst there had worked on locomotives at the
Yorkshire Engine Company. He was a major contributor to the design of rail
pads (a mass market for elastomers, especially natural rubber), and to the
large bearings used to mount the track beds under the Barbican development
and for the Piccadilly Line extension to Heathrow Airport. He was involved
with Derham on the isolation of Albany Court above St James Underground Station
and in the initial British use of rubber bridge bearings under the Pelham
Street bridge in Lincoln. He was responsible for creating an extra market
of some 8000 tonnes per annum through his design for an automotive buffer
for Ford cars to withstand 5 mile/h impacts..
McAlpine, Sir Robert
Michael Gould contributed a biography on page 302 of
the Oxford Companion. The family,
including Sir Robert, is included in an
Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography contribution by Iain Russell.
McClean, John Robinson
According to Marshall was born
in Belfast in 1813 and died in Stonehouse (Kent) on 13 July 1873. Studied
Glasgow University. In 1838 entered office of Walker & Burges. Worked
on improvements to Birmingham Canal. Jack
describes how he leased the South Staffordshire Railway for 21 years
from 1 August 1850. He became Chief Engineer of the Furness Railway. President
Institution of Civil Egineers in 1865.
Mackenzie, Willliam
Marshall notes
that born in Burnley on 20 March 1794 and died on 19 October 1851. Prominent
contractor. Apprenticed to Thomas Clapham, lock carpenter on the Leeds &
Liverpool Canal, and at Troon harbour in Ayrshire. After Clapham's death
he worked under Cargill constructing Telford's iron bridge at Craigellachie,
subsequently working for Telford on the Birmingham Canal. He then transferred
to railway work becoming contractor for the tunnel under Liverpool from Edge
Hill to Lime Street station. Other contracts followed, on the GJR, Glasgow,
Paisley & Greenock, North Union, and Midland railways. In 1840 he began
his connection with Thomas Brassey with whom he carried
out much work on railways in France. The revolution of 1848 forced a return
to England where, with Brassey, he completed the Eastern Union Railway and,
in conjunction with John Stephenson the whole of the lines from Lancashire
to Edinburgh and Glasgow under Locke and Errington, the Scottish Central
to Perth, the Scottish Midland to Forfar, part of the Chester & Holyhead
under Robert Stephenson, part of the North Staffordshire Railway under
Bidder, the whole of the Trent Valley line, and the
Liverpool, Ormskirk & Preston section of the ELR, again under
Locke and Errington.
Altogether the contracts executed by Mackenzie alone and in conjunction
with Brassey and John Stephenson totalled over £17m. Overwork and exposure
led in 1848 to an attack of gangrene in his foot and from then his health
declined. See also Newcomen
Transactions, 2000, 73, 319 for paper by Otter and Thomas.
McMullen, D.
Colonel in Royal Engineers who became Chief Inspecting Officer of
Railways. He conducted the accident enquiry into the Hither Green derailment
of 5 November 1967 caused by a broken rail..
See Nock's Historic railway
disasters (portrait p. 288)
Macneill, [Sir] John Benjamin
Marshall states
that born in near Dundalk County Louth in 1793 and died on 2 March 1880 in
London. Trained under Telford, on southern section of Holyhead Road, and
was a beneficiary in Telford's will. In 1834 he set himself up as
consulting.engineer and was engineer to the Wishaw & Coltness Railway
and to Grangemouth Docks. In 1837 the Irish Railway Commissioners appointed
him to survey railways in the North of Ireland. In 1840 he was Engineer to
the Dublin & Drogheda Railway. Horne
(Backtrack, 11, 308) shows that he made a considerable
contribution to bridge design, both directly and through his pupils; including
George Willoughby Hemans (above and
letter in 18, 125).
Marindin, [Sir] Francis
Wikepedia lists place of birth as Weymouth on 1 May 1838 and death
as London 21 April 1900. Educated at Eton and Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.
Served in Crimean War. When Colonel in Royal Engineers, became Chief Inspecting
Officer of Railways between 1895 and 1899. He encouraged Sapper soccer and
was President of the Football Association for several years.
See Nock's Historic railway
disasters .
Meyer, Sebastian William
1856-1946: a comparable figure to Colonel Stephens: invloved in East
& West Yorkshire Union Railway, the North Sunderland Railway, the Dearne
Valley Railway, the Tickhill Light Railway and further similar lines actually
constructed and with several proposed lines. A biography by A.L. Barnett
(published RCHS) is fulsomely reviewed by "AE" (Alan Earnshaw?) in
Backtrack Volume 7 page
166.
Miller, John (b.1805)
Born 1805, died 1883. Included in the
Oxford Companion: biography by Jack
Simmons, but not in Marshall. Rutherford
(Backtrack, 2004, 18, 688) emphasises his significance
in terms of engineering the Edinburgh & Glasgow Railway, notably his
viaducts across the Almond and Avon valleys, and his contribution to locomotive
development through ordering locomotives from R.&W. Hawthorn (a note
observes that Miller's name is in the Hawthorn Order Books maintained at
the NRM. Sekon (Evolution of the steam
locomotive) notes his involvement in the Cowlairs banking engines,
but spells his name "Millar". He was also (with Thomas Grainger, who had
taken Miller into partnership) engineer of the Ballochmyle Viaduct in Ayrshire
(see Biddle).
Miller, John (b.1872)
Born in County Tyrone on 29 February 1872; gained a BSc in Belfast
in 1904. Lectured in mathematics at the the Central Technical College of
the City & Guilds of London Institute until 1909 when he emigrated to
USA and eventually became Chief Engineer of the Long Island Railroad, but
in 1916 joined Henry Worth Thornton on the Great Eastern Railway, and became
its Chief Civil Engineer in March 1919. In 1925 he became Chief Civil Engineer
at York (the LNER did not have a single "chief" civil engineer). At York
he encouraged the uptake of modern signalling, introduced the Morris-Bretland
Tracklayer, and encouraged the careful maintenance of the railway environment
with the removal of rubbish and the use of curbing.
Marshall records taht he died in Woodford
Green on 16 May 1942.
See Rutherford: Backtrack, 2001, 15, 228.
Mitchell, Joseph
Born in Forres on 3 November 1803. Died London on 26 November 1883
(see ODNB entry by Ronald M. Birse rev.
Mike Chrimes: Marshall states "Inverness
and is clearly incorrect). Educated at Inverness Academy and learnt practical
masonry under Telford building locks for Caledonian Canal. Subsequently one
of Telford's pupils. Responsible for roads and bridges in Highlands, and
also for the construction of many churches. Engineer to many Scottish railways,
and responsible for surveying the original Highland Railway's mainline across
the Grampians and constructing the original Highland Railway line to Keith.
Worked in partnership with his two assistants William and
Murdoch Paterson. Supported the creation of Inverness Public Library.
Memoirs published as Reminiscences of my life in the Highlands.See
also Anne-Mary Paterson: Reaching Keith.
Backtrack, 2008, 22, 468 which includes a portrait..
Molesworth, Guilford
Director General of Railway Department and then from 1871 Consulting
Engineer to Indian railways. Narrow gauge activities covered in
Ransom's Narrow gauge steam. Also
biography.
Molesworth, E.J. Life of Sir Guilford Molesworth. Spon, 1922.
Moorsom, William Scarth
Marshall notes
that he was born near Whitby in 1804 and died in London on 3 June 1863. He
was educated at Sandhurst and is usually known by his rank of Captain (Royal
Engineers). He was closely associated with the London & Birmingham (with
Robert Stephenson) and Birmingham & Gloucester Railways. In the case
of the latter he was responsible for ordering 4-2-0s from Norris in Philadelphia
to work the Lickey Incline. He was engineer of those lines which eventually
became part of the Great Western Railway from Wolverhampton to Shrewsbury
and Chester. Other lines associated with him included the Cromford &
High Peak Railway and the lines from Plymouth to Falmouth and Penzance.
He contributed a paper in 1840 on the
Norris 4-2-0s in Min Proc Instn civ. Engrs. Mike Chrimes provides
an Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography entry. See also LMS
Journal (19) 2 (especially Note 3)..
Mount, [Sir] Alan Henry Lawrence
Born in 1881, died 1955 (BLPC). Chief Inspecting Officer Railways
(he had investigated the serious
derailments of Maunsell's 2-6-4Ts, most notably one which immediately preceded
the on at Sevenoaks) and was Chairman of the Pacific Locomotive Committee
which investigated rhe serious derailments of Indian locomotives which had
been supplied by British locomotive manufacturers. Cox was a member of this
Committee and this activity is described (and the members of the Committee
are illustrated) in Volume 2 of Cox's Locomotive
panorama. The 190pp Report was published in Delhi in 1939. The cause
of the derailments was poor bogie design and this was established by the
French Member Léguille. Mount
commented upon his Iandian experiences at a joint meeting of the Locomotive,
Civil and Mechanical Engineers: this is reported in
J. Instn Loco. Engrs., 1943,
33, 226-7.
See also Nock's Historic
railway disasters (including portrait p. 288)
Newlands, Alexander
Born in Elgin on 11 January 1870 and died in Glasgow on 28 August
1938 (Marshall). He was appointed Chief
Engineer of the Highland Railway in 1914 and was responsible for the dismissal
of F.R. Smith, the Locomotive Superintendent. He eventually became the Chief
Civil Engineer of the LMS in 1927 until his retirement in 1933
Norris, Richard Stuart
1812-78 (Brian Reed): Norris
was born at Bolton and was employed on early GJR surveys by Locke. In 1836
he became chief draughtsman in Locke's Liverpool office, but was considered
as on the GJR payroll from December 1833, and thus in length of service the
senior of all men associated with Crewe. After the GJR was opened he was
appointed resident engineer of the Northern Division, and as such had charge
of the erection of early Crewe houses and streets, also of the town and works
extensions. In the early 1850s he was made both engineer and superintendent
of the Northern Division, with headquarters variously at Warrington and
Liverpool. Towards the end of his active career he came somewhat under the
strictures of Richard Moon, as did various other old-timers. He retired from
railway service in 1862 after the ND-SD locomotive consolidation, and settled
near Kenyon Junction, where he died on 26 January 1878.
.
Pain family
The Culm Valley Railway in 1811 was the brainchild of 27-year old
Arthur Cadlick Pain, Simon Pain's (letter to
Backtrack, 16, p. 174)
great-grandfather. He convinced the Bristol & Exeter Railway and the
"great and good" locally to invest on the basis that he could build the over
seven-mile railway in twelve months for £22,500. Sadly this proved to
be vely optimistic and it finally opened in late 1874 at a cost of £47,000.
As a result its financial position was doomed and it was finally swallowed
up by the GWR in 1880.
Still espousing the light railway philosophy, A.C. continued with railway building and amongst many others he engineered the 3ft gauge Southwold Rallway which opened in 1879 and he remained chairman until its closure in 1929; he had been succeeded by my grandfather Claude as its engineer in 1912.
A.C. is best remembered in railway circles as the engineer for the Axminster & Lyme Regis Light Railway which opened in 1903 where he was ably assisted by two of his sons, Edward and Claude. The 600ft Cannington Viaduct was the first [sic] one early viaduct constructed almost exclusively of concrete. A paper which was read to the Institution of Civil Engineers by Edward in 1904 on its pioneering design and construction.
In later years he concentrated his skills on other public works, notably public water supply, and was chairman of the Mid Wessex (later Mid Southern) Water Company, which he had founded in 1893, until 1935. I have a splendid portrait of him painted at that time which hung in the boardroom for over 60 years. He lived in Frimley, Surrey, being very active in the local community and was also a JP for many years. He was obviously a man of great energy and warmth much loved by all; he finally died aged 93 in 1937.
Arthur C. Pain was engineer of the Axminster & Lyme Regis Railway. He was aided by his sons Edward & Claud. Edward Pain presented Construction of a railway viaduct entirely on the Cannington construction. Proc. Instn Civ. Engrs, 1905. See Backtrack.
Karau, Paul. Common light railway architecture. Br. Rly J., 1984, 1, 60-3.
Palmer, Henry
Founder member of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Patented monorail
system in 1821. Systems at Royal Victualling Yard, Deptford and at Cheshunt
in Hertfordshire. Hennessey, R.A.S.
One track to the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19,
437-41.
Parry, Edward
Marshall: born
Hendy in Flintshire on 8 November 1844 and died at Leamington on 11 August
1920. Educated at private school in Chester. Began civil engineering career
on Midland Railway. Between 1879 and 1889 he was county surveyor for
Nottinghamshire. He was responsible for the construction of the Nottingham
Suburban Railway and was resident engineer for the Nottingham to Rugby section
of the GCR London Extension (Emblin
Backtrack, 2008, 22, 110). Most of his works were faced
with vitrified blue bricks.
Pasley, [General Sir] Charles William
Born Eskdalemuir, Dumfriesshire on 8 September 1780, and died in London
on 19 April 1861. (Marshall).
Excellent biography by Jack Simmons in
Oxford Companion which makes it even more absurd that
ODNB entry by R.H. Vetch (some sort of
weed) supposedly revised by John Sweetham fails to make anything of his
contribution to railway safety. Established Royal Engineers Institution at
Chatham. Inspector of Railways at Board of Trade 1841-6. Diary at British
Library.
Paterson, Murdoch
Born in Inverness in September 1826. Died Culloden Moor on 9 August
1898. Educated at Royal Academy, Inverness. Apprenticed to
Joseph Mitchell: worked with him on construction
of Highland Railway, including line from Inverness to Keith. After Mitchell's
retirement through a stroke in 1862 Paterson worked on the Kyle and Northern
lines. See Marshall and
Anne-Mary Paterson (great grand niece):
Reaching Keith. Backtrack, 2008, 22, 468 which includes
a portrait..
Peto, Samuel Morton
Railway, and other major works, builder and contractor. Born in Woking
on 4 August 1809. Following an apprenticeship with his uncle as a builder
he went into partnership with his cousin Thomas Grissell: a partnership that
lasted 16 years. Contracts included that between Hanwell and Langley on the
GWR, Foord Viaduct, Folkestone in 1843, most of the London & Blackwall
Railway, Curzon Street (Birmingham). He frequently accepted payment in the
form of shares in lieu of cash payment. He became involved in many East Anglian
lines, including the Yarmouth & Norwich Railway, and acquired Somerleyton
Hall as a residence and the harbour at Lowestoft. He became an influential
East Anglian figure and became associated with the Gurney banking family.
He was Liberal MP for Norwich from 1847 to 1954, but resigned to take Government
work in the Crimea. He was involved in many overseas contracts and in the
construction of the Crystal Palace. He became an MP for Bristol from 1865-8
and more dangerously became involved in the LCDR which collapsed on 12 July
1866 following the failure of the bankers Overend, Gurney & Co. on 11
May. Peto was declared bankrupt and was forced to apply for the Chiltern
Hundreds. He retired from public life and lived in Tunbridge Wells (a sort
of pleasant Siberia) and died on 13 November 1889 and is buried at Pembury.
See Gray Backtrack, 16,
220.
Pringle, [Sir] John W.
Colonel in Royal Engineers who conducted the accident enquiry into
the Sevenoaks derailment of
24 August 1927. See Nock's
Historic railway disasters (portrait p. 288). Chaired two high-powered
Committees to investigate the general adoption of automatic train control
on British railways (following the adoption of an electro-mecnaical system
on the GWR). The first reported in April 1922: its members were W.C. Acfield,
Signalling Superintendent of the Midland Railway,;E.C. Cox, Superintendent
of the Line, SECR; Major Edmonds of the Ministry of Transport; H.N. Gresley,
Locomotive Engineer, GNR; Major Hall, Inspecting Office, Ministry of Transport,
J.H. Thomas, General Secretary, NUR; and Sir Robert Turnbull, a Director
of the LNWR. The second committee reported in 1930, its members were H.C.
Charleton, MP; C.B. Collett, E.C. Cox, Chief Operating Superintendent of
the SR; Gresley, Lt. Col. G.L. Hall, Assistant Engineer, Signals &
Telegraphs, SR, A. Newlands, Chief Civil Engineer, LMS, J. Sayers, Telegraph
Superintendent, LMS and E.A. Wilson, Chief Engineer to the Metropolitan Railway.
As was shown later at Harrow & Wealdstone (and elsewhere) little was
done outside the GWR. He was also Chairman of the Electrification of Railways
Advisory Committee which reported in 1928 (see
R.A.S. Hennessey. 'Sparks' the
electrical consultants. Backtrack, 2008, 22, 564-9)
.
Rattray, David Campbell
Born in Dundee in 1858. Educated at High Schools. Apprenticed to Pearse
Brothers of Dundee. Became a pupil and then assistant on CR & GSWJR.
Studied civil engineering at Glasgow University. Moved to LYR. In 1890 he
moved to the MSLR in Manchester and in 1893 became district engineer in charge
of that railway west of Penistone. In 1897 he returned to the LYR as assitant
to W.B. Worthington and in April 1905 he became Chief Engineer. He retired
immediately prior to the Grouping and died in Southport on 11 January 1927.
Marshall.
Rendel, George Wightwick
George Rendel was the second son of James Rendel.
He was born in 1832 and educated at Harrow; then in his father's
office.See Horne in
Backtrack
Rendel, James Meadows
James Meadows Rendel was born in 1799 in South Devon . His father
was a supervisor of roads; his uncle was a millwright. He was a surveyor
under Telford and an expert in hydraulics. By 1849 he had become London
Consultant to the East Indian Railway.
See Horne in
Back Track
Ross, Alexander
Marshall: born
Laggan in County of Inverness on 20 April 1845. Died in London on 3 February
1923. Educated at Aberdeen and at Owen's College, Manchester. Began railway
career on GNSR, but moved to LNWR in 1871, thence to the NER in 1873, but
returned to the LNWR in 1874. He moved to the LYR in 1884 and became Chief
Engineer on the MSLR in 1890 where he was responsible for many of the works
on the London Extension (Emblin
Backtrack, 2008, 22, 110). He was Chief Engineer on the
GNR between 1896 and 1911 when he became a consulting engineer. His later
works included the Herford Loop and Breydon Water Viaduct. The massive girder
viaducts across the Hertford to Stevenage road, and the flyover at Langley
Junction are presumably amongst his last remaining works still
visible.(KPJ)
Samuel, James
Born in Glasgow on 21 March 1824 and died in Fulham, London on 25
May 1874. Educated Glsgow High School and Glasgow University. Articled to
Daniel Mackain at Glasgow waterworks. In January 1846 appointed Resident
Engineer to the Eastern Counties Railway. From 1858 on involved in civil
engineering projects in Asia Minor, the USA and Mexico. (Marshall) . Advocated
light railway vehicles and was involved in this with William Bridges Adams.
See also Morayshire Railway for
his 2-2-0 locomotives employed thereon. Involved with
John Nicholson in early application of
compounding.
Scott, James Robb
Born in the Gorbals, Glasgow in 1882, illegitimate son of a Glasgow
architect. Articled to Leadbetter & Fairley of Edinburgh around 1900.
He then joined Belcher & Joass in London before joining the LSWR in 1907
as chief architectural assistant where he was responsible for the Victory
Arch at the entrance to the reconstructed Waterloo Station. Chief Architect
to the Southern Railway and thus responsible for a wide range of stations
from a fairly traditional style at Ramsgate to Art Deco at Wimbledon and
on the Chessington branch. Died in
1940. See Mel Holley: Fit for the
purpose. Steam Wld, 2008 (249), 4-5..
Scott, [Sir] Walter
Born Abbey Town, Cumbria on 17 August 1826 and died whilst on holiday
in Meltone, France, on 8 April 1910. Began work as a mason and by 23 became
a contractor on his own account working on railways in North East England,
later as Walter Scott & Co. worked on railways in Essex and London (including
City & South London Railway). Established publishing works at Felling
in County Durham, famous for its editions of standard classics (business
acquired in lieu of debt payment for constructing printing factory). Knighted
in 1907. John Marshall and
John R. Turner's Sir Walter Scott
(1826-1910), civil engineering contractor. Trans. Newcomen Soc.,
1993, 65, 1-19. This biographer was also responsible for the
ODNB biography.
Simmons, John Lintorn Arabin
Simmons was born on 12 February 1821 at Langford Budville, near Milverton
in Somerset. He was the fifth son of Lieutenant Thomas F. Simmons, a Royal
Artillery Officer. He was educated at Elizabeth College Guernsey (where his
father was serving) and at the Royal Military College in Woolwich. He was
commissioned on 14 December 1837 as a Royal Engineer and sent to Chatham
for further study under Col. Sir Charles Pasley who was to become Chief Inspector
of Railways in 1841, until deprived of this post following the collapse of
bridges on the NBR due to flooding. Simmons spent six years in Canada, and
on his return was sent to Chester to provide expertise on the bridge collapse
there on 24 May 1847. Captain Simmons recomended a Royal Commission on the
Application of Iron to Railway Structures. Subsequently, he became involved
as an advisor to the Turkish Army and rose in rank. He became Govenor of
the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich, was involved in the Royal Commission
on Railway Accidents of 1874, became a full General in 1877, the Govenor
of Malta between 1884 and 1888 where his diplomatic skills were used in
negotiations with the Pope. He retired on 28 September 1888 and was made
a Field Marshall in 1890. He died at Blackwater (Hants) on 14 February 1903
and is buried in Churchill, Somerset. See
Horne Backtrack 16 504 and
Horne Backtrack, 15, 148.
Stephens, Holman Frederick
Born Hammersmith on 31 October 1868. His father Frederick George Stephes
was a member of the pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.. Known as Holly as a child.
During his lifetime he built or was associated with around sixteen light
railways, ranging from the lightly constructed Rye & Camber Tramway to
the Bere Alston and Callington line, with its magnificent viaduct of 12 arches,
each of 60ft span and standing 120ft above the River Tamar:
see article by Neil Parhouse in Archive
No. 2 and links from therein.
Stephens studied civil engineering at University College under Sir Alexander Kennedy. In 1888 his father arranged with John Bell, General Manager of the Metropolitan Railway, for him to enter the Company's works at Neasden as a pupil of the Locomotive Superintendent, John Hanbury. In due course, Stephens pressed for the opportunity to gain experience in civil engineering and Hanbury suggested that he approach Seaton, who was working for the Metropolitan on extensive alterations to Baker Street and Portland Road stations. Edward P. Seaton took Stephens on to assist with the design of the route and structures of the Cranbrook and Paddock Wood Railway, and although Stephens was only 22 and still a student many of the distinctive features and materials used in the buildings on this line were adopted by him on subsequent schemes.
Stephens was an individualist who set out to build and operate railways of economical construction. In 1895 with Edward Peterson, a solicitor with a practice in Staplehurst, they formed a company called the Light Railways Syndicate to finance Bills or Orders in Parliament for proposed new railways. The intention was that once the necessary authorisations had been obtained, a separate company would be formed for each scheme to raise the capital and the syndicate would receive a fee for its services. A total of seven schemes were formally proposed by the Light Railways Syndicate and its sister company, the Economic Railways Company, formed in 1898, but only one, the Sheppey Light Railway, was built. In all cases, Stephens was to have been the engineer and had a smallish shareholding in the syndicate.
The failures Stephens had in the early years were balanced by many successes, commencing with the Selsey line in 1895 and the Rother Valley (later the Kent & East Sussex) in 1900 - the first line to be constructed under the provisions of the 1896 Light Railways Act. Thereafter a string of schemes came to fruition - the Sheppey Light, Bere Alston & Callington, Shropshire & Montgomeryshire, and Burry Port. WW1 did not end his activity. The North Devon & Cornwall Junction Light was constructed in the early 1920s. He saved the Festiniog Railway from bankruptcy in the 1920s and had the Kent coalfield achieved its expected potential it would have been amply served by a network of lines engineered and managed by him. His biggest disappointment was the Southern Heights, a projected electric line in Surrey on which he was working almost up to the time of his death and which failed to come to fruition. It featured on many of the carriuage panel maps of the old Southern Electrics: see article by Arthur R. Nicholls in Backtrack, 13, 271.
In private life Stephens was an enigmatic, even an eccentric character. A tall, striking figure, instantly recognisable, with a military bearing; an arrogant man, but with immense personal charm and wit, much admired and liked by his staff; his attitude to women always courteous, sometimes supercilious - occasionally mysterious, he nevertheless had few friends outside his business acquaintances and lived a solitary existence mainly in hotels or at his clubs. A lifelong bachelor with no close relatives, he had few interests apart from his railways; his army service was spasmodic, but he attained the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in 1916, mainly in respect of services to the Territorial Force, a contact that he maintained throughout most of the 1920s. His interest in classical mythology, if somewhat superficial, is evidenced by the naming of many of his locomotives after goddesses.
He died in Dover on 23 October 1931 Portrait & brief biography:
.Morgan, J.S. The Colonel Stephens railways.
1978..
Excellent
website at www.hfstephens-museum.org.uk/pages/himself.htm.
Stephenson, John
Marshall notes
born in 1794 and died on 8 July 1848 at Rotherham. Civil engineer, friend
(but not related to) George Stephenson. Worked on Stockton & Darlinton
Railway, Summit Tunnel on Manchester & Leeds Railway, Chorley cutting
(including its flying arches). Member of the firm Stephenson, Mackenzie &
Brassey.
Stephenson, Robert (Civil Engineer)
Stevenson, Francis
Born in Scotland on 27 August 1827 and died in London on 1 February
1902. Marshall. Articled to R.B. Dockray,
then engineer on the London & Birmingham Railway. In 1855 became assistant
to William Baker who was in charge of new works and succeeded him in 1879.
From 1886 he became in charge of maintenance of of the whole LNWR
system.
Stevenson, Robert
Born Glasgow 8 June 1772: died Eninburgh 12 July 1850. Famous
civil engineer, and contributor to early railway schemes. Probably responsible
for the encouragement in the use of wroughr iron (then known as malleable
iron) for rails and tram plates. Grandfather of Robert Louis Stevenson,
See Marshall and
Miles Macnair's William
James..
Sylvester, Charles
Author of a report to the Liverpool & Manchester Railroad Committee
in 1824 following a visit to Hetton Colliery to obseve locomotives at work.
He observed runs hauling 16 wagons of 1½ miles at 4½ mile/h and
at 5¾ mile/h. Unfortunately, he also came up with a theory that gradients
steeper than about 1:360 were excessive for steam traction. This greatly
increased the cost of the L&BR. See
Backtrack, 9, 436 and
Sylvester's report.
Telford, Thomas
Born 1757: died 1834. One of the greatest British civil engineers.
Correctly Simmons included Telford in the
Oxford Companion (but excluded
from Marshall) and succinctly noted his contributions to railways, most
permanently as an expert called in by the Exchequer Load Commissioners to
comment upon the works for the Liverpool & Manchester Railway in 1829.
He also advised on the Stratford & Moreton and Newcastle & Carlisle
Railways and laid out the somewhat improbable Glasgow & Berwick Railway
of 1809. His major road and canal projects, and their bridges, cuttings and
embankments, had a huge influence on early railway construction.
Tempest, Percy Crosland
Born in Leeds on 24 February 1860. Educated Leeds Grammar School and
Leeds University. Chief Engineer of the South Eastern & Chatham Railway.
On retirement of Sir Francis Dent in 1920 became General Manager and was
initially joint General Manager of the Southern Railway with Sir Herbert
Walker, but retired from 1 January 1924.. Formerly Permanent Way Engineer
of the South Eastern Railway. Born in Yorkshire. Trained on LNWR. Ardent
advocate of Channel Tunnel (Engineer to Channel Tunnel Co. from 1916). Knighted
in 1923.. Died on 2 November 1924.
Marshall..
Thom, Riach
Reverent gentleman from Kilmarnock: model of Marvo railway (top-supported
monorail) built:in 1904. Information from
Hennessey, R.A.S. One track to
the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19, 437-41; and references
therein
Thompson, Francis
Born at Woodbridge in Suffolk on 25 July 1808. Francis Thompson was
the architect of stations on the North Midland and Chester & Holhead
Railways, including the noteworthy Chester Station. He was also architect
for several significant structures in Canada. He died on 23 April 1895 back
at Woodbridge.
See O. Carter: Francis Thompson...
Backtrack, 1995, 9, 213.
Thornton, James
Born in 1798? at Cowick, Yorkshire, and died at Cheshunt in 1880.
Described on census returns as a 'railway contractor' or 'public works
contractor'. He was living with his family at Eastwick in 1841 when the Northern
& Eastern Railway reached Harlow on 9 August and Bishop's Stortford on
16 May 1842. Thus it is highly probable that he was a contractor on this
line. His wife came from Norfolk and their children were born in Denver
(Norfolk), Oldham, the Wakefield area and Harlow where James rented a substantial
house in what is now Old Harlow.
Tite, [Sir] William
Born in City of London on 7 February 1798. Articled to architect David
Laing and then set his own practice in 1824. Died in Torquay on 20 April
1873. The Royal Exchange in London was probably his most significant work.
Many important railway stations, notably for London & Southampton Railway
and Lancaster & Carlisle Railway. See
Biddle, Gordon Sir William Tite and railways. Part 1. Backtrack, 2008,
22, 530-6. ODNB biography by S.P.
Parissien.
Train, John Cumberland [Sir] Landale
Formerly Chief Engineer (Southern Area) of the LNER, but from 1942
Chief Engineer LNER and following Nationalization became Railway Executive
member for Civil Engineering (Hughes LNER). Unlike Riddles he transferred
his expertise to the British Transport Commission
Paper
Organization in relation to engineering output and efficiency on the
London and North Eastern Railway. Instn Civ. Engrs., 1944, 2,
(Railway Engineering Division)
Patent
342,890 Improvements relating to cant gauges for railways.
Applied 30 January 1930. Published 12 February 1931.
Contribution to Other's paper
Cox, E.S. of locomotive reciprocating parts.
J. Instn Loco. Engrs., 1943,
33, 221-2. (Paper No. 432)
A class 5 locomotive was deliberately slipped on greased rails at a speed
equivalent to 100 mile/h to establish the effect of coupled wheel lifting
at speed. This paper was also published in Proc. Instn mech. Engrs,
1941, 146 148-62 and J. Instn civ. Engrs, 1941/42, 17,
221-50. J.C.L. Train (221-2) commented
at length on his concern about the effect of high speed trains, but had accepted
Gresley's reassurances. He considered that the steam locomotive was at a
disadvantage compared with other forms of motive power due to their reciprocating
parts. Advocated multiple cylinders to lessen risk..:
Trench, Ernest F. Crosbie
Born Ardfert Abbey, Kerry (Ireland) on 6 August 1869. In 1893 became
pupil of E.B. Thornhill, then Chief Engineer LNWR and succeeded Thornhill
from 1 October 1909. Became Chief Engineer of the LMS where generally agreed
that he was obstructive towards locomotive policy. Retired 1930. Died 15
September 1960. Marshall.
Trubshaw, Charles
Charles Trubshaw came from an architecural family. He was born in
1841, the son of an architect, who was also called Charles and was educated
by him His father was the architect and surveyor to the County of Stafford.
He became an ARIBA in 1865 and worked for the LNWR until in 1874 when he
became the Architect of the Northern Division of the MR. Both Hellifield
and Skipton stations were designed by him. The magnificent Midland Hotel
in Manchester followed a visit to the USA with William Towle the Midland
Railway Hotels' Manager. According to Biddle
Britain's historical railway buildings Trubshaw was responsible
for architecture on the whole of the MR between 1884 and 1910. The latter
is contrary to Dixey who stated that he retired in 1906. The hotel
and station at Bradford Forster Square were also his work. Leicester London
Road Station is probably his best surving work. He died in Derby on 15 February
1917. Charles Trubshaw: a Victorian
railway architect. S. John Dixey. Bedside Backtrack,
65-8.
Trubshaw, James
Born in Colwich, Staffordshire on 13 February 1877. He was engineer
to the Trent & Mersey Canal and built the Grosvenor Bridge in Chester.
He worked with Locke being responsible for 14 miles of the Birmingham Grand
Junction Railway, and surveyed and constructed the Shipton on Stour branch.
See paper by Woodward in Trans
Newcomen Soc., 2000, 72, 77 .
Turner, Frederick Thomas
Born Hereford on 4 August 1812; died London 21 August 1877
(Marshall). Articled to John Fawcetts,
became assistant to J.U. Rastrick. Latterly Civil Engineer of LCDR.
Tyler, [Sir] Henry Watley
Born on 7 March 1827 and died on 30 January 1908 in London. Educated
Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. In 1852 married Margaret, daughter of Lieut
General Sir Charles Pasley, first Government Inspector of Railways. Appointed
a Government Inspector for Railways in 1853: Chief Inspector 1870-7. Became
closely involved with Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. MP for Harwich 1880-5
and for Great Yarmouth 1885-92. Deputy Chairman GER. Became chairman of the
British Westinghouse Co. Not in ODNB, but excellent thumbnail biography by
Jack Simmons in his everyday book (Oxford
Companion).
Marshall.
Papers
On the Festiniog Railway for passengers.
Min. Proc. Instn Civ. Engrs.,
1865, 24. (Paper 1130) .
On the working of steep gradients and sharp curves on railways.
Min. Proc. Instn Civ. Engrs.,
1867, 26. (Paper 1160)
Vignoles, Charles Blacker
Vignoles was born in May 1793 in County Wexford into a Huguenot family.
His diaries are preserved in The British Library and he has been the subject
of two biographies by members of his family
(the earlier one by his son. In 1814 he was commissioned into the 1st
Royals and served in Holland, Canada and within the UK. He made his mark
in surveying in Holland, and following his departure from the Services he
produced a survey of Florida which was published in 1823, the year he returned
to England, leaving his financial affairs in America in a mess (he both owed,
and was owed, money).
He worked for the Rennie brothers and surveyed the L&MR where he came into dispute with George Stephenson. Nevertheless, this did not prevent him from becoming a M.I.C.E. in April 1827. He invented a device to enable trains to climb steep gradients and was involved in engineering the Midland Counties Railway, the Manchester, Ashton-under-Lyme and Sheffield Railway and many lines in the period of the railway mania. He did a considerable amount of work overseas including in Russia. He became the first Professor of Civil Engineering at University College, London in 1841 and was elected as an FRS in 1855. He made, or attempted to make, several observations of solar eclipses.
Short biography by Anthony Hall-Patch. Backtrack, 1995, 9, 445.
Von Donop, P[elham] G.
Lt. Col. in Royal Engineers who became an Inspecting Officer in 1899.
He conducted the accident enquiry into the Grantham derailment of 9 September
1906, became Inspector General of Railways and had played for the team which
won the Football Association Cup in 1875.
See Nock's Historic railway
disasters (portrait p. 287). Wikepedia gives first name from when
playing soccer.
Walker, James
Born Falkirk in 1781. Died London on 8 November 1862. Civil engineer:
work on docks and bridges. Built Hull & Selby and Leeds & Selby Railways.
Reported with Rastrick on traction for Liverpool & Manchester Railway:
See Captain Edgar Smith's observations
about James Walker: Trans. Newcomen Soc., .9, 92.
Marshall.
Smith, Denis. James Walker (1781-1862): Civil Engineer.
Trans. Newcomen Soc., 1997,
69, 23.
Wallace, William Kelly
Irishman from Ulster where he had been Chief Engineer of the Northern
Counties Committee, became Chief Stores Superintendent of the LMS from 1930
and eventually Chief Civil Engineer. See
Martin Stuart Smith LMS Journal, (13),
60.
Wallace, W.K. Modern British railway practice. Loco. Rly Carr.
Wagon Rev., 1927, 33, 369-72.
Abstract of an address presented to the Belfast Association of Engineers,
by the NCC's Chief Engineer. Most of the paper is concerned with British,
as distinct from Irish, development.
Warren, James
Born London 23 November 1802 and died London 23 April 1870. Inventor
and patentee of Warren truss bridge: see long
entry in Marshall.
Wild, Charles Heard
Horne introduces this Wild engineer several times: (Backtrack
Volume 9 page 509 and
Volume 11 page 51 and in
Volume 11 page 441) He was born in
about 1815 and was pupilled to John Braithwaite and died in 1857. It seems
likely that the design of the permanent way, and the gauge of 5' 6" in India,
was borrowed from the Dublin and Drogheda Railway by Charles Heard Wild,
who had been sent to Ireland to examine it; and Wild was occupied with the
design of Warren girders for the EIR in 1853 and for the Great Northern Railway
to cross the Trent via the Newark Dyke Bridge. This same Wild was credited
with the invention of the 'under-cut' railway switch.
Willet, Archibald William
Son of John: born in Aberdeen on 29 January 1858 and died in same
City on 11 October 1942. Educated Aberdeen Grammar School and Aberdeen and
Edinburgh Universities. Pupil under his father. Joined LNWR under
Francis Stevenson where innvolved in many
major works. Marshall
Willet, John
Born Aikenhead, Ayrshire on 6 February 1815.
Marshall notes that educated Ayr Academy
and School of Arts, Edinburgh. Apprenticed to James Thomson, a Glasgow civil
engineer. Then joined Andrew Thomson to work on railways many of which were
to become part of Caledonian Railway. In 1843 he joined Locke and Errington
to work on Grand Junction Railway. From 1849 he was resident engineer of
the Aberdeen Railway, then worked for Caledonian Raiway and then independently.
Father of Archibald William.