WHEN the great tobacco trade with
Virginia and the sugar trade with the West Indies were at the apex
of their fortunes one of the most serious difficulties which the
merchants of Glasgow had to contend with lay in the inadequate means
of communication and transport. General Wade had shewn the way
towards improvement by the making of his military roads throughout
the country in the middle of the century. It was the making of one
of these, the road along Loch Lomond side, which General Wolfe
superintended from the Garrison at Inversnaid, between the time when
he commanded the garrison in Glasgow, and the expedition for the
conquest of Canada in which he fell. We have seen how, shortly
afterwards, a sort of fever of road-making and bridge-building
seized the Town Council, which plunged heavily into debt over the
enterprise. A dozen years later came Golborne's practicable scheme
for the deepening of the Clyde, and it was followed immediately by
proposals for other waterways connected with the city. In the
projecting of these enterprises the genius of the celebrated James
Watt played a part which seems in danger of being forgotten. Watt's
early and important work as a civil engineer has been overshadowed
by his later achievements in the improvement and development of the
steam engine. The inventor's
family came originally from Aberdeenshire. His
great-great-grandfather, a small laird farming his own land, was
killed fighting on the Covenanting side against the Marquess of
Montrose. His grandfather, Thomas Watt, migrating south, became a
teacher of mathematics, surveying, and navigation at Crawfordsdyke,
now part of Greenock; and his uncle, John Watt, a successful
engineer and land-surveyor at Ayr, was extensively employed, as we
have seen, by the Town Council of Glasgow in making plans and
surveys of the city and district. Watt's father was a ship's
block-maker and general merchant at Greenock, where for some time he
held the office of magistrate. His business, however, offered small
prospects, and in 1754 he sent his son, then aged eighteen, to
London, to learn the craft of mathematical instrument making.
Forced by ill-health to return to
Scotland, James Watt proposed to set up business in Glasgow. Against
this intention, however, stood the obstacle that he was not a
freeman of any Craft. In this difficulty the young mechanic found a
friend in Professor John Anderson, occupant of the Chair of Natural
Philosophy in Glasgow University. Anderson's father had been
minister of Rosneath, and his younger brother had been one of Watt's
school companions at Greenock. [Coutts, Hist. Univ. Glasg. p. 264.]
George Muirhead, also, Professor of Latin in the University, was a
relation of Watt's mother. At the psychological moment a fortunate
chance occurred. In January, 1756, Alexander Macfarlane, a merchant
in Jamaica, and brother of the Chief of the clan, bequeathed to
Glasgow University the instruments of an astronomical observatory
which he had fitted up in that far-off island. On being brought home
these instruments were found to have suffered from tropical heat and
damp. Watt, who was in Glasgow at the time, was asked to clean them
and put them in order. For his trouble he was paid £5. [Memorials of
James Watt. George Williamson, in these Memorials, originates a
statement that Watt was prevented from setting up business in the
city by the Incorporation of Hammermen. The growth and
groundlessness of this idea were dealt with in a scholarly article
in The Glasgow Herald of 26th Dec. 1811, included in the History of
the Hammermen, by Lumsden and Aitken, p. 394.] But more important
still, the young mechanic was appointed instrument-maker to the
University, and had a workshop fitted up for him in the college,
which was outside the jurisdiction of the Trades House and the Town
Council. Thus sheltered, for six years, from 1757 till 1763, he
struggled to make a scanty living.
.Meanwhile Anderson's house and
library, his conversation and scientific apparatus, played their
part in ripening Watt's mechanical genius. As early as 1759 he had
speculated with a college friend, Robison, afterwards of the Chair
of Natural Philosophy at Edinburgh, on steam as a motive power, and
two years later he had experimented with a Papin's Digester, but the
flash of inspiration came in the winter of 1763, when Anderson sent
him for repair the model of the Newcomen engine used in the Natural
Philosophy class. That engine was chiefly used for pumping water
from mines. [Newcomen's engine, an invention of the year 1710,
immensely helped to develop the industry of coal-mining, as it
enabled water to be pumped from much greater depths.—Mackinnon, Soc.
and Indus. Hist. p. 79. One of these engines was installed at the
coal pits in Gorbals in 1762. Burgh Records, 10th June, 1762.] In it
steam was merely used to inflate a cylinder and drive up a piston
attached to a beam from the other end of which hung the plunger of a
pump. The steam in the cylinder was cooled by a jet of water, and,
as it condensed, the piston sank and dragged down its end of the
beam, thus drawing up the plunger of the pump at the other end.
Watt's first improvement was the provision of a separate chamber for
condensing the steam, thus saving the waste entailed in cooling the
main cylinder against the next injection of steam. He afterwards,
however, proceeded to use steam for pushing the piston both up and
down, and may thus justly be said to be the inventor of the real
steam engine.
A partnership with Dr. Roebuck,
founder of the Carron Ironworks, came to nothing, and it was not
till 1773 that, in partnership with Matthew Boulton of Soho near
Birmingham, Watt was able to build engines for practical purposes,
and proceed with the invention of further improvements.
But, though the steam engine was
afterwards to play a vital part in developing the industries and
fortunes of Glasgow, Watt's other services to the city were of more
immediate advantage. In 1763, possibly because he had married the
daughter of a burgess, he was allowed to leave the College
precincts, and set up a workshop in the town. Even there for a time
he had to eke out a livelihood by various devices. Though without
any ear whatever for music, he both made and mended fiddles ; and he
actually constructed several organs, one of which, after a somewhat
chequered history, is now preserved in the city's Art Galleries at
Kelvingrove. [The full history of James Watt's organ is detailed in
J. O. Mitchell's Old Glasgow Essays, p. 50.] It was not till 1767
that his abilities found a new and larger field in the service of
the community.
As early as the reign of Charles II.
the suggestion had been made of a canal to afford transport across
the narrow neck of Scotland, between the Forth and the Clyde. Defoe,
again, in his Tour to Scotland, wrote "If this city could have a
communication with the firth of Forth, so as to send their tobacco
and sugar by water to Alloway, below Stirling, as they might from
thence again to London, Holland, Hamburg, and the Baltic, they would
very probably, in a few years, double their trade." The suggestion
had been revived in 1723 and in 1761, and the Board of Trustees for
Fisheries and Manufactures had the route for a canal surveyed by
John Smeaton in 1763 without result. The advantages, nevertheless,
were so obvious that in 1766 the merchants of Glasgow determined to
proceed with the enterprise. In two days the sum of 30,00o was
subscribed for the purpose, and James Watt was employed to make
surveys and prepare an estimate of the cost of the undertaking. The
Town Council subscribed £1000, and the original idea was that the
canal should enter the Clyde near the Broomielaw. [Burgh Records,
15th Jan., 1st April, 1767.]
Having in view, no doubt, the
limited-sum at the disposal of the promoters, Watt planned a
waterway only four feet deep and twenty-four feet broad. The plan
was opposed by land owners and others on the eastern side of the
country, led by Sir Lawrence Dundas, M.P., who, perhaps, did not
wish to see the waterway controlled entirely by Glasgow merchants;
and Parliament threw out the bill on the plea that the capital
subscribed and the scheme proposed were inadequate. In the following
year, Sir Lawrence Dundas secured an Act of Parliament for the
forming of a company with a capital of £150,000 and liberty to
borrow £50,000. This project in turn was heartily supported by
Glasgow Town Council, which transferred to it its subscription of
£1000, and sent the Lord Provost, George Murdoch, to London to
support the proposal in Parliament. [Ibid. 3oth Nov., 1767; 23rd
Jan., 1768. Marwick, The River Clyde, p. 179.] The Act of Parliament
was secured, the engineer Smeaton was engaged to superintend the
work, and the first sod was cut by Sir Lawrence himself in July
1768. [Sir Lawrence, preceding Richard Oswald of Auchencruive, had
made an immense fortune as provider of stores for the fighting
forces of the time; he had purchased the rich estate of Kerse, which
included the village of Grangemouth, and the Forth and Clyde Canal
formed part of his plan for developing his estate. The plan took two
generations to arrive at fruition, but out of it grew the thriving
town of Grangemouth, and no small part of the fortunes of the family
whose head is now Marquess of Zetland.] The canal was opened as far
west as Stockingfield in 1775, and the branch to Hamilton Hill and
Port Dundas, half a mile north of Glasgow, shortly afterwards; but
it was not completed to Bowling till July 1790.
Meanwhile Watt had found employment
on another similar enterprise. With the increase of population,
Glasgow had begun to find the sources of its coal supply somewhat
inadequate. It was suggested in 1769 that the rich coalfields of
Monkland, which had been mined by the monks of Tranent as long ago
as the thirteenth century, might be made available by means of a
waterway. The Town Council subscribed £goo to the undertaking on
condition that the owners of coal along the line of the canal should
become bound to put out 30,000 tons of coal per annum for thirty
years, a stipulation afterwards modified to the demand that the
coal-owners should subscribe £5000 sterling to the work. [Burgh
Records, 8th Nov., 1769; 2nd Jan., 18th Jan., 1770; 2nd March,
1770.] James Watt was employed to make a survey, an Act of
Parliament was secured, and the excavation was begun. But when ten
miles of channel had been constructed the whole subscribed capital
of £10,000 had been spent, with as much again of borrowed money. On
the shareholders refusing to subscribe more, the Town Council
resolved to sell its share, [Ibid. 7th June, 28th June, 1780.] and
the whole undertaking was disposed of to Messrs. William Stirling &
Sons, the great firm of Turkey Red dyers and bleachers. The new
owners are understood to have expended £100,000 in completing the
work, and, with the proprietors of the Forth and Clyde Canal, they
made a connection with that waterway at Port Dundas. [Stirling Road
in the Townhead of Glasgow, is not the road to Stirling, but the
road made by William Stirling & Sons, to give access to the basin of
their canal in Castle Street. Similarly, when, in 1812, a new road
northward from Queen Street was formed to give access to the basin
of the Forth and Clyde Canal at Port Dundas, the Town Council named
it Dundas Street.—Burgh Records, 8th Jan. 1812.] Besides its mineral
traffic, the canal carried large numbers of passengers. It began to
pay a dividend in 1807, and after 1825, when the great ironworks at
Calder, Gartsherrie, Dundyvan, and Langloan were established along
its route, it proved highly remunerative, and greatly helped the
development of Glasgow's industry. About the time when the Monkland
Canal was projected—in 1769—Watt was asked by the Town Council, on
Golborne's suggestion, to supplement that engineer's report, made in
the previous year, on the condition of the channel of the Clyde, and
it was after his supplementary survey and report that Glasgow
procured its second Act of Parliament on the subject, and proceeded
to carry out Golborne's plans for the clearing and deepening of the
river. [George III. c. 109.. Marwick, The River Clyde, p. 180.]
An engineering work of a similar kind
was the graving dock at Port-Glasgow, constructed under Watt's
direction in 1761. It is said to have been the first graving dock in
Scotland. It could contain at one time two vessels of 500 tons
burden each, and was kept dry by means of a pump worked by a horse.
[Marwick, The River Clyde, pp. 108, 178. Brown's History of Glasgow,
II., 348. Burgh Records, 27th April, 29th Sept., 1758; 5th Oct.,
1761; 30th Sept., 1768.] Ten years later Watt was employed to make a
report on the needs of the harbour at Port-Glasgow, and his plans
for cleaning, improving, and enlarging it, as well as repairing, and
improving the dry dock, were duly carried out by the Town Council.
[Burgh Records, 10th Aug., 1771.]
Further afield, in 1773, he was asked
to prepare plans for a canal through the Great Glen of Scotland, to
connect Inverness with the western ocean at Loch Linnhe, but his
estimate of the cost—~165,000—so alarmed the promoters that the
project was dropped for thirty years. [For his services and expenses
in surveying this canal through the Great Glen of Scotland Watt's
fee was £1 17s. per day.—Strang, Glasgow and its Clubs, p. 106
note.] When the Caledonian Canal was at last constructed, under
Telford's direction, the estimate was £474,531, and the actual cost
ran to £1,311,270.
Among his other works Watt was asked
to report on the comparative advantages of Tarbert and Crinan for
the cutting of a canal to connect the Firth of Clyde with the
Atlantic, [Burgh Records, 1st March, 1771. Twenty-one years later,
on a subscription paper issued by the Duke of Argyll, the Town
Council agreed to take four shares of £50 each in the Crinan Canal
enterprise.—Ibid. 22nd Nov. 1792.] and he made surveys for the
improvement of the harbours of Ayr and Greenock.
All of these enterprises were not
immediately connected with the development of Glasgow, but
remarkably enough, in the course of time, most of them, even the
far-off Caledonian Canal, came to be contributory to the fortunes of
this "dark, sea-born city." Among the inventor's later services to
the city were the introduction, in 1786, of the French chemist
Berthollet's recent discovery of chlorine gas for bleaching
purposes, and the invention of a cable pipe on the ball and socket
principle, by which the Glasgow Water Company brought a supply
across the bed of the river from a valuable well on the south side.
James Watt retired from active
partnership in his engine-making business at Soho in the year 1800,
received the degree of LL.D. from the University of Glasgow six
years later, and died at Heathfield in Staffordshire in 1819. [
Williamson, Memorials of James Watt. Muirhead, Life of Watt. Smiles,
Lives of Boulton and Watt.] His statue by Chantrey, a seated figure
in marble, is one of the interesting possessions of Glasgow
University, while a reproduction of it, in bronze, sits in George
Square. [Glasgow has at least five Watt statues. The first, by
Greenshields, was executed in freestone for the Mechanics'
Institute, and is now in the Technical College, which also has a
smaller replica of it. There is also a small statue by William
Scoular in the Art Galleries at Kelvingrove.] |