Shrewsbury being situated in
the immediate neighbourhood of the Black Country, of which coal and iron are
the principal products, Telford's attention was naturally directed, at a
very early period, to the employment of cast iron in bridge-building. The
strength as well as lightness of a bridge of this material, compared with
one of stone and lime, is of great moment where headway is ofimportance, or
the difficulties of defective foundations have to be encountered. The metal
can be moulded in such precise forms and so accurately fitted together as to
give to the arching the greatest possible rigidity; while it defies the
destructive influences of time and atmospheric corrosion with nearly as much
certainty as stone itself.
The Italians and French, who
took the lead in engineering down almost to the end of last century, early
detected the value of this material, and made several attempts to introduce
it in bridge-building; but their efforts proved unsuccessful, chiefly
because of the inability of the early founders to cast large masses of iron,
and also because the metal was then more expensive than either stone or
timber. The first actual attempt to build a cast iron bridge was made at
Lyons in 1755, and it proceeded so far that one of the arches was put
together in the builder's yard; but the project was abandoned as too costly,
and timber was eventually used.
It was reserved for English
manufacturers to triumph over the difficulties which had baffled the foreign
iron-founders. Shortly after the above ineffectual attempt had been made,
the construction of a bridge over the Severn near Broseley formed the
subject of discussion among the adjoining owners. There had been a great
increase in the coal, iron, brick, and pottery trades of the neighbourhood;
and the old ferry between the opposite banks of the river was found
altogether inadequate for the accommodation of the traffic. The necessity
for a bridge had long been felt, and the project of constructing one was
actively taken up in 1776 by Mr. Abraham Darby, the principal owner of the
extensive iron works at Coalbrookdale. Mr. Pritchard, a Shrewsbury
architect, prepared the design of a stone bridge of one arch, in which he
proposed to introduce a key-stone of cast iron, occupying only a few feet at
the crown of the arch. This plan was, however, given up as unsuitable; and
another, with the entire arch of cast iron, was designed under the
superintendence of Mr. Darby. The castings were made in the works at
Coalbrookdale, and the bridge was erected at a point where the banks were of
considerable height on both sides of the river. It was opened for traffic in
1779, and continues a most serviceable structure to this day, giving the
name to the town of Ironbridge, which has sprung up in its immediate
vicinity. The bridge consists of one semicircular arch, of 100 feet span,
each of the great ribs consisting of two pieces only. Mr. Robert Stephenson
has said of the structure--"If we consider that the manipulation of cast
iron was then completely in its infancy, a bridge of such dimensions was
doubtless a bold as well as an original undertaking, and the efficiency of
the details is worthy of the boldness of the conception."*[1]
The first Iron Bridge, Coalbrookdale.
It is a curious circumstance
that the next projector of an iron bridge--and that of a very bold
design--was the celebrated, or rather the notorious, Tom Paine, whose
political writings Telford had so much admired. The son of a decent Quaker
of Thetford, who trained him to his own trade of a staymaker, Paine seems
early to have contracted a dislike for the sect to which his father
belonged. Arrived at manhood, he gave up staymaking to embrace the wild life
of a privateersman, and served in two successive adventures. Leaving the
sea, he became an exciseman, but retained his commission for only a year.
Then he became an usher in a school, during which he studied mechanics and
mathematics. Again appointed an exciseman, he was stationed at Lewes in
Sussex, where he wrote poetry and acquired some local celebrity as a writer.
He was accordingly selected by his brother excisemen to prepare their
petition to Government for an increase of pay, *[2] -- the document which he
drew up procuring him introductions to Goldsmith and Franklin, and dismissal
from his post. Franklin persuaded him to go to America; and there the
quondam staymaker, privateersman, usher, poet, an a exciseman, took an
active part in the revolutionary discussions of the time, besides holding
the important office of Secretary to the Committee for Foreign Affairs.
Paine afterwards settled for a time at Philadelphia, where he occupied
himself with the study of mechanical philosophy, electricity, mineralogy,
and the use of iron in bridge-building. In 1787, when a bridge over the
Schnylkill was proposed, without any river piers, as the stream was apt to
be choked with ice in the spring freshets, Paine boldly offered to build an
iron bridge with a single arch of 400 feet span. In the course of the same
year, he submitted his design of the proposed bridge to the Academy of
Sciences at Paris; he also sent a copy of his plan to Sir Joseph Banks for
submission to the Royal Society; and, encouraged by the favourable opinions
of scientific men, he proceeded to Rotherham, in Yorkshire, to have his
bridge cast.*[3] An American gentleman, named Whiteside, having advanced
money to Paine on security of his property in the States, to enable the
bridge to be completed, the castings were duly made, and shipped off to
London, where they were put together and exhibited to the public on a
bowling-green at Paddington. The bridge was there visited by a large number
of persons, and was considered to be a highly creditable work. Suddenly
Paine's attention was withdrawn from its further prosecution by the
publication of Mr. Burke's celebrated 'Thoughts on the French Revolution,'
which he undertook to answer. Whiteside having in the meantime become
bankrupt, Paine was arrested by his assignees, but was liberated by the
assistance of two other Americans, who became bound for him. Paine, however,
was by this time carried away by the fervour of the French Revolution,
having become a member of the National Convention, as representative for
Calais. The "Friends of Man," whose cause he had espoused, treated him
scurvily, imprisoning him in the Luxembourg, where he lay for eleven months.
Escaped to America, we find him in 1803 presenting to the American Congress
a memoir on the construction of Iron Bridges, accompanied by several models.
It does not appear, however, that Paine ever succeeded in erecting an iron
bridge. He was a restless, speculative, unhappy being; and it would have
been well for his memory if, instead of penning shallow infidelity, he had
devoted himself to his original idea of improving the communications of his
adopted country. In the meantime, however, the bridge exhibited at
Paddington had produced important results. The manufacturers agreed to take
it back as part of their debt, and the materials were afterwards used in the
construction of the noble bridge over the Wear at Sunderland, which was
erected in 1796.
The project of constructing a
bridge at this place, where the rocky banks of the Wear rise to a great
height oh both sides of the river, is due to Rowland Burdon, Esq., of Castle
Eden, under whom Mr. T. Wilson served as engineer in carrying out his
design. The details differed in several important respects from the proposed
bridge of Paine, Mr. Burdon introducing several new and original features,
more particularly as regarded the framed iron panels radiating towards the
centre in the form of voussoirs, for the purpose of resisting compression.
Mr. Phipps, C.E., in a report prepared by him at the instance of the late
Robert Stephenson, under whose superintendence the bridge was recently
repaired, observes, with respect to the original design,--"We should
probably make a fair division of the honour connected with this unique
bridge, by conceding to Burdon all that belongs to a careful elaboration and
improvement upon the designs of another, to the boldness of taking upon
himself the great responsibility of applying. this idea at once on so
magnificent a scale, and to his liberality and public spirit in furnishing
the requisite funds [to the amount of 22,000L.]; but we must not deny to
Paine the credit of conceiving the construction of iron bridges of far
larger span than had been made before his time, or of the important examples
both as models and large constructions which he caused to be made and
publicly exhibited. In whatever shares the merit of this great work may be
apportioned, it must be admitted to be one of the earliest and greatest
triumphs of the art of bridge construction." Its span exceeded that of any
arch then known, being 236 feet, with a rise of 34 feet, the springing
commencing at 95 feet above the bed of the river; and its height was such as
to allow vessels of 300 tons burden to sail underneath without striking
their masts. Mr. Stephenson characterised the bridge as "a structure which,
as regards its proportions and the small quantity of material employed in
its construction, will probably remain unrivalled."
Wear Bridge, at Sunderland.
The same year in which
Burdon's Bridge was erected at Sunderland, Telford was building his first
iron bridge over the Severn at Buildwas, at a point about midway between
Shrewsbury and Bridgenorth. An unusually high flood having swept away the
old bridge in the Year 1795, he was called upon, as surveyor for the county,
to supply the plan of a new one. Having carefully examined the bridge at
Coalbrookdale, and appreciated its remarkable merits, he determined to build
the proposed bridge at Buildwas of iron; and as the waters came down with
great suddenness from the Welsh mountains, he further resolved to construct
it of only one arch, so as to afford the largest possible water-way.
He had some difficulty in
inducing the Coalbrookdale iron-masters, who undertook the casting of the
girders, to depart from the plan of the earlier structure; but he persisted
in his design, which was eventually carried out. It consisted of a single
arch of 130 feet span, the segment of a very large circle, calculated to
resist the tendency of the abutments to slide inwards, which had been a
defect of the Coalbrookdale bridge; the flat arch being itself sustained and
strengthened by an outer ribbed one on each side, springing lower than the
former and also rising higher, somewhat after the manner of timber-trussing.
Although the span of the new bridge was 30 feet wider than the Coalbrookdale
bridge, it contained less than half the quantity of iron; Buildwas bridge
containing 173, whereas the other contained 378 tons. The new structure was,
besides, extremely elegant in form; and when the centres were struck, the
arch and abutments stood perfectly firm, and have remained so to this day.
But the ingenious design of this bridge will be better explained by the
following representation than by any description in words.*[4] The bridge at
Buildwas, however, was not Telford's first employment of iron in
bridge-building; for, the year before its erection, we find him writing to
his friend at Langholm that he had recommended an iron aqueduct for the
Shrewsbury Canal, "on a principle entirely new," and which he was "endeavouring
to establish with regard to the application of iron."*[5] This iron aqueduct
had been cast and fixed; and it was found to effect so great a saving in
masonry and earthwork, that he was afterwards induced to apply the same
principle, as we have already seen, in different forms, in the magnificent
aqueducts of Chirk and Pont-Cysylltau.
The uses of cast iron in
canal construction became more obvious with every year's successive
experience; and Telford was accustomed to introduce it in many cases where
formerly only timber or stone had been used. On the Ellesmere, and
afterwards on the Caledonial Canal, he adopted cast iron lock-gates, which
were found to answer well, being more durable than timber, and not liable
like it to shrink and expand with alternate dryness and wet. The turnbridges
which he applied to his canals, in place of the old drawbridges, were also
of cast iron; and in some cases even the locks were of the same material.
Thus, on a part of the Ellesmere Canal opposite Beeston Castle, in Cheshire,
where a couple of locks, together rising 17 feet, having been built on a
stratum of quicksand, were repeatedly undermined, the idea of constructing
the entire locks of cast iron was suggested; and this unusual application of
the new material was accomplished with entirely satisfactory results.
But Telford's principal
employment of cast iron was in the construction of road bridges, in which he
proved himself a master. His experience in these structures had become very
extensive. During the time that he held the office of surveyor to the county
of Salop, he erected no fewer than forty-two, five of which were of iron.
Indeed, his success in iron bridge-building so much emboldened him, that in
1801, when Old London Bridge had become so rickety and inconvenient that it
was found necessary to take steps to rebuild or remove it, he proposed the
daring plan of a cast iron bridge of a single arch of not less than 600 feet
span, the segment of a circle l450 feet in diameter. In preparing this
design we find that he was associated with a Mr. Douglas, to whom many
allusions are made in his private letters.*[6] The design of this bridge
seems to have arisen out of a larger project for the improvement of the port
of London. In a private letter of Telford's, dated the 13th May, 1800, he
says:
"I have twice attended the
Select Committee on the Fort of London, Lord Hawkesbury, Chairman. The
subject has now been agitated for four years, and might have been so for
many more, if Mr. Pitt had not taken the business out of the hands of the
General Committee, and got it referred to a Select Committee. Last year they
recommended that a system of docks should be formed in a large bend of the
river opposite Greenwich, called the Isle of Dogs, with a canal across the
neck of the bend. This part of the contemplated improvements is already
commenced, and is proceeding as rapidly as the nature of the work will
admit. It will contain ship docks for large vessels, such as East and West
Indiamen, whose draught of water is considerable.
"There are now two other
propositions under consideration. One is to form another system of docks at
Wapping, and the other to take down London Bridge, rebuild it of such
dimensions as to admit of ships of 200 tons passing under it, and form a new
pool for ships of such burden between London and Blackfriars Bridges, with a
set of regular wharves on each side of the river. This is with the view of
saving lighterage and plunderage, and bringing the great mass of commerce so
much nearer to the heart of the City. This last part of the plan has been
taken up in a great measure from some statements I made while in London last
year, and I have been called before the Committee to explain. I had
previously prepared a set of plans and estimates for the purpose of showing
how the idea might be carried out; and thus a considerable degree of
interest has been excited on the subject. It is as yet, however, very
uncertain how far the plans will be carried out. It is certainly a matter of
great national importance to render the Port of London as perfect as
possible."*[7]
Later in the same year he
writes that his plans and propositions have been approved and recommended to
be carried out, and he expects to have the execution of them. "If they will
provide the ways and means," says he, "and give me elbow-room, I see my way
as plainly as mending the brig at the auld burn." In November, 1801, he
states that his view of London Bridge, as proposed by him, has been
published, and much admired. On the l4th of April, 1802, he writes, "I have
got into mighty favour with the Royal folks. I have received notes written
by order of the King, the Prince of Wales, Duke of York, and Duke of Kent,
about the bridge print, and in future it is to be dedicated to the King."
The bridge in question was
one of the boldest of Telford's designs. He proposed by his one arch to
provide a clear headway of 65 feet above high water. The arch was to consist
of seven cast iron ribs, in segments as large as possible, and they were to
be connected by diagonal cross-bracing, disposed in such a manner that any
part of the ribs and braces could be taken out and replaced without injury
to the stability of the bridge or interruption to the traffic over it. The
roadway was to be 90 feet wide at the abutments and 45 feet in the centre;
the width of the arch being gradually contracted towards the crown in order
to lighten the weight of the structure. The bridge was to contain 6500 tons
of iron, and the cost of the whole was to be 262,289L.
Telford's proposed One-arched Bridge over the Thames.
The originality of the design
was greatly admired, though there were many who received with incredulity
the proposal to bridge the Thames by a single arch, and it was sarcastically
said of Telford that he might as well think of "setting the Thames on fire."
Before any outlay was incurred in building the bridge, the design was
submitted to the consideration of the most eminent scientific and practical
men of the day; after which evidence was taken at great length before a
Select Committee which sat on the subject. Among those examined on the
occasion were the venerable James Watt of Birmingham, Mr. John Rennie,
Professor Button of Woolwich, Professors Playfair and Robison of Edinburgh,
Mr. Jessop, Mr.Southern, and Dr. Maskelyne. Their evidence will still be
found interesting as indicating the state at which constructive science had
at that time arrived in England.*[8] There was a considerable diversity of
opinion among the witnesses, as might have been expected; for experience was
as yet very limited as to the resistance of cast iron to extension and
compression. Some of them anticipated immense difficulty in casting pieces
of metal of the necessary size and exactness, so as to secure that the
radiated joints should be all straight and bearing. Others laid down certain
ingenious theories of the arch, which did not quite square with the plan
proposed by the engineer. But, as was candidly observed by Professor
Playfair in concluding his report--"It is not from theoretical men that the
most valuable information in such a case as the present is to be expected.
When a mechanical arrangement becomes in a certain degree complicated, it
baffles the efforts of the geometer, and refuses to submit to even the most
approved methods of investigation. This holds good particularly of bridges,
where the principles of mechanics, aided by all the resources of the higher
geometry, have not yet gone further than to determine the equilibrium of a
set of smooth wedges acting on one another by pressure only, and in such
circumstances as, except in a philosophical experiment, can hardly ever be
realised. It is, therefore, from men educated in the school of daily
practice and experience, and who to a knowledge of general principles have
added, from the habits of their profession, a certain feeling of the
justness or insufficiency of any mechanical contrivance, that the soundest
opinions on a matter of this kind can be obtained."
It would appear that the
Committee came to the general conclusion that the construction of the
proposed bridge was practicable and safe; for the river was contracted to
the requisite width, and the preliminary works were actually begun. Mr.
Stephenson says the design was eventually abandoned, owing more immediately
to the difficulty of constructing the approaches with such a head way, which
would have involved the formation of extensive inclined planes from the
adjoining streets, and thereby led to serious inconvenience, and the
depreciation of much valuable property on both sides of the river.*[9]
Telford's noble design of his great iron bridge over the Thames, together
with his proposed embankment of the river, being thus definitely abandoned,
he fell back upon his ordinary business as an architect and engineer, in the
course of which he designed and erected several stone bridges of
considerable magnitude and importance.
In the spring of 1795, after
a long continued fall of snow, a sudden thaw raised a heavy flood in the
Severn, which carried away many bridges--amongst others one at Bewdley, in
Worcestershire,-- when Telford was called upon to supply a design for a new
structure. At the same time, he was required to furnish a plan for a new
bridge near the town of Bridgenorth; "in short," he wrote to his friend, "I
have been at it night and day." So uniform a success had heretofore attended
the execution of his designs, that his reputation as a bridge-builder was
universally acknowledged. "Last week," he says, "Davidson and I struck the
centre of an arch of 76 feet span, and this is the third which has been
thrown this summer, none of which have shrunk a quarter of an inch."
Bewdley Bridge is a handsome
and substantial piece of masonry. The streets on either side of it being on
low ground, land arches were provided at both ends for the passage of the
flood waters; and as the Severn was navigable at the point crossed, it was
considered necessary to allow considerably greater width in the river arches
than had been the case in the former structure. The arches were three in
number--one of 60 feet span and two of 52 feet, the land arches being of 9
feet span. The works were proceeded with and the bridge was completed during
the summer of 1798, Telford writing to his friend in December of that year--
"We have had a remarkably dry summer and autumn; after that an early fall of
snow and some frost, followed by rain. The drought of the summer was
unfavourable to our canal working; but it has enabled us to raise Bewdley
Bridge as if by enchantment. We have thus built a magnificent bridge over
the Severn in one season, which is no contemptible work for John
Simpson*[10] and your humble servant, amidst so many other great
undertakings. John Simpson is a treasure--a man of great talents and
integrity. I met with him here by chance, employed and recommended him, and
he has now under his charge all the works of any magnitude in this great and
rich district."
Bewdley Bridge.
Another of our engineer's
early stone bridges, which may be mentioned in this place, was erected by
him in 1805, over the river Dee at Tongueland in the county of
Kirkcudbright. It is a bold and picturesque bridge, situated in a lovely
locality. The river is very deep at high water there, the tide rising 20
feet. As the banks were steep and rocky, the engineer determined to bridge
the stream by a single arch of 112 feet span. The rise being considerable,
high wingwalls and deep spandrels were requisite; but the weight of the
structure was much lightened by the expedient which he adopted of
perforating the wings, and building a number of longitudinal walls in the
spandrels, instead of filling them with earth or inferior masonry, as had
until then been the ordinary practice. The ends of these walls, connected
and steadied by the insertion of tee-stones, were built so as to abut
against the back of the arch-stones and the cross walls of each abutment.
Thus great strength as well as lightness was secured, and a very graceful
and at the same time substantial bridge was provided for the accommodation
of the district.*[11]
Tongueland Bridge.
In his letters written about
this time, Telford seems to have been very full of employment, which
required him to travel about a great deal. "I have become," said he, "a very
wandering being, and am scarcely ever two days in one place, unless detained
by business, which, however, occupies my time very completely." At another
time he says, "I am tossed about like a tennis ball: the other day I was in
London, since that I have been in Liverpool, and in a few days I expect to
be at Bristol. Such is my life; and to tell you the truth, I think it suits
my disposition."
Another work on which Telford
was engaged at this time was a project for supplying the town of Liverpool
with water conveyed through pipes in the same manner as had long before been
adopted in London. He was much struck by the activity and enterprise
apparent in Liverpool compared with Bristol. "Liverpool," he said, "has
taken firm root in the country by means of the canals" it is young,
vigorous, and well situated. Bristol is sinking in commercial importance:
its merchants are rich and indolent, and in their projects they are always
too late. Besides, the place is badly situated. There will probably arise
another port there somewhat nearer the Severn; but Liverpool will
nevertheless continue of the first commercial importance, and their water
will be turned into wine. We are making rapid progress in this country-- I
mean from Liverpool to Bristol, and from Wales to Birmingham. This is an
extensive and rich district, abounding in coal, lime, iron, and lead.
Agriculture too is improving, and manufactures are advancing at rapid
strides towards perfection. Think of such a mass of population, industrious,
intelligent, and energetic, in continual exertion! In short, I do not
believe that any part of the world, of like dimensions, ever exceeded Great
Britain, as it now is, in regard to the production of wealth and the
practice of the useful arts."*[12] Amidst all this progress, which so
strikingly characterized the western districts of England, Telford also
thought that there was a prospect of coming improvement for Ireland. "There
is a board of five members appointed by Parliament, to act as a board of
control over all the inland navigations, &c., of Ireland. One of the members
is a particular friend of mine, and at this moment a pupil, as it were,
anxious for information. This is a noble object: the field is wide, the
ground new and capable of vast improvement. To take up and manage the water
of a fine island is like a fairy tale, and, if properly conducted, it would
render Ireland truly a jewel among the nations."*[13] It does not, however,
appear that Telford was ever employed by the board to carry out the grand
scheme which thus fired his engineering imagination.
Mixing freely with men of all
classes, our engineer seems to have made many new friends and acquaintances
about this time. While on his journeys north and south, he frequently took
the opportunity of looking in upon the venerable James Watt--"a great and
good man," he terms him--at his house at Heathfield, near Birmingham. At
London he says he is "often with old Brodie and Black, each the first in his
profession, though they walked up together to the great city on foot,*[14]
more than half a century ago--Gloria!" About the same time we find him
taking interest in the projects of a deserving person, named Holwell, a
coal-master in Staffordshire, and assisting him to take out a patent for
boring wooden pipes; "he being a person," says Telford, "little known, and
not having capital, interest, or connections, to bring the matter forward."
Telford also kept up his
literary friendships and preserved his love for poetical reading. At
Shrewsbury, one of his most intimate friends was Dr. Darwin, son of the
author of the 'Botanic Garden.' At Liverpool, he made the acquaintance of
Dr. Currie, and was favoured with a sight of his manuscript of the ' Life of
Burns,' then in course of publication. Curiously enough, Dr. Currie had
found among Burns's papers a copy of some verses, addressed to the poet,
which Telford recognised as his own, written many years before while working
as a mason at Langholm. Their purport was to urge Burns to devote himself to
the composition of poems of a serious character, such as the 'Cotter's
Saturday Night.' With Telford's permission, several extracts from his
Address to Burns were published in 1800 in Currie's Life of the poet.
Another of his literary friendships, formed about the same time, was that
with Thomas Campbell, then a very young man, whose 'Pleasures of Hope' had
just made its appearance. Telford, in one of his letters, says, "I will not
leave a stone unturned to try to serve the author of that charming poem. In
a subsequent communication*[15] he says, "The author of the 'Pleasures of
Hope' has been here for some time. I am quite delighted with him. He is the
very spirit of poetry. On Monday I introduced him to the King's librarian,
and I imagine some good may result to him from the introduction."
In the midst of his plans of
docks, canals, and bridges, he wrote letters to his friends about the
peculiarities of Goethe's poems and Kotzebue's plays, Roman antiquities,
Buonaparte's campaign in Egypt, and the merits of the last new book. He
confessed, however, that his leisure for reading was rapidly diminishing in
consequence of the increasing professional demands upon his time; but he
bought the 'Encyclopedia Britannica,' which he described as "a perfect
treasure, containing everything, and always at hand." He thus rapidly
described the manner in which his time was engrossed. "A few days since, I
attended a general assembly of the canal proprietors in Shropshire. I have
to be at Chester again in a week, upon an arbitration business respecting
the rebuilding of the county hall and gaol; but previous to that I must
visit Liverpool, and afterwards proceed into Worcestershire. So you see what
sort of a life I have of it. It is something like Buonaparte, when in Italy,
fighting battles at fifty or a hundred miles distance every other day.
However, plenty of employment is what every professional man is seeking
after, and my various occupations now require of me great exertions, which
they certainly shall have so long as life and health are spared to me."*[16]
Amidst all his engagements, Telford found time to make particular inquiry
about many poor families formerly known to him in Eskdale, for some of whom
he paid house-rent, while he transmitted the means of supplying others with
coals, meal, and necessaries, during the severe winter months,--a practice
which he continued to the close of his life.
Footnotes for Chapter VII.
*[1] 'Encyclopedia
Britannica,' 8th ed. Art. "Iron Bridges."
*[2] According to the statement made in the petition drawn by Paine, excise
officers were then (1772) paid only 1s. 9 1/4d. a day.
*[3] In England, Paine took
out a patent for his Iron Bridge in 1788. Specification of Patents (old law)
No. 1667.
*[4] Buildwas Bridge.
The following are further
details: "Each of the main ribs of the flat arch consists of three pieces,
and at each junction they are secured by a grated plate, which connects all
the parallel ribs together into one frame. The back of each abutment is in a
wedge-shape, so as to throw off laterally much of the pressure of the earth.
Under the bridge is a towing path on each side of the river. The bridge was
cast in an admirable manner by the Coalbrookdale iron-masters in the year
1796, under contract with the county magistrates. The total cost was 6034L.
l3s. 3d."
*[5] Letter to Mr. Andrew
Little, Langholm, dated Shrewsbury, l8th March, 1795.
*[6] Douglas was first
mentioned to Telford, in a letter from Mr. Pasley, as a young man, a native
of Bigholmes, Eskdale, who had, after serving his time there as a mechanic,
emigrated to America, where he showed such proofs of mechanical genius that
he attracted the notice of Mr. Liston, the British Minister, who paid his
expenses home to England, that his services might not be lost to his
country, and at the same time gave him a letter of introduction to the
Society of Arts in London. Telford, in a letter to Andrew Little, dated 4th
December, 1797, expressed a desire "to know more of this Eskdale
Archimedes." Shortly after, we find Douglas mentioned as having invented a
brick machine, a shearing-machine, and a ball for destroying the rigging of
ships; for the two former of which he secured patents. He afterwards settled
in France, where he introduced machinery for the improved manufacture of
woollen cloth; and being patronised by the Government, he succeeded in
realising considerable wealth, which, how ever, he did not live to enjoy.
*[7] Letter to Mr. Andrew
Little, Langholm, dated London, l3th May, 1800.
*[8] The evidence is fairly
set forth in 'Cresy's Encyclopedia of Civil Engineering,' p. 475.
*[9] Article on Iron Bridges,
in the 'Encyclopedia Britannica,' Edinburgh, 1857.
*[10] His foreman of masons
at Bewdley Bridge, and afterwards his assistant in numerous important works.
*[11] The work is thus
described in Robert Chambers's ' Picture of Scotland':--"Opposite Compston
there is a magnificent new bridge over the Dee. It consists of a single web,
the span of which is 112 feet; and it is built of vast blocks of freestone
brought from the isle of Arran. The cost of this work was somewhere about
7000L. sterling; and it may be mentioned, to the honour of the Stewartry,
that this sum was raised by the private contributions of the gentlemen of
the district. From Tongueland Hill, in the immediate vicinity of the bridge,
there is a view well worthy of a painter's eye, and which is not inferior in
beauty and magnificence to any in Scotland."
*[12] Letter to Mr. Andrew
Little, Langholm, dated Salop, 13th July, 1799.
*[13] Letter to Mr. Andrew
Little, Langholm, dated Liverpool, 9th September, 1800.
*[14] Brodie was originally a
blacksmith. He was a man of much ingenuity and industry, and introduced many
improvements in iron work; he invented stoves for chimneys, ships' hearths,
&c. He had above a hundred men working in his London shop, besides carrying
on an iron work at Coalbrookdale. He afterwards established a woollen
manufactory near Peebles.
*[15] Dated London, l4th
April, 1802.
*[16] Letter to Mr. Andrew
Little, Langholm, dated Salop, 30th November, 1799. |