FURLOUGH : ENGINEER TRAVELS—SUKKUR BRIDGE—THE CANTILEVER
SYSTEM—LORD NORTHBROOK’S RULE— RUSSIAN ADVANCE—SUPPRESSION OF SLAVE TRADE—
AFGHANISTAN AND RUSSIA.
WITH such a position and outlook in India as has been
described, Browne proceeded on furlough while Lord Mayo was Viceroy, and
arrived in London early in 1871. His father had died in 1870, the family
home was broken up, and he was free to spend much of his time in travel, and
he spent it accordingly—and further, in accordance with his tastes and
proclivities, in that sort of travel in which he could combine amusement and
enjoyment of life with the study of practical engineering, both civil and
military. For the Franco-German war was in full swing, and the battlefields
and scenes and episodes of the wars which Prussia had been waging with
Denmark and Austria were still only a matter of yesterday.
So, after a spell of London and England, he spent most of his
first year of furlough in Europe; and then, when his military studies were
over, he concentrated his attention on the engineering of Holland and
Belgium: its dykes and dams; its warfare against the action and encroachment
of the sea; its reclamations ; its protective and regulative works; its
mines, factories, and bridges; its machinery and railways. All these
specialities, combined with the local interests resulting from his own
partially Dutch descent, made this an especially pleasant experience.
This study in Europe was hardly over when the intelligence he
received from India led him to recognise that the new activity in the Public
Works of India, under Lord Mayo, was not a mere flash in the pan, but the
beginning of a genuine and widespread development. So he continued his study
of engineering, but transferred it to the even more appropriate field of
America. For Lord Mayo had started, as shown in the last chapter, not only a
vigorous expansion of work, but at the same time a wisely economical as well
as progressive policy; and Browne’s inquiry led to the conclusion that in
America he would most readily find and be able to study the class of
enterprise needed for India.
The railway work carried out in India had as yet been of the
stereotyped massive broad gauge style of the Guaranteed Railways; and their
engineers, when referred to by Lord Mayo, had refused to depart from it and
adopt any lighter style, such as a narrow gauge, or at any smaller
cost—i.e. anything much under £20,000 a mile; while Lord Mayo aimed at
£8,000 to £10,000. He was now consequently organising arrangements for the
construction of these railways through the agency of his own Engineer
officers. Hence Browne’s determination to study the American works on the
spot, and to this study he devoted the second year of his furlough.
He was already, to start with, an expert mathematician, both
theoretical and practical, and much given to professional correspondence and
controversy on the subject; and in America he studied the local systems
thoroughly, working out the calculations for the component parts of the
structures, and discussing them with the American engineers and mathematical
experts.
The fulness of his study in America may be gathered from the
variety of the works and places he visited, such as New York and
Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, Omaha, Nebraska,
Utah, San Francisco, Chicago, Montreal. All this involved hard and tough
work and considerable vigour and gymnastic skill; for he was thorough, and
went climbing about the girders and structures, and probing into details, so
as to acquire direct personal knowledge of them. Browne was specially
pleased with the helpful readiness and friendliness he found there, the
outcome probably, in a measure at any rate, of the determined good-will and
unison betokened by Lord Ripon’s far-seeing award in the Alabama case.
On going back from America to England, Browne had to prepare
for his return to India, where he would take with him the vast store of
professional knowledge and information he had acquired, of which the
intelligence had preceded him.
On rejoining in India, he found himself reposted to
Dalhousie, which was now constituted a Division, but which had formerly been
only a subdivision of his Kangra Valley charge; and he soon realised how
work had been expanding in India, of which the accounts he had heard while
absent were far short of the reality.
This Dalhousie charge, though he held it for only a brief
period, was useful in giving him the needful insight into the present state
of public affairs, before joining in more important operations. To this
Division, then, Browne found himself now nominally appointed towards the end
of 1873. The word “nominally" is used advisedly, for though, as will be
seen, he carried out the duties and furthered the works of the charge as
heartily as any man could have done, it was virtually only a temporary post,
pending arrangements for the special employment for which he was destined
and on which his studies in America could be more specifically utilised.
But even while employed in this Dalhousie Division, he was
further assigned some of the special work of designing iron bridges, and
that not even for his own Government, the Punjab, but for the North-west
Provinces. Among these, of which some had spans of 200 and 300 feet, one was
specially notable—a suspension bridge across the Jumna at Khalsi, the
largest in India, with a centre span of 260 feet and two others of 140 feet
each. He prepared not only the general designs and estimates, but also the
working drawings for guidance in the erection. On these designs they were
constructed, not by himself, but by the local engineers—and they stood, with
complete success, the severe tests to which, in view of the novelty of some
of the designs, they are said to have been subjected.
To turn now from these exceptional and additional tasks to
his normal duties at Dalhousie. Browne, it will be remembered, was not
undertaking a charge to which he was new—as he had designed and estimated
the road to it from the plains, and worked there in 1870 and earlier; but
since then the station—like other hill stations—had been progressing under
the policy and support of Lord Mayo and Lord Napier. Double-storied barracks
and cognate buildings were under construction, and road work was in full
swing. One noticeable feature in the arrangements was that much of the work,
especially the latter—the road work—was executed by the troops there, of
whom some 2,000 were at his disposal. He not only guided and controlled them
in the work, but also, with the concurrence and support of their own
regimental officers, improvised or aided in the arrangements for their
hutting and comforts, their food and their movements. The insight into such
matters which he here acquired was of much value to him afterwards in the
similar but more arduous case of the Hurnai road. From all the quarters and
authorities with whom these duties brought him into contact he received the
highest commendation, especially from the military authorities at Lahore,
who expressed themselves most warmly as to the speedy construction of the
buildings and the management of the troops on the road work.
Besides these works for the troops Browne was assigned the,
to him, perfectly novel task of designing and carrying out the water supply.
For this the only precedent he could obtain for guidance was that of
Calcutta; but it was more a theoretical than a practical precedent, for the
circumstances and conditions at Dalhousie were so wholly different. In the
one case, there were level plains, a huge river with a permanent supply, and
all the machinery and structural appliances that were needed immediately
available; in the other there was mountainous ground, and streams varying
from almost dry watercourses to rushing torrents, with a head of water of
nigh 500 feet, to contend against. Still, with his wonted care and practical
bent, he carried out this task with entire success.
But now the time had arrived for the further special
employment on which he was to be engaged. Mr. (now Sir) Guilford Molesworth,
the Government Consulting Engineer for Railways, was ready to have the
surveys begun for the designing of the railway bridge over the Indus at
Sukkur. Browne, being selected for the task, now proceeded to join him at
his office at Simla, where he received full instructions, and made all the
arrangements needed, including the preliminary surveys, borings, and other
investigations.
Besides the point that the site of the bridge was famed in
ancient history, the leading fact, for the time, was that railways were
already under construction along the banks of the Indus—one on the left bank
from the Punjab down to Sukkur, the other on the right bank from Kurrachee
up to Sukkur; and this proposed bridge was wanted to connect the two lines
properly, as well as for other purposes.
The prominent site for the crossing is at the Island of
Bukkur, a rock lying mid-channel between the city of Sukkur on the right
bank, and the town of Rohri on the left, and Browne, of course, surveyed
this position thoroughly; but, not content with this, he surveyed and
explored fully all other possible passages. Then, when he had finished these
inquiries completely, so much so as to have formed his own conclusions as to
the proper sites for the bridge—or rather bridges—he returned to Simla to
lay the surveys and results before Mr. Molesworth, and work up the designs,
in his office, on such style or principle as might then be decided on.
It may be at once explained that the idea of any other
.passage than by the Island of Bukkur was soon set aside, and the general
tenor of the arrangement was (1) a bridge across the comparatively narrow
channel between Sukkur and the Island of Bukkur, (2) a railway line across
that island, and (3) a large single-span bridge from the island to the bank
at Rohri. This span would be from 850 to 880 feet according to the precise
spot selected. About the bridge over the narrow channel there was little
question, as there were good sites for piers; but the large single-span
bridge would constitute the difficulty of the undertaking.
Having completed the surveys, Browne returned to Simla, and
placed the whole matter before Mr. Molesworth, who was much satisfied with
the thoroughness of Browne’s investigations, and the good judgment of his
conclusions. Having considered and discussed the matter fully, Mr.
Molesworth, while holding other alternatives in view, set Browne to the
preparation of a design, on the principle known as “stiffened suspension,”
at the site at which the present bridge was eventually erected.
Browne duly set to work, prepared the detailed designs, and
worked out the calculations for the component parts, in a manner which
elicited the highest encomiums from Sir Alexander Rendel, the Consulting
Engineer to the India Office, and the other authorities concerned. They gave
him special credit for “ the skill and ingenuity with which he had applied
the suspension principle, and the completeness and admirable finish of the
designs and drawings.”
As will be presently seen, the design was never carried out,
but the final official notice of it ran thus:
“In relieving Major Browne, it is only just to him to
acknowledge the value of his services in the preparations of the bridge
designs; an inspection of them will show how very voluminous and elaborate
they are. The calculations have entailed enormous labour. Major Browne has
not been satisfied with the calculations generally required for such works,
but has investigated every principal condition in the most perfect manner. I
cannot speak too highly of the ability he has shown, both in his
mathematical investigations and in his practical suggestions in carrying out
the details of this important structure; ana in doing so he has shown
himself possessed of a rare combination of theoretical skill ana practical
talent.”
When the design had been finished and the estimates for its
cost were worked out, the amount involved was found to be so serious that
Mr. Molesworth thought it proper to set it aside, while considering other
schemes. One alternative design was for a bridge altogether avoiding and
below the Bukkur Island, with a number of short spans and steel cylinders;
but the results of borings led to this idea being abandoned. His next scheme
was that of a steel arch, which would have been less costly than the
“stiffened suspension” plan, and which some competent judges think would
have been the best after all. It was duly sent to England for consideration.
It included a roadway, and in England objection was raised to this, though
without it the bridge would not have been sufficiently stiff.
But at this crisis—i.e. while they were disputing about
it—the cantilever system or principle had just been invented and brought
forward—a perfectly novel idea, which caught the fancy generally; and it was
forthwith adopted (in 1875) and eventually carried out, but not till after
fourteen years of steady hard work. The bridge was completed, and formally
opened by Lord Reay on February 9th, 1889.
Browne, however, was, as a matter of course, not well pleased
with the summary stoppage of his designs, even on the assumed superiority of
the other principle; but it was not till December 9th, 1882, that he gave
expression to this feeling, in writing to Government regarding their
superseding by the cantilever system, on an assumed superiority of
theoretical principle, the suspension system which they had originally
prescribed and which he had worked out. He wrote thus:
“The East River Railway Suspension Bridge at New York, with a
span of 1,000 feet, is just approaching completion. It is described in
the New York Christian Weekly newspaper of December 13th, 1873, and I saw
all the wire for it being made in 1876. This bridge cannot for a moment be
compared as to strength and steadiness to the bridge or the Indus which I
propose. The fact of its erection shows that the Americans at least have not
abandoned the suspension principle.”
Before quitting the subject of the Sukkur Bridge, it may be
noted that when Browne first appeared there the place was almost at the
limits of civilisation—at “where three empires meet,” it may be said, at the
junction of the wilds of Scinde, of Beloochistan, and of the Punjab
deserts—where every one was apt to think himself his own master and superior
to all others. The less his real authority and position might be, the
greater generally was his assumption. Thereby hangs a tale.
A snag of a large tree, which was lying on the bank at Rohri,
was interfering with Browne's work, and while talking casually on the spot
to one of the gentry referred to, who may here be called Q., he remarked
that he meant for that reason to throw it into the river. “Oh no,” says his
friend, “I won’t let you do that. It would obstruct the navigation.” After a
little chaff Browne was formally and angrily forbidden, and warned against
carrying out his threat. Now Browne had a large steam launch there, so in
the night he carried the snag on board and took it across to Bukkur, the
island, and there landed it. His friend Q., on missing it next day, jumped
to the conclusion that Browne had thrown it into the river in defiance of
his warning, and forthwith handed the matter up to the Collector; and a long
and very roundabout correspondence ensued, for Browne and Q. were under two
different Governments—Scinde and India. Presently Browne carried the snag
back to its former site, and in course of time was called on to explain his
action. His answer was very simple— “The snag is where it was, and has never
been thrown into the river.” The huge piles of correspondence, red tape, and
circumlocution, ending with the sharp rap over the knuckles to Q., need not
be described.
Lord Mayo had been assassinated during Browne’s furlough, and
he had been eventually succeeded by Lord Northbrook, an administrator of
liberal principles and strong practical sense, which left its impress on his
Indian administration. The first prominent public event during his
viceroyalty was a famine which broke out in Behar in 1874; and to Lord
Northbrook belongs the credit of having, for the first time in the history
of British India, succeeded completely in relieving distress and preventing
deaths in an Indian famine. After the famine was over, the Prince of Wales
visited India in 1875-6, and the outburst of loyalty which the visit evoked
from all sections of the people in all parts of India forms one of the most
memorable events of modern Indian history.
A good deal of not altogether unreasonable anxiety was
expressed as to the Prince’s safety. Lord Mayo’s assassination was then
fresh in people’s memory, and it was not the sole instance during late years
of a high official being murdered. Religious fanatics are common in India,
and with every precaution there still remained an appreciable amount of
risk. This risk lay chiefly in the semi-madness of isolated individual
fanatics, and very little, it would seem, in the action of emissaries of
secret sects—such as those called Wahabees, though not off-shoots of the
real Wahabees of the Red Sea or Arabia.
These sects occupy, among the Sunis or Turkish Moslems, much
the same position as the Kojahs and other disciples of the “Old Man of the
Mountain” occupy among the Shias or Persian Moslems. They are held by the
learned and orthodox to be dangerous and fanatical heretics, but they are
dreaded and courted by all classes. They are the natural vent for the
undying fanaticism of Islam, requiring at all times to be watched, and in
troubled times becoming a political force of much importance. Their
headquarters in India are at Patna, whence they feed colonies, as at Sitana,
on the “Black Mountain” beyond the Indus, which we destroyed in 1863. Mr.
Taylor was commissioner at Patna in 1857, and, having learnt much of their
secret intrigues, arrested their leader, and so saved Patna from an
outbreak. There could be no doubt that very special precautions were still
needed against the agents of these fanatics, but no one was better able to
meet the danger without fuss or worry than Major Bradford,* who had been
selected to be in constant attendance on His Royal Highness, and never to
leave him while he stayed in India.
While all this was going on Browne had been engaged at Simla
on his designs in connection with the Sukkur Bridge, working in Mr.
Molesworth’s office—and was, of course, fully conversant there with the
course of general events, both in India and on the frontier, as well as
beyond it.
In regard to this, Lord Northbrook had entirely set aside
Lord Mayo’s policy, and reverted to that of Lord Lawrence, yclept Masterly
Inactivity. It was a singular fact, it may be remarked, that there was no
continuous policy in India during Browne’s career there. Lawrence was the
prototype of his own policy of Inactivity. Then came Mayo, who held out his
hand to Russia and supported Shere Ali warmly: now we have Lord Northbrook
going back to Inactivity, to be followed, it will be seen, by Lytton, a
thorough progressive; he in his turn by Lord Ripon, another reactionary.
So Lord Northbrook, having adopted the Lawrence policy,
refused to continue to the Ameer the practical countenance and support which
Lord Mayo had given him. And he did this in face of the fact that the Ameer
was now beginning to feel urgently, and to show vehemently that he so felt,
the necessity for that support against the insidious advances and proposals
of Kaufmann, the aggressive Russian Governor-General of Turkestan. For
Kaufmann had now adopted a new route for his active operations and
subsequent advance. The immediately previous route had, as referred to in
the last chapter, been a failure ; lying eastwards from Krasnovodsk on the
eastern shore of the Caspian, it became lost in hopeless desert, and his new
direction started from the same point on the Caspian, but ran more southerly
by Kizil Arvat and along the borders of Persia towards Herat. And he was
now, in the Russian manner, playing his own independent game with
Afghanistan, perfectly regardless of, and at variance with, the diplomatic
action going on in higher quarters—i.e. between the courts of Russia and of
England.
Lord Northbrook was carrying out, in its most complete form,
the policy of Masterly Inactivity, or drift, not only in regard to the
north-west frontier— i.e. towards Afghanistan and Russia, but also towards
Beloochistan, which was now in a somewhat scandalous state of confusion. All
the Beloochees were at feud, the minor clans among themselves, and they
collectively with the head of the confederacy, the primus inter pares, the
Khan of Khelat, a chief with whom Browne was to be much in contact. .And
further, the various English authorities, Merewether, Phayre, Sandeman, and
others, were much at variance, having lost the strong guiding hand of Sir
Henry Green.
But now, in 1874, Mr. Disraeli had become Prime Minister, and
a change had come over the spirit of England’s policy towards Afghanistan,
which had reverted to that of Lord Mayo. The policy of maintaining that
country as a strong, independent, but friendly state, had been accepted by
the successive Viceroys, but carried out by differing methods. But a still
more advanced policy than Lord Mayo’s was now mooted—viz. that English
agents should be established in the heart of Afghanistan in order to support
and guide that power more effectually. Lord Salisbury, now Secretary of
State for India, had sent a dispatch embodying the new policy in January,
1875. Lord Northbrook, strong in the strength of his own convictions,
remonstrated. In the following year, having again differed from the
Secretary of State—this time on the financial policy of India—he received a
censure, and forthwith resigned.
But Lord Northbrook’s rule cannot be justly described without
referring to one special incident in it, the subject being one in which
Browne’s personal interest was particularly strong, though it has no direct
connection with his career. The last chapter of the history of the negro
slave-trade was, at the time, generally thought to be completed by the
result of the American Civil War and the collapse of slavery in the United
States. The European Powers had long been united, with greater or less
sincerity and zeal, in seeking to effect its abolition. In the analogous
case of white slavery in Russia, the Emperor Alexander had already freed the
Serfs in 1861, and paid the penalty for it by being dynamited. Hence the
adhesion of the United States, whose attitude had hitherto been doubtful,
gave a unanimity of support to its prohibition, which the Powers were now
strong enough, if they had the will, to impose upon the whole world.
The occasion was not long wanting. It became known that the
slaves, who had been kidnapped under circumstances of horrible atrocity in
the interior of Africa, were being exported in large and yearly increasing
numbers from Zanzibar, Kilwa, and other places on the east coast, to the
ports of the Red Sea and Persian Gulf. The dhows in which they were shipped,
running with their lateen sails spread before the south-west monsoon, could
distance any steamer then on the coast. The English squadron, inadequate in
numbers and equipment for the special service, and without the means of
obtaining timely information, zealously as its men and officers performed
their arduous duties, could do little to check the traffic. The captures
which they made scarcely compensated for the additional suffering caused to
the slaves by the increased crowding and the precautions taken by their
masters against capture.
England, when Lord Palmerston was in power, had been wont to
take the lead in the contest with the slave trade; and it belonged
especially to England to do so in the present case, because the Zanzibar
territory, whence nearly all the slaves were shipped, was, or might at her
will become, as much under British influence as a native state of India; and
the East African merchants who profited by the traffic were most of them
Banians—British subjects from India. But though Lord Palmerston was no
longer there, another Englishman now stepped into the breach, Sir Lewis
Pelly—in fact two Englishmen, the other being Sir Bartle Frere; and between
them, aided by the local officer, Dr. Kirk, they so acted on the Sultan of
Zanzibar that on June 5th, 1873, he signed a treaty abolishing and closing
slavery on his coast for ever. In this treaty he formally and explicitly
engaged that the transport and export of slaves from the coast for any
purpose should cease entirely, that all public slave markets in his
dominions should be closed, and that protection should be given to liberated
slaves. It was at the same time arranged that natives of Indian states under
British protection should be prohibited from possessing slaves.
There now remained only one territory under British sway
where slavery was still in force—and not only in force, but being extended
by a portion of the population with all their might—and that was in South
Africa among its Boer population. We all know what Mrs. Josephine Butler and
Sir Charles Warren had to say on the subject.
To return. The design for the Sukkur Bridge was the
concluding item in the continuous Engineer employment or study, which began
on Browne’s return to India in 1864, and consequently covered a period of
eleven years—and he had by this time proved himself as capable and as
many-sided in varied engineering of a high class as he had done in the
rough-and-ready work and ingenious contrivances of his earlier days ; and he
was now about to leave it—after some preliminary explorations and
surveys—for a turn of political and military experiences.
During all this period of eleven years he had been out of
direct touch with public matters, excepting those in which he had been
closely concerned, and which were almost entirely of only local interest.
But the results of the more general and grave events at its close give an
important colouring and effect to the duties on which he would soon be
engaged, and they will therefore be touched on briefly.
During Lord Mayo’s rule Russia, as has been already shown,
had not been making any actual advance towards the south, being occupied
chiefly with the Kirghiz and other tribes on the more northern parts of
Central Asia, and in approaches by the north towards such positions as Khiva.
But wijji the revival of Masterly Inactivity under Northbrook
came a change. Kaufmann began an insidious correspondence with Shere
Ali—insidious, that is, considering the real and recognised position of
affairs, which was this: The Russian Chancellor had declared in the spring
of 1869, that Afghanistan was “completely outside the sphere within which
Russia may be called upon to exercise her influence,” and in the following
November he had informed Sir A. Buchanan that “he saw no objection whatever
to English officers visiting Cabul, though he agreed with Lord Mayo that
Russian agents should not do so.”
Yet now, in spite of these assurances, Kaufmann sent Russian
agents in 1870 to Cabul with letters to Shere Ali, thus starting
correspondence between Tashkent and the Afghan capital which was first
continued in a desultory and insidious manner until the year 1874, and then
began to assume a more important aspect; for in the spring of that year
General Kolpakoffsky, in Kaufmann’s absence, wrote a letter to Shere
Ali which was very significant in tone, referring to "devotion" on the side
of the Ameer and “grace” on the part of the Czar. After this there was a
brief pause in the correspondence; but next year fresh letters were sent to
the Ameer, and from that time they became more frequent and more significant
in tone, Kaufmann, now again on the scene, even going so far as to propose
to Shere Ali that he should sign a treaty of commerce, and also enter into
an offensive and defensive alliance with the Russian Government. This was
categorically denied by Prince Gortchakoff; but in spite of this the
correspondence was continued, and after two years more of secret
negotiations, it became evident to the Indian Government that Kaufmann had
succeeded in turning Shere Ali aside from his alliance with the English. |