The founder Of the Scotch family of
Naesmyth is said to have derived his name from the following circumstance.
In the course of the feuds which raged for some time between the Scotch
kings and their powerful subjects the Earls of Douglas, a rencontre took
place one day on the outskirts of a Border village, when the king's
adherents were worsted. One of them took refuge in the village smithy,
where, hastily disguising himself, and donning a spare leathern apron, he
pretended to be engaged in assisting the smith with his work, when a party
of the Douglas followers rushed in. They glanced at the pretended workman
at the anvil, and observed him deliver a blow upon it so unskilfully that
the hammer-shaft broke in his hand. On this one of the Douglas men rushed
at him, calling out, "Ye're nae smyth!" The assailed man seized his sword,
which lay conveniently at hand, and defended himself so vigorously that he
shortly killed his assailant, while the smith brained another with his
hammer; and, a party of the king's men having come to their help, the rest
were speedily overpowered. The royal forces then rallied, and their
temporary defeat was converted into a victory. The king bestowed a grant
of land on his follower "Nae Smyth," who assumed for his arms a sword
between two hammers with broken shafts, and the motto "Non arte sed Marte,"
as if to disclaim the art of the Smith, in which he had failed, and to
emphasize the superiority of the warrior. Such is said to be the
traditional origin of the family of Naesmyth of Posso in Peeblesshire, who
continue to bear the same name and arms. It is remarkable that the
inventor of the steam-hammer should have so effectually contradicted the
name he bears and reversed the motto of his family; for so far from being
"Nae Smyth," he may not inappropriately be designated the very Vulcan of
the nineteenth century.
His hammer is a tool of immense
power and pliancy, but for which we must have stopped short in many of
those gigantic engineering works which are among the marvels of the age we
live in. It possesses so much precision and delicacy that it will chip the
end of an egg resting in a glass on the anvil without breaking it, while
it delivers a blow of ten tons with such a force as to be felt shaking the
parish. It is therefore with a high degree of appropriateness that Mr.
Nasmyth has discarded the feckless hammer with the broken shaft, and
assumed for his emblem his own magnificent steam-hammer, at the same time
reversing the family motto, which he has converted into "Non Marte sed
Arte."
James Nasmyth belongs to a family
whose genius in art has long been recognised. His father, Alexander
Nasmyth of Edinburgh, was a landscape-painter of great eminence, whose
works are sometimes confounded with those of his son Patrick, called the
English Hobbema, though his own merits are peculiar and distinctive. The
elder Nasmyth was also an admirable portrait painter, as his head of
Burns--the best ever painted of the poet--bears ample witness. His
daughters, the Misses Nasmyth, were highly skilled painters of landscape,
and their works are well known and much prized. James, the youngest of the
family, inherits the same love of art, though his name is more extensively
known as a worker and inventor in iron.
He was born at Edinburgh, on the
19th of August, 1808; and his attention was early directed to mechanics by
the circumstance of this being one of his father's hobbies. Besides being
an excellent painter, Mr. Nasmyth had a good general knowledge of
architecture and civil engineering, and could work at the lathe and handle
tools with the dexterity of a mechanic. He employed nearly the whole of
his spare time in a little workshop which adjoined his studio, where he
encouraged his youngest son to work with him in all sorts of materials.
Among his visitors at the studio were Professor Leslie, Patrick Miller of
Dalswinton, and other men of distinction. He assisted Mr. Miller in his
early experiments with paddle-boats, which eventually led to the invention
of the steamboat. It was a great advantage for the boy to be trained by a
father who so loved excellence in all its forms, and could minister to his
love of mechanics by his own instruction and practice. James used to drink
in with pleasure and profit the conversation which passed between his
father and his visitors on scientific and mechanical subjects; and as he
became older, the resolve grew stronger in him every day that he would be
a mechanical engineer, and nothing else. At a proper age, he was sent to
the High School, then as now celebrated for the excellence of its
instruction, and there he laid the foundations of a sound and liberal
education. But he has himself told the simple story of his early life in
such graphic terms that we feel we cannot do better than quote his own
words: - [footnote... Originally prepared for John Hick, Esq., C.E., of
Bolton, and embodied by him in his lectures on "Self Help," delivered
before the Holy Trinity Working Men's Association of that town, on the
18th and 20th March, 1862; the account having been kindly corrected by Mr.
Nasmyth for the present publication....]
"I had the good luck," he says, "to
have for a school companion the son of an iron founder. Every spare hour
that I could command was devoted to visits to his father's iron foundry,
where I delighted to watch the various processes of moulding,
iron-melting, casting, forging, pattern-making, and other smith and metal
work; and although I was only about twelve years old at the time, I used
to lend a hand, in which hearty zeal did a good deal to make up for want
of strength. I look back to the Saturday afternoons spent in the workshops
of that small foundry, as an important part of my education. I did not
trust to reading about such and such things; I saw and handled them; and
all the ideas in connection with them became permanent in my mind. I also
obtained there--what was of much value to me in after life-- a
considerable acquaintance with the nature and characters of workmen. By
the time I was fifteen, I could work and turn out really respectable jobs
in wood, brass, iron, and steel: indeed, in the working of the latter
inestimable material, I had at a very early age (eleven or twelve)
acquired considerable proficiency. As that was the pre-lucifer match
period, the possession of a steel and tinder box was quite a patent of
nobility among boys. So I used to forge old files into 'steels' in my
father's little workshop, and harden them and produce such first-rate,
neat little articles in that line, that I became quite famous amongst my
school companions; and many a task have I had excused me by bribing the
monitor, whose grim sense of duty never could withstand the glimpse of a
steel.
"My first essay at making a steam
engine was when I was fifteen. I then made a real working; steam-engine, 1
3/4 diameter cylinder, and 8 in. stroke, which not only could act, but
really did some useful work; for I made it grind the oil colours which my
father required for his painting. Steam engine models, now so common, were
exceedingly scarce in those days, and very difficult to be had; and as the
demand for them arose, I found it both delightful and profitable to make
them; as well as sectional models of steam engines, which I introduced for
the purpose of exhibiting the movements of all the parts, both exterior
and interior. With the results of the sale of such models I was enabled to
pay the price of tickets of admission to the lectures on natural
philosophy and chemistry delivered in the University of Edinburgh. About
the same time (1826) I was so happy as to be employed by Professor Leslie
in making models and portions of apparatus required by him for his
lectures and philosophical investigations, and I had also the inestimable
good fortune to secure his friendship. His admirably clear manner of
communicating a knowledge of the fundamental principles of mechanical
science rendered my intercourse with him of the utmost importance to
myself. A hearty, cheerful, earnest desire to toil in his service, caused
him to take pleasure in instructing me by occasional explanations of what
might otherwise have remained obscure.
"About the years 1827 and 1828, the
subject of steam-carriages for common roads occupied much of the attention
of the public. Many tried to solve the problem. I made a working model of
an engine which performed so well that some friends determined to give me
the means of making one on a larger scale. This I did; and I shall never
forget the pleasure and the downright hard work I had in producing, in the
autumn of 1828, at an outlay of 60L., a complete steam-carriage, that ran
many a mile with eight persons on it. After keeping it in action two
months, to the satisfaction of all who were interested in it, my friends
allowed me to dispose of it, and I sold it a great bargain, after which
the engine was used in driving a small factory. I may mention that in that
engine I employed the waste steam to cause an increased draught by its
discharge up the chimney. This important use of the waste steam had been
introduced by George Stephenson some years before, though entirely unknown
to me.
"The earnest desire which I
cherished of getting forward in the real business of life induced me to
turn my attention to obtaining employment in some of the great engineering
establishments of the day, at the head of which, in my fancy as well as in
reality, stood that of Henry Maudslay, of London. It was the summit of my
ambition to get work in that establishment; but as my father had not the
means of paying a premium, I determined to try what I could do towards
attaining my object by submitting to Mr. Maudslay actual specimens of my
capability as a young workman and draughtsman. To this end I set to work
and made a small steam-engine, every part of which was the result of my
own handiwork, including the casting and the forging of the several parts.
This I turned out in such a style as I should even now be proud of. My
sample drawings were, I may say, highly respectable. Armed with such means
of obtaining the good opinion of the great Henry Maudslay, on the l9th of
May, 1829, I sailed for London in a Leith smack, and after an eight days'
voyage saw the metropolis for the first time. I made bold to call on Mr.
Maudslay, and told him my simple tale. He desired me to bring my models
for him to look at. I did so, and when he came to me I could see by the
expression of his cheerful, well-remembered countenance, that I had
attained my object. He then and there appointed me to be his own private
workman, to assist him in his little paradise of a workshop, furnished
with the models of improved machinery and engineering tools of which he
has been the great originator. He left me to arrange as to wages with his
chief cashier, Mr. Robert Young, and on the first Saturday evening I
accordingly went to the counting-house to enquire of him about my pay. He
asked me what would satisfy me. Knowing the value of the situation I had
obtained, and having a very modest notion of my worthiness to occupy it, I
said, that if he would not consider l0s. a week too much, I thought I
could do very well with that. I suppose he concluded that I had some means
of my own to live on besides the l0s. a week which I asked. He little knew
that I had determined not to cost my father another farthing when I
left-home to begin the world on my own account. My proposal was at once
acceded to. And well do I remember the pride and delight I felt when I
carried to my three shillings a week lodging that night my first wages.
Ample they were in my idea; for I knew how little I could live on, and was
persuaded that by strict economy I could easily contrive to make the money
support me. To help me in this object, I contrived a small cooking
apparatus, which I forthwith got made by a tinsmith in Lambeth, at a cost
of 6s., and by its aid I managed to keep the eating and drinking part of
my private account within 3s. 6d. per week, or 4s. at the outside. I had
three meat dinners a week, and generally four rice and milk dinners, all
of which were cooked by my little apparatus, which I set in action after
breakfast. The oil cost not quite a halfpenny per day. The meat dinners
consisted of a stew of from a half to three quarters of a lb. of leg of
beef, the meat costing 3 1/2d. per lb., which, with sliced potatoes and a
little onion, and as much water as just covered all, with a sprinkle of
salt and black pepper, by the time I returned to dinner at half-past six
furnished a repast in every respect as good as my appetite. For breakfast
I had coffee and a due proportion of quartern loaf. After the first year
of my employment under Mr. Maudslay, my wages were raised to 15s. a week,
and I then, but not till then, indulged in the luxury of butter to my
bread. I am the more particular in all this, to show you that I was a
thrifty housekeeper, although only a lodger in a 3s. room. I have the old
apparatus by me yet, and I shall have another dinner out of it ere I am a
year older, out of regard to days that were full of the real romance of
life.
"On the death of Henry Maudslay in
1831, I passed over to the service of his worthy partner, Mr. Joshua
Field, and acted as his draughtsman, much to my advantage, until the end
of that year, when I returned to Edinburgh, to construct a small stock of
engineering tools for the purpose of enabling me to start in business on
my own account. This occupied me until the spring of l833, and during the
interval I was accustomed to take in jobs to execute in my little workshop
in Edinburgh, so as to obtain the means of completing my stock of tools.
[footnote... Most of the tools with which he began business in Manchester
were made by his own hands in his father's little workshop at Edinburgh,
He was on one occasion " hard up" for brass with which to make a wheel for
his planing machine. There was a row of old-fashioned brass candlesticks
standing in bright array on the kitchen mantelpiece which he greatly
coveted for the purpose. His father was reluctant to give them up; "for,"
said he, "I have had many a crack with Burns when these candlesticks were
on the table. But his mother at length yielded; when the candlesticks were
at once recast, and made into the wheel of the planing machine, which is
still at work in Manchester. ...]
In June, 1834, I went to Manchester,
and took a flat of an old mill in Dale Street, where I began business. In
two years my stock had so increased as to overload the floor of the old
building to such an extent that the land lord, Mr. Wrenn, became alarmed,
especially as the tenant below me--a glass-cutter--had a visit from the
end of a 20-horse engine beam one morning among his cut tumblers. To set
their anxiety at rest, I went out that evening to Patricroft and took a
look at a rather choice bit of land bounded on one side by the canal, and
on the other by the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. By the end of the
week I had secured a lease of the site for 999 years; by the end of the
month my wood sheds were erected; the ring of the hammer on the smith's
anvil was soon heard all over the place; and the Bridgewater Foundry was
fairly under way. There I toiled right heartily until December 31st, 1856,
when I retired to enjoy in active leisure the reward of a laborious life,
during which, with the blessing of God, I enjoyed much true happiness
through the hearty love which I always had for my profession; and I trust
I may be allowed to say, without undue vanity, that I have left behind me
some useful results of my labours in those inventions with which my name
is identified, which have had no small share in the accomplishment of some
of the greatest mechanical works of our age." If Mr. Nasmyth had
accomplished nothing more than the invention of his steam-hammer, it would
have been enough to found a reputation. Professor Tomlinson describes it
as "one of the most perfect of artificial machines and noblest triumphs of
mind over matter that modern English engineers have yet developed."
[footnote... Cyclopaedia of Useful Arts, ii. 739....]
The hand-hammer has always been an
important tool, and, in the form of the stone celt, it was perhaps the
first invented. When the hammer of iron superseded that of stone, it was
found practicable in the hands of a "cunning" workman to execute by its
means metal work of great beauty and even delicacy. But since the
invention of cast-iron, and the manufacture of wrought-iron in large
masses, the art of hammer-working has almost become lost; and great
artists, such as Matsys of Antwerp and Rukers of Nuremberg were,
[footnote... Matsys' beautiful wrought-iron well cover, still standing in
front of the cathedral at Antwerp, and Rukers's steel or iron chair
exhibited at South Kensington in 1862, are examples of the beautiful
hammer work turned out by the artisans of the middle ages. The railings of
the tombs of Henry VII. and Queen Eleanor in Westminster Abbey, the hinges
and iron work of Lincoln Cathedral, of St. George's Chapel at Windsor, and
of some of the Oxford colleges, afford equally striking illustrations of
the skill of our English blacksmiths several centuries ago. ...] no longer
think it worth their while to expend time and skill in working on so
humble a material as wrought-iron. It is evident from the marks of care
and elaborate design which many of these early works exhibit, that the
workman's heart was in his work, and that his object was not merely to get
it out of hand, but to execute it in first-rate artistic style.
When the use of iron extended and
larger ironwork came to be forged, for cannon, tools, and machinery, the
ordinary hand-hammer was found insufficient, and the helve or forge-hammer
was invented. This was usually driven by a water-wheel, or by oxen or
horses. The tilt-hammer was another form in which it was used, the smaller
kinds being worked by the foot. Among Watt's various inventions, was a
tilt-hammer of considerable power, which he at first worked by means of a
water-wheel, and afterwards by a steam engine regulated by a fly-wheel.
His first hammer of this kind was 120 lbs. in weight; it was raised eight
inches before making each blow. Watt afterwards made a tilt-hammer for Mr.
Wilkinson of Bradley Forge, of 7 1/2 cwt., and it made 300 blows a minute
. Other improvements were made in the hammer from time to time, but no
material alteration was made in the power by which it was worked until Mr.
Nasmyth took it in hand, and applying to it the force of steam, at once
provided the worker in iron with the most formidable of machine-tools.
This important invention originated as follows:
In the early part of 1837, the
directors of the Great Western Steam-Ship Company sent Mr. Francis
Humphries, their engineer, to consult Mr. Nasmyth as to some engineering
tools of unusual size and power, which were required for the construction
of the engines of the "Great Britain" steamship. They had determined to
construct those engines on the vertical trunk-engine principle, in
accordance with Mr. Humphries' designs; and very complete works were
erected by them at their Bristol dockyard for the execution of the
requisite machinery, the most important of the tools being supplied by
Nasmyth and Gaskell. The engines were in hand, when a difficulty arose
with respect to the enormous paddle-shaft of the vessel, which was of such
a size of forging as had never before been executed. Mr. Humphries applied
to the largest engineering firms throughout the country for tenders of the
price at which they would execute this part of the work, but to his
surprise and dismay he found that not one of the firms he applied to would
undertake so large a forging. In this dilemma he wrote to Mr. Nasmyth on
the 24th November,1838, informing him of this unlooked-for difficulty. "I
find," said he, "there is not a forge-hammer in England or Scotland
powerful enough to forge the paddle-shaft of the engines for the 'Great
Britain!' What am I to do? Do you think I might dare to use cast-iron?"
This letter immediately set Mr.
Nasmyth a-thinking. How was it that existing hammers were incapable of
forging a wrought-iron shaft of thirty inches diameter? Simply because of
their want of compass, or range and fall, as well as power of blow. A few
moments' rapid thought satisfied him that it was by rigidly adhering to
the old traditional form of hand-hammer--of which the tilt, though driven
by steam, was but a modification--that the difficulty had arisen. When
even the largest hammer was tilted up to its full height, its range was so
small, that when a piece of work of considerable size was placed on the
anvil, the hammer became "gagged," and, on such an occasion, where the
forging required the most powerful blow, it received next to no blow at
all,--the clear space for fall being almost entirely occupied by the work
on the anvil.
The obvious remedy was to invent
some method, by which a block of iron should be lifted to a sufficient
height above the object on which it was desired to strike a blow, and let
the block fall down upon the work,--guiding it in its descent by such
simple means as should give the required precision in the percussive
action of the falling mass. Following out this idea, Mr. Nasmyth at once
sketched on paper his steam-hammer, having it clearly before him in his
mind's eye a few minutes after receiving Mr. Humphries' letter narrating
his unlooked-for difficulty. The hammer, as thus sketched, consisted of,
first an anvil on which to rest the work; second, a block of iron
constituting the hammer or blow-giving part; third, an inverted
steam-cylinder to whose piston-rod the block was attached. All that was
then required to produce by such means a most effective hammer, was simply
to admit steam in the cylinder so as to act on the under side of the
piston, and so raise the block attached to the piston-rod, and by a simple
contrivance to let the steam escape and so permit the block rapidly to
descend by its own gravity upon the work then on the anvil. Such, in a few
words, is the rationale of the steam-hammer.
By the same day's post, Mr. Nasmyth
wrote to Mr. Humphries, inclosing a sketch of the invention by which he
proposed to forge the "Great Britain" paddle-shaft. Mr. Humphries showed
it to Mr. Brunel, the engineer-inchief of the company, to Mr. Guppy, the
managing director, and to others interested in the undertaking, by all of
whom it was heartily approved. Mr. Nasmyth gave permission to communicate
his plans to such forge proprietors as might feel disposed to erect such a
hammer to execute the proposed work,--the only condition which he made
being, that in the event of his hammer being adopted, he was to be allowed
to supply it according to his own design.
The paddle-shaft of the "Great
Britain" was, however, never forged. About that time, the substitution of
the Screw for the Paddle-wheel as a means of propulsion of steam-vessels
was attracting much attention; and the performances of the "Archimedes"
were so successful as to induce Mr. Brunel to recommend his Directors to
adopt the new power. They yielded to his entreaty. The great engines which
Mr. Humphries had designed were accordingly set aside; and he was required
to produce fresh designs of engines suited for screw propulsion. The
result was fatal to Mr. Humphries. The labour, the anxiety, and perhaps
the disappointment, proved too much for him, and a brain-fever carried him
off; so that neither his great paddle-shaft nor Mr. Nasmyth's steam-hammer
to forge it was any longer needed.
The hammer was left to bide its
time. No forge-master would take it up. The inventor wrote to all the
great firms, urging its superiority to every other tool for working
malleable iron into all kinds of forge work. Thus he wrote and sent
illustrative sketches of his hammer to Accramans and Morgan of Bristol, to
the late Benjamin Hick and Rushton and Eckersley of Bolton, to Howard and
Ravenhill of Rotherhithe, and other firms; but unhappily bad times for the
iron trade had set in; and although all to whom he communicated his design
were much struck with its simplicity and obvious advantages, the answer
usually given was--"We have not orders enough to keep in work the
forge-hammers we already have, and we do not desire at present to add any
new ones, however improved." At that time no patent had been taken out for
the invention. Mr. Nasmyth had not yet saved money enough to enable him to
do so on his own account; and his partner declined to spend money upon a
tool that no engineer would give the firm an order for. No secret was made
of the invention, and, excepting to its owner, it did not seem to be worth
one farthing. Such was the unpromising state of affairs, when M.
Schneider, of the Creusot Iron Works in France, called at the Patricroft
works together with his practical mechanic M. Bourdon, for the purpose of
ordering some tools of the firm. Mr. Nasmyth was absent on a journey at
the time, but his partner, Mr. Gaskell, as an act of courtesy to the
strangers, took the opportunity of showing them all that was new and
interesting in regard to mechanism about the works. And among other
things, Mr. Gaskell brought out his partner's sketch or "Scheme book,"
which lay in a drawer in the office, and showed them the design of the
Steam Hammer, which no English firm would adopt. They were much struck
with its simplicity and practical utility; and M. Bourdon took careful
note of its arrangements. Mr. Nasmyth on his return was informed of the
visit of MM. Schneider and Bourdon, but the circumstance of their having
inspected the design of his steam-hammer seems to have been regarded by
his partner as too trivial a matter to be repeated to him; and he knew
nothing of the circumstance until his visit to France in April, 1840.
When passing through the works at
Creusot with M. Bourdon, Mr. Nasmyth saw a crank shaft of unusual size,
not only forged in the piece, but punched. He immediately asked, "How did
you forge that shaft?" M. Bourdon's answer was, "Why, with your hammer, to
be sure!" Great indeed was Nasmyth's surprise; for he had never yet seen
the hammer, except in his own drawing! A little explanation soon cleared
all up. M. Bourdon said he had been so much struck with the ingenuity and
simplicity of the arrangement, that he had no sooner returned than he set
to work, and had a hammer made in general accordance with the design Mr.
Gaskell had shown him; and that its performances had answered his every
expectation. He then took Mr. Nasmyth to see the steam-hammer; and great
was his delight at seeing the child of his brain in full and active work.
It was not, according to Mr. Nasmyth's ideas, quite perfect, and he
readily suggested several improvements, conformable with the original
design, which M. Bourdon forthwith adopted.
On reaching England, Mr. Nasmyth at
once wrote to his partner telling him what he had seen, and urging that
the taking out of a patent for the protection of the invention ought no
longer to be deferred. But trade was still very much depressed, and as the
Patricroft firm needed all their capital to carry on their business, Mr.
Gaskell objected to lock any of it up in engineering novelties. Seeing
himself on the brink of losing his property in the invention, Mr. Nasmyth
applied to his brother-in-law, William Bennett, Esq., who advanced him the
requisite money for the purpose--about 280L.,-- and the patent was secured
in June 1840. The first hammer, of 30 cwt., was made for the Patricroft
works, with the consent of the partners; and in the course of a few weeks
it was in full work. The precision and beauty of its action--the perfect
ease with which it was managed, and the untiring force of its percussive
blows--were the admiration of all who saw it; and from that moment the
steam-hammer became a recognised power in modern mechanics. The variety or
gradation of its blows was such, that it was found practicable to
manipulate a hammer of ten tons as easily as if it had only been of ten
ounces weight. It was under such complete control that while descending
with its greatest momentum, it could be arrested at any point with even
greater ease than any instrument used by hand. While capable of forging an
Armstrong hundred-pounder, or the sheet-anchor for a ship of the line, it
could hammer a nail, or crack a nut without bruising the kernel.
When it came into general use, the
facilities which it afforded for executing all kinds of forging had the
effect of greatly increasing the quantity of work done, at the same time
that expense was saved. The cost of making anchors was reduced by at least
50 per cent., while the quality of the forging was improved. Before its
invention the manufacture of a shaft of l5 or 20cwt. required the
concentrated exertions of a large establishment, and its successful
execution was regarded as a great triumph of skill.; whereas forgings of
20 and 30 tons weight are now things of almost every-day occurrence. Its
advantages were so obvious, that its adoption soon became general, and in
the course of a few years Nasmyth steam-hammers were to be found in every
well-appointed workshop both at home and abroad. Many modifications have
been made in the tool, by Condie, Morrison, Naylor, Rigby, and others; but
Nasmyth's was the father of them all, and still holds its ground.
[footnote... Mr. Nasmyth has lately introduced, with the assistance of Mr.
Wilson of the Low Moor Iron Works, a new, exceedingly ingenious, and very
simple contrivance for working the hammer. By this application any length
of stroke, any amount of blow, and any amount of variation can be given by
the operation of a single lever; and by this improvement the machine has
attained a rapidity of action and change of motion suitable to the powers
of the engine, and the form or consistency of the articles under the
hammer.--Mr. FAIRBAIRN'S Report on the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1855,
p. 100. ...]
Among the important uses to which
this hammer has of late years been applied, is the manufacture of iron
plates for covering our ships of war, and the fabrication of the immense
wrought-iron ordnance of Armstrong, Whitworth, and Blakely. But for the
steam-hammer, indeed, it is doubtful whether such weapons could have been
made. It is also used for the re-manufacture of iron in various other
forms, to say nothing of the greatly extended use which it has been the
direct means of effecting in wrought-iron and steel forgings in every
description of machinery, from the largest marine steam-engines to the
most nice and delicate parts of textile mechanism. "It is not too much to
say," observes a writer in the Engineer, "that, without Nasmyth's
steam-hammer, we must have stopped short in many of those gigantic
engineering works which, but for the decay of all wonder in us, would be
the perpetual wonder of this age, and which have enabled our modern
engineers to take rank above the gods of all mythologies.
There is one use to which the
steam-hammer is now becoming extensively applied by some of our
manufacturers that deserves especial mention, rather for the prospect
which it opens to us than for what has already been actually accomplished.
We allude to the manufacture of large articles in DIES. At one manufactory
in the country, railway wheels, for example, are being manufactured with
enormous economy by this means. The various parts of the wheels are
produced in quantity either by rolling or by dies under the hammer; these
parts are brought together in their relative positions in a mould, heated
to a welding heat, and then by a blow of the steam hammer, furnished with
dies, are stamped into a complete and all but finished wheel. It is
evident that wherever wrought-iron articles of a manageable size have to
be produced in considerable quantities, the same process may be adopted,
and the saving effected by the substitution of this for the ordinary
forging process will doubtless ere long prove incalculable. For this, as
for the many other advantageous uses of the steam-hammer, we are primarily
and mainly indebted to Mr. Nasmyth. It is but right, therefore, that we
should hold his name in honour. In fact, when we think of the universal
service which this machine is rendering us, we feel that some special
expression of our indebtedness to him would be a reasonable and grateful
service. The benefit which he has conferred upon us is so great as to
justly entitle him to stand side by side with the few men who have gained
name and fame as great inventive engineers, and to whom we have testified
our gratitude--usually, unhappily, when it was too late for them to enjoy
it."
Mr. Nasmyth subsequently applied the
principle of the steam-hammer in the pile driver, which he invented in
1845. Until its production, all piles had been driven by means of a small
mass of iron falling upon the head of the pile with great velocity from a
considerable height, -- the raising of the iron mass by means of the
"monkey" being an operation that occupied much time and labour, with which
the results were very incommensurate. Pile-driving was, in Mr. Nasmyth's
words, conducted on the artillery or cannon-ball principle; the action
being excessive and the mass deficient, and adapted rather for destructive
than impulsive action. In his new and beautiful machine, he applied the
elastic force of steam in raising the ram or driving block, on which, the
block being disengaged, its whole weight of three tons descended on the
head of the pile, and the process being repeated eighty times in the
minute, the pile was sent home with a rapidity that was quite marvellous
compared with the old-fashioned system. In forming coffer-dams for the
piers and abutments of bridges, quays, and harbours, and in piling the
foundations of all kinds of masonry, the steam pile driver was found of
invaluable use by the engineer.
At the first experiment made with
the machine, Mr. Nasmyth drove a 14-inch pile fifteen feet into hard
ground at the rate of 65 blows a minute. The driver was first used in
forming the great steam dock at Devonport, where the results were very
striking; and it was shortly after employed by Robert Stephenson in piling
the foundations of the great High Level Bridge at Newcastle, and the
Border Bridge at Berwick, as well as in several other of his great works.
The saving of time effected by this machine was very remarkable, the ratio
being as 1 to 1800; that is, a pile could be driven in four minutes that
before required twelve hours. One of the peculiar features of the
invention was that of employing the pile itself as the support of the
steam-hammer part of the apparatus while it was being driven, so that the
pile had the percussive action of the dead weight of the hammer as well as
its lively blows to induce it to sink into the ground. The steam-hammer
sat as it were on the shoulders of the pile, while it dealt forth its
ponderous blows on the pile-head at the rate of 80 a minute, and as the
pile sank, the hammer followed it down with never relaxing activity until
it was driven home to the required depth. One of the most ingenious
contrivances employed in the driver, which was also adopted in the hammer,
was the use of steam as a buffer in the upper part of the cylinder, which
had the effect of a recoil spring, and greatly enhanced the force of the
downward blow. In 1846, Mr. Nasmyth designed a form of steam-engine after
that of his steam-hammer, which has been extensively adopted all over the
world for screw-ships of all sizes. The pyramidal form of this engine, its
great simplicity and GET-AT-ABILITY of parts, together with the
circumstance that all the weighty parts of the engine are kept low, have
rendered it a universal favourite. Among the other labour-saving tools
invented by Mr. Nasmyth, may be mentioned the well-known planing machine
for small work, called "Nasmyth's Steam Arm," now used in every large
workshop. It was contrived for the purpose of executing a large order for
locomotives received from the Great Western Railway, and was found of
great use in accelerating the work, especially in planing the links,
levers, connecting rods, and smaller kinds of wrought-iron work in those
engines. His circular cutter for toothed wheels was another of his handy
inventions, which shortly came into general use. In iron-founding also he
introduced a valuable practical improvement. The old mode of pouring the
molten metal into the moulds was by means of a large ladle with one or two
cross handles and levers; but many dreadful accidents occurred through a
slip of the hand, and Mr. Nasmyth resolved, if possible, to prevent them.
The plan he adopted was to fix a worm-wheel on the side of the ladle, into
which a worm was geared, and by this simple contrivance one man was
enabled to move the largest ladle on its axis with perfect ease and
safety. By this means the work was more promptly performed, and accidents
entirely avoided.
Mr. Nasmyth's skill in invention was
backed by great energy and a large fund of common sense--qualities not
often found united. These proved of much service to the concern of which
he was the head, and indeed constituted the vital force. The firm
prospered as it deserved; and they executed orders not only for England,
but for most countries in the civilized world. Mr. Nasmyth had the
advantage of being trained in a good school--that of Henry Maudslay--where
he had not only learnt handicraft under the eye of that great mechanic,
but the art of organizing labour, and (what is of great value to an
employer) knowledge of the characters of workmen. Yet the Nasmyth firm
were not without their troubles as respected the mechanics in their
employment, and on one occasion they had to pass through the ordeal of a
very formidable strike. The manner in which the inventor of the
steam-hammer literally "Scotched" this strike was very characteristic.
A clever young man employed by the
firm as a brass founder, being found to have a peculiar capacity for
skilled mechanical work, had been advanced to the lathe. The other men
objected to his being so employed on the ground that it was against the
rules of the trade. "But he is a first-rate workman," replied the
employers, "and we think it right to advance a man according to his
conduct and his merits." "No matter," said the workmen, "it is against the
rules, and if you do not take the man from the lathe, we must turn out."
"Very well; we hold to our right of selecting the best men for the best
places, and we will not take the man from the lathe." The consequence was
a general turn out. Pickets were set about the works, and any stray men
who went thither to seek employment were waylaid, and if not induced to
turn back, were maltreated or annoyed until they were glad to leave. The
works were almost at a standstill. This state of things could not be
allowed to go on, and the head of the firm bestirred himself accordingly
with his usual energy. He went down to Scotland, searched all the best
mechanical workshops there, and after a time succeeded in engaging
sixty-four good hands. He forbade them coming by driblets, but held them
together until there was a full freight; and then they came, with their
wives, families, chests of drawers, and eight-day clocks, in a steamboat
specially hired for their transport from Greenock to Liverpool. From
thence they came by special train to Patricroft, where houses were in
readiness for their reception. The arrival of so numerous, well-dressed,
and respectable a corps of workmen and their families was an event in the
neighbourhood, and could not fail to strike the "pickets" with surprise.
Next morning the sixty-four Scotchmen assembled in the yard at Patricroft,
and after giving "three cheers," went quietly to their work. The
"picketing" went on for a little while longer, but it was of no use
against a body of strong men who stood "shouther to shouther," as the new
hands did. It was even bruited about that there were more trains to
follow!" It very soon became clear that the back of the strike was broken.
The men returned to their work, and the clever brass founder continued at
his turning-lathe, from which he speedily rose to still higher employment.
Notwithstanding the losses and
suffering occasioned by strikes, Mr. Nasmyth holds the opinion that they
have on the whole produced much more good than evil. They have served to
stimulate invention in an extraordinary degree. Some of the most important
labour-saving processes now in common use are directly traceable to them.
In the case of many of our most potent self-acting tools and machines,
manufacturers could not be induced to adopt them until compelled to do so
by strikes. This was the ease with the self-acting mule, the wool-combing
machine, the planing machine, the slotting machine, Nasmyth's steam arm,
and many others. Thus, even in the mechanical world, there may be "a soul
of goodness in things evil."
Mr. Nasmyth retired from business in
December, 1856. He had the moral courage to come out of the groove which
he had so laboriously made for himself, and to leave a large and
prosperous business, saying, "I have now enough of this world's goods; let
younger men have their chance." He settled down at his rural retreat in
Kent, but not to lead a life of idle ease. Industry had become his habit,
and active occupation was necessary to his happiness. He fell back upon
the cultivation of those artistic tastes which are the heritage of his
family. When a boy at the High School of Edinburgh, he was so skilful in
making pen and ink illustrations on the margins of the classics, that he
thus often purchased from his monitors exemption from the lessons of the
day. Nor had he ceased to cultivate the art during his residence at
Patricroft, but was accustomed to fall back upon it for relaxation and
enjoyment amid the pursuits of trade. That he possesses remarkable
fertility of imagination, and great skill in architectural and landscape
drawing, as well as in the much more difficult art of delineating the
human figure, will be obvious to any one who has seen his works,--more
particularly his "City of St. Ann's," "The Fairies," and "Everybody for
ever!" which last was exhibited in Pall Mail, among the recent collection
of works of Art by amateurs and others, for relief of the Lancashire
distress. He has also brought his common sense to bear on such unlikely
subject's as the origin of the cuneiform character. The possession of a
brick from Babylon set him a thinking. How had it been manufactured? Its
under side was clearly marked by the sedges of the Euphrates upon which it
had been laid to dry and bake in the sun. But how about those curious
cuneiform characters? How had writing assumed so remarkable a form? His
surmise was this: that the brickmakers, in telling their tale of bricks,
used the triangular corner of another brick, and by pressing it down upon
the soft clay, left behind it the triangular mark which the cuneiform
character exhibits. Such marks repeated, and placed in different relations
to each other, would readily represent any number. From the use of the
corner of a brick in writing, the transition was easy to a pointed stick
with a triangular end, by the use of which all the cuneiform characters
can readily be produced upon the soft clay. This curious question formed
the subject of an interesting paper read by Mr. Nasmyth before the British
Association at Cheltenham.
But the most engrossing of Mr.
Nasmyth's later pursuits has been the science of astronomy, in which, by
bringing a fresh, original mind to the observation of celestial phenomena,
he has succeeded in making some of the most remarkable discoveries of our
time. Astronomy was one of his favourite pursuits at Patricroft, and on
his retirement became his serious study. By repeated observations with a
powerful reflecting telescope of his own construction, he succeeded in
making a very careful and minute painting of the craters, cracks,
mountains, and valleys in the moon's surface, for which a Council Medal
was awarded him at the Great Exhibition of 1851. But the most striking
discovery which he has made by means of big telescope--the result of
patient, continuous, and energetic observation--has been that of the
nature of the sun's surface, and the character of the extraordinary
light-giving bodies, apparently possessed of voluntary motion, moving
across it, sometimes forming spots or hollows of more than a hundred
thousand miles in diameter. The results of these observations were of so
novel a character that astronomers for some time hesitated to receive them
as facts. [footnote... See Memoirs of the Literary and Philosophical
Society of Manchester, 3rd series, vol.1. 407. ...]
Yet so eminent an astronomer as Sir
John Herschel does not hesitate now to describe them as "a most wonderful
discovery." "According to Mr. Nasmyth's observations," says he, "made with
a very fine telescope of his own making, the bright surface of the sun
consists of separate, insulated, individual objects or things, all nearly
or exactly of one certain definite size and shape, which is more like that
of a willow leaf, as he describes them, than anything else. These leaves
or scales are not arranged in any order (as those on a butterfly's wing
are), but lie crossing one another in all directions, like what are called
spills in the game of spillikins; except at the borders of a spot, where
they point for the most part inwards towards the middle of the spot,
[footnote... Sir John Herschel adds, "Spots of not very irregular, and
what may be called compact form, covering an area of between seven and
eight hundred millions of square miles, are by no means uncommon. One spot
which I measured in the year 1837 occupied no less than three thousand
seven hundred and eighty millions, taking in all the irregularities of its
form; and the black space or nucleus in the middle of one very nearly
round one would have allowed the earth to drop through it, leaving a
thousand clear miles on either side; and many instances of much larger
spots than these are on record." ...] presenting much the sort of
appearance that the small leaves of some water-plants or sea-weeds do at
the edge of a deep hole of clear water. The exceedingly definite shape of
these objects, their exact similarity one to another, and the way in which
they lie across and athwart each other (except where they form a sort of
bridge across a spot, in which case they seem to affect a common
direction, that, namely, of the bridge itself),--all these characters seem
quite repugnant to the notion of their being of a vaporous, a cloudy, or a
fluid nature. Nothing remains but to consider them as separate and
independent sheets, flakes, or scales, having some sort of solidity. And
these flakes, be they what they may, and whatever may be said about the
dashing of meteoric stones into the sun's atmosphere, &c., are evidently
THE IMMEDIATE SOURCES OF THE SOLAR LIGHT AND HEAT, by whatever mechanism
or whatever processes they may be enabled to develope and, as it were,
elaborate these elements from the bosom of the non-luminous fluid in which
they appear to float. Looked at in this point of view, we cannot refuse to
regard them as organisms of some peculiar and amazing kind; and though it
would be too daring to speak of such organization as partaking of the
nature of life, yet we do know that vital action is competent to develop
heat and light, as well as electricity. These wonderful objects have been
seen by others as well as Mr. Nasmyth, so that them is no room to doubt of
their reality." [footnote... SIR JOHN HERSCHEL in Good Words for April,
1863. ...]
Such is the marvellous discovery
made by the inventor of the steam-hammer, as described by the most
distinguished astronomer of the age. A writer in the Edinburgh Review,
referring to the subject in a recent number, says it shows him "to possess
an intellect as profound as it is expert." Doubtless his training as a
mechanic, his habits of close observation and his ready inventiveness,
which conferred so much power on him as an engineer, proved of equal
advantage to him when labouring in the domain of physical science.
Bringing a fresh mind, of keen perception, to his new studies, and
uninfluenced by preconceived opinions, he saw them in new and original
lights; and hence the extraordinary discovery above described by Sir John
Herschel.
Some two hundred years since, a
member of the Nasmyth family, Jean Nasmyth of Hamilton, was burnt for a
witch--one of the last martyrs to ignorance and superstition in
Scotland--because she read her Bible with two pairs of spectacles. Had Mr.
Nasmyth himself lived then, he might, with his two telescopes of his own
making, which bring the sun and moon into his chamber for him to examine
and paint, have been taken for a sorcerer. But fortunately for him, and
still more so for us, Mr. Nasmyth stands before the public of this age as
not only one of its ablest mechanics, but as one of the most accomplished
and original of scientific observers.