Charles Blacker Vignoles: Romantic Engineer
Charles Blacker Vignoles (1793–1875) has been somewhat overshadowed by his contemporaries, the Stephensons, Brunel and Locke. Yet from 1825 to 1870, he was continually involved in the field of civil engineering in the UK, Ireland and overseas. Among his achievements were the Tudela and Bilbao Railway in northern Spain, and the suspension bridge spanning the River Dnieper at Kiev, Russia, which at the time of its completion was one of the largest bridges of its kind in the world. This account, originally published in 1982, is based on a close study of original records, including a large volume of correspondence as well as Vignoles' extensive diaries in the British Library. The aim of the book is to put his engineering achievements into perspective in comparison with those of his contemporaries, and by drawing on his own account of himself to illuminate the personal background of one of the great pioneers of the Victorian age of civil engineering.
Product details
April 2010Paperback
9780521135399
200 pages
244 × 170 × 11 mm
0.33kg
Available
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- 1. The infant ensign, 1793–1817
- 2. South Carolina and Florida, 1817–23
- 3. The Liverpool and Manchester Railway, 1823–27
- 4. The struggle for recognition, 1827–32
- 5. The Dublin and Kingstown Railway and the Irish Railway Commission, 1832–9
- 6. The North Union, the Midland Counties railways, and the Vignoles rail, 1834–9
- 7. The Sheffield and Manchester disaster, 1835–40
- 8. The difficult years, 1841–4
- 9. The 'Railway Mania', 1844–6
- 10. The Kiev Bridge I, 1846–9
- 11. The Kiev Bridge II, 1849–53
- 12. The last works, 1847–63
- 13. The end of a career, 1863–75
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.