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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Industrial Biography, by Samuel Smiles
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Industrial Biography
+ Iron Workers and Tool Makers
+
+Author: Samuel Smiles
+
+Release Date: March 6, 2008 [EBook #404]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDUSTRIAL BIOGRAPHY ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Updater's note: The previous version's footnotes were embedded
+into their respective paragraphs. In this version, each chapter's
+footnotes have been renumbered sequentially and moved to the end
+of their chapter.]
+
+
+
+
+
+INDUSTRIAL BIOGRAPHY
+
+Iron Workers and Tool Makers
+
+
+by Samuel Smiles
+
+
+(This etext was produced from a reprint of the 1863 first edition)
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+The Author offers the following book as a continuation, in a more
+generally accessible form, of the Series of Memoirs of Industrial Men
+introduced in his Lives of the Engineers. While preparing that work he
+frequently came across the tracks of celebrated inventors, mechanics,
+and iron-workers--the founders, in a great measure, of the modern
+industry of Britain--whose labours seemed to him well worthy of being
+traced out and placed on record, and the more so as their lives
+presented many points of curious and original interest. Having been
+encouraged to prosecute the subject by offers of assistance from some
+of the most eminent living mechanical engineers, he is now enabled to
+present the following further series of memoirs to the public.
+
+Without exaggerating the importance of this class of biography, it may
+at least be averred that it has not yet received its due share of
+attention. While commemorating the labours and honouring the names of
+those who have striven to elevate man above the material and
+mechanical, the labours of the important industrial class to whom
+society owes so much of its comfort and well-being are also entitled to
+consideration. Without derogating from the biographic claims of those
+who minister to intellect and taste, those who minister to utility need
+not be overlooked. When a Frenchman was praising to Sir John Sinclair
+the artist who invented ruffles, the Baronet shrewdly remarked that
+some merit was also due to the man who added the shirt.
+
+A distinguished living mechanic thus expresses himself to the Author on
+this point:--"Kings, warriors, and statesmen have heretofore
+monopolized not only the pages of history, but almost those of
+biography. Surely some niche ought to be found for the Mechanic,
+without whose skill and labour society, as it is, could not exist. I
+do not begrudge destructive heroes their fame, but the constructive
+ones ought not to be forgotten; and there IS a heroism of skill and
+toil belonging to the latter class, worthy of as grateful record,--less
+perilous and romantic, it may be, than that of the other, but not less
+full of the results of human energy, bravery, and character. The lot
+of labour is indeed often a dull one; and it is doing a public service
+to endeavour to lighten it up by records of the struggles and triumphs
+of our more illustrious workers, and the results of their labours in
+the cause of human advancement."
+
+As respects the preparation of the following memoirs, the Author's
+principal task has consisted in selecting and arranging the materials
+so liberally placed at his disposal by gentlemen for the most part
+personally acquainted with the subjects of them, and but for whose
+assistance the book could not have been written. The materials for the
+biography of Henry Maudslay, for instance, have been partly supplied by
+the late Mr. Joshua Field, F.R.S. (his partner), but principally by Mr.
+James Nasmyth, C.E., his distinguished pupil. In like manner Mr. John
+Penn, C.E., has supplied the chief materials for the memoir of Joseph
+Clement, assisted by Mr. Wilkinson, Clement's nephew. The Author has
+also had the valuable assistance of Mr. William Fairbairn, F.R.S., Mr.
+J. O. March, tool manufacturer (Mayor of Leeds), Mr. Richard Roberts,
+C.E., Mr. Henry Maudslay, C.E., and Mr. J. Kitson, Jun., iron
+manufacturer, Leeds, in the preparation of the other memoirs of
+mechanical engineers included in this volume.
+
+The materials for the memoirs of the early iron-workers have in like
+manner been obtained for the most part from original sources; those of
+the Darbys and Reynoldses from Mr. Dickinson of Coalbrookdale, Mr.
+William Reynolds of Coed-du, and Mr. William G. Norris of the former
+place, as well as from Mr. Anstice of Madeley Wood, who has kindly
+supplied the original records of the firm. The substance of the
+biography of Benjamin Huntsman, the inventor of cast-steel, has been
+furnished by his lineal representatives; and the facts embodied in the
+memoirs of Henry Cort and David Mushet have been supplied by the sons
+of those inventors. To Mr. Anderson Kirkwood of Glasgow the Author is
+indebted for the memoir of James Beaumont Neilson, inventor of the hot
+blast; and to Mr. Ralph Moore, Inspector of Mines in Scotland, for
+various information relative to the progress of the Scotch iron
+manufacture.
+
+The memoirs of Dud Dudley and Andrew Yarranton are almost the only ones
+of the series in preparing which material assistance has been derived
+from books; but these have been largely illustrated by facts contained
+in original documents preserved in the State Paper Office, the careful
+examination of which has been conducted by Mr. W. Walker Wilkins.
+
+It will thus be observed that most of the information embodied in this
+volume, more especially that relating to the inventors of tools and
+machines, has heretofore existed only in the memories of the eminent
+mechanical engineers from whom it has been collected. The estimable
+Joshua Field has died since the date at which he communicated his
+recollections; and in a few more years many of the facts which have
+been caught and are here placed on record would, probably, in the
+ordinary course of things, have passed into oblivion. As it is, the
+Author feels that there are many gaps yet to be filled up; but the
+field of Industrial Biography is a wide one, and is open to all who
+will labour in it.
+
+London, October, 1863.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IRON AND CIVILIZATION.
+
+ The South Sea Islanders and iron
+ Uses of iron for tools
+ The Stone, Bronze, and Iron ages
+ Recent discoveries in the beds of the Swiss lakes
+ Iron the last metal to come into general use, and why
+ The first iron smelters
+ Early history of iron in Britain
+ The Romans
+ Social importance of the Smith in early times
+ Enchanted swords
+ Early scarcity of iron in Scotland
+ Andrea de Ferrara
+ Scarcity of iron in England at the time of the Armada
+ Importance of iron for national defence
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+BEGINNINGS OF THE IRON-MANUFACTURER IN BRITAIN.
+
+ Iron made in the Forest of Dean in Anglo-Saxon times
+ Monkish iron-workers
+ Early iron-smelting in Yorkshire
+ Much iron imported from abroad
+ Iron manufactures of Sussex
+ Manufacture of cannon
+ Wealthy ironmasters of Sussex
+ Founder of the Gale family
+ Extensive exports of English ordnance
+ Destruction of timber in iron-smelting
+ The manufacture placed under restrictions
+ The Sussex furnaces blown out
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IRON SMELTING BY PIT-COAL--DUD DUDLEY.
+
+ Greatly reduced production of English iron
+ Proposal to use pit-coal instead of charcoal of wood in smelting
+ Sturtevant's patent
+ Rovenson's
+ Dud Dudley; his family his history
+ Uses pit-coal to smelt iron with success
+ Takes out his patent
+ The quality of the iron proved by tests
+ Dudley's works swept away by a flood
+ Rebuilds his works, and they are destroyed by a mob
+ Renewal of his patent
+ Outbreak of the Civil War
+ Dudley joins the Royalists, and rises to be General of artillery
+ His perilous adventures and hair-breadth escapes
+ His estate confiscated
+ Recommences iron-smelting
+ Various attempts to smelt with pit-coal
+ Dudley's petitions to the King
+ His death
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ANDREW YARRANTON.
+
+ A forgotten patriot
+ The Yarranton family
+ Andrew Yarranton's early life
+ A soldier under the Parliament
+ Begins iron works
+ Is seized and imprisoned
+ His plans for improving internal navigation
+ Improvements in agriculture
+ Manufacture of tin plate
+ His journey into Saxony to learn it
+ Travels in Holland
+ His views of trade and industry
+ His various projects
+ His 'England's Improvement by Sea and Land'
+ His proposed Land Bank
+ His proposed Registry of Real Estate
+ His controversies
+ His iron-mining
+ Value of his labours
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+COALBROOKDALE IRON WORKS--THE DARBYS AND REYNOLDSES.
+
+ Failure in the attempts to smelt iron with pit-coal
+ Dr. Blewstone's experiment
+ Decay of the iron manufacture
+ Abraham Darby
+ His manufacture of cast-iron pots at Bristol
+ Removes to Coalbrookdale
+ His method of smelting iron
+ Increased use of coke
+ Use of pit-coal by Richard Ford
+ Richard Reynolds joins the Coalbrookdale firm
+ Invention of the Craneges in iron-refining
+ Letter of Richard Reynolds on the subject
+ Invention of cast-iron rails by Reynolds
+ Abraham Darby the Second constructs the first iron bridge
+ Extension of the Coalbrookdale Works
+ William Reynolds: his invention of inclined planes for working canals
+ Retirement of Richard Reynolds from the firm
+ His later years, character, and death
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+INVENTION OF CAST STEEL--BENJAMIN HUNTSMAN.
+
+ Conversion of iron into steel
+ Early Sheffield manufactures
+ Invention of blistered steel
+ Important uses of cast-steel
+ Le Play's writings on the subject
+ Early career of Benjamin Huntsman at Doncaster
+ His experiments in steel-making
+ Removes to the neighbourhood of Sheffield
+ His laborious investigations, failures, and eventual success
+ Process of making cast-steel
+ The Sheffield manufacturers refuse to use it
+ Their opposition foiled
+ How they wrested Huntsman's secret from him
+ Important results of the invention to the industry of Sheffield
+ Henry Bessemer and his process
+ Heath's invention
+ Practical skill of the Sheffield artisans
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE INVENTIONS OF HENRY CORT.
+
+ Parentage of Henry Cort
+ Becomes a navy agent
+ State of the iron trade
+ Cort's experiments in iron-making
+ Takes a foundry at Fontley
+ Partnership with Jellicoe
+ Various improvers in iron-making: Roebuck, Cranege, Onions
+ Cort's improved processes described
+ His patents
+ His inventions adopted by Crawshay, Homfray, and other ironmasters
+ Cort's iron approved by the Admiralty
+ Public defalcations of Adam Jellicoe, Cort's partner
+ Cort's property and patents confiscated
+ Public proceedings thereon
+ Ruin of Henry Cort
+ Account of Richard Crawshay, the great ironmaster
+ His early life
+ Ironmonger in London
+ Starts an iron-furnace at Merthyr Tydvil
+ Projects and makes a canal
+ Growth of Merthyr Tydvil and its industry
+ Henry Cort the founder of the iron aristocracy, himself unrewarded
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SCOTCH IRON MANUFACTURE--Dr. ROEBUCK--DAVID MUSHET.
+
+ Dr. Roebuck, a forgotten public benefactor
+ His birth and education
+ Begins business as a physician at Birmingham
+ Investigations in metallurgy
+ Removes to Scotland, and begins the manufacture of chemicals, &c.
+ Starts the Carron Iron Works, near Falkirk
+ His invention of refining iron in a pit-coal fire
+ Embarks in coal-mining at Boroughstoness
+ Residence at Kinneil House
+ Pumping-engines wanted for his colliery
+ Is introduced to James Watt
+ Progress of Watt in inventing the steam-engine
+ Interviews with Dr. Roebuck
+ Roebuck becomes a partner in the steam-engine patent
+ Is involved in difficulties, and eventually ruined
+ Advance of the Scotch iron trade
+ Discovery of the Black Band by David Mushet
+ Early career of Mushet
+ His laborious experiments
+ His inventions and discoveries in iron and steel, and death
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+INVENTION OF THE HOT BLAST--JAMES BEAUMONT NEILSON.
+
+ Difficulty of smelting the Black Band by ordinary process until the
+ invention of the hot blast
+ Early career of James Beaumont Neilson
+ Education and apprenticeship
+ Works as an engine-fireman
+ As colliery engine-wright
+ Appointed foreman of the Glasgow Gas-works; afterwards manager
+ and engineer
+ His self-education
+ His Workmen's Institute
+ His experiments in iron-smelting
+ Trials with heated air in the blast-furnace
+ Incredulity of ironmasters
+ Success of his experiments, and patenting of his process
+ His patent right disputed, and established
+ Extensive application of the hot blast
+ Increase of the Scotch iron trade
+ Extraordinary increase in the value of estates yielding Black Band
+ Scotch iron aristocracy
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MECHANICAL INVENTIONS AND INVENTORS.
+
+ Tools and civilization
+ The beginnings of tools
+ Dexterity of hand chiefly relied on
+ Opposition to manufacturing machines
+ Gradual process of invention
+ The human race the true inventor
+ Obscure origin of many inventions
+ Inventions born before their time
+ "Nothing new under the sun"
+ The power of steam known to the ancients
+ Passage from Roger Bacon
+ Old inventions revived
+ Printing
+ Atmospheric locomotion
+ The balloon
+ The reaping machine
+ Tunnels
+ Gunpowder
+ Ancient firearms
+ The steam gun
+ The Congreve rocket
+ Coal-gas
+ Hydropathy
+ Anaesthetic agents
+ The Daguerreotype anticipated
+ The electric telegraph not new
+ Forgotten inventors
+ Disputed inventions
+ Simultaneous inventions
+ Inventions made step by step
+ James Watt's difficulties with his workmen
+ Improvements in modern machine-tools
+ Their perfection
+ The engines of "The Warrior"
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+JOSEPH BRAMAH.
+
+ The inventive faculty
+ Joseph Bramah's early life
+ His amateur work
+ Apprenticed to a carpenter
+ Starts as cabinet-maker in London
+ Takes out a patent for his water-closet
+ Makes pumps and ironwork
+ Invention of his lock
+ Invents tools required in lock-making
+ Invents his hydrostatic machine
+ His hydraulic press
+ The leathern collar invented by Henry Maudslay
+ Bramah's other inventions
+ His fire-engine
+ His beer-pump
+ Improvements in the steam-engine
+ His improvements in machine-tools
+ His number-printing machine
+ His pen-cutter
+ His hydraulic machinery
+ Practises as civil engineer
+ Altercation with William Huntington, "S.S."
+ Bramah's character and death
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+HENRY MAUDSLAY.
+
+ The Maudslays
+ Henry Maudslay
+ Employed as powder-boy in Woolwich Arsenal
+ Advanced to the blacksmiths' shop
+ His early dexterity in smith-work
+ His "trivet" making
+ Employed by Bramah
+ Proves himself a first-class workman
+ Advanced to be foreman of the works
+ His inventions of tools required for lock-making
+ His invention of the leathern collar in the hydraulic press
+ Leaves Bramah's service and begins business for himself
+ His first smithy in Wells Street
+ His first job
+ Invention of the slide-lathe
+ Resume of the history of the turning-lathe
+ Imperfection of tools about the middle of last century
+ The hand-lathe
+ Great advantages of the slide rest
+ First extensively used in constructing Brunel's Block Machinery
+ Memoir of Brunel
+ Manufacture of ships' blocks
+ Sir S. Bentham's specifications
+ Introduction of Brunel to Maudslay
+ The block-machinery made, and its success
+ Increased operations of the firm
+ Improvements in the steam-engine
+ Invention of the punching-machine
+ Further improvements in the slide-lathe
+ Screw-cutting machine
+ Maudslay a dexterous and thoughtful workman
+ His character described by his pupil, James Nasmyth
+ Anecdotes and traits
+ Maudslay's works a first-class school for workmen
+ His mode of estimating character
+ His death
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+JOSEPH CLEMENT.
+
+ Skill in contrivance a matter of education
+ Birth and parentage of Joseph Clement
+ Apprenticed to the trade of a slater
+ His skill in amateur work
+ Makes a turning-lathe
+ Gives up slating, and becomes a mechanic
+ Employed at Kirby Stephen in making power-looms
+ Removes to Carlisle
+ Glasgow
+ Peter Nicholson teaches him drawing
+ Removes to Aberdeen
+ Works as a mechanic and attends College
+ London
+ Employed by Alexander Galloway
+ Employed by Bramah
+ Advanced to be foreman
+ Draughtsman at Maudslay and Field's
+ Begins business on his own account
+ His skill as a mechanical draughtsman
+ Invents his drawing instrument
+ His drawing-table
+ His improvements in the self-acting lathe
+ His double-driving centre-chuck and two-armed driver
+ His fluted taps and dies
+ Invention of his Planing Machine
+ Employed to make Babbage's Calculating Machine
+ Resume of the history of apparatus for making calculations
+ Babbage's engine proceeded with
+ Its great cost
+ Interruption of the work
+ Clement's steam-whistles
+ Makes an organ
+ Character and death
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+FOX OF DERBY--MURRAY OF LEEDS--ROBERTS AND WHITWORTH OF MANCHESTER.
+
+ The first Fox of Derby originally a butler
+ His genius for mechanics
+ Begins business as a machinist
+ Invents a Planing Machine
+ Matthew Murray's Planing Machine
+ Murray's early career
+ Employed as a blacksmith by Marshall of Leeds
+ His improvements of flax-machinery
+ Improvements in steam-engines
+ Makes the first working locomotive for Mr. Blenkinsop
+ Invents the Heckling Machine
+ His improvements in tools
+ Richard Roberts of Manchester
+ First a quarryman, next a pattern-maker
+ Drawn for the militia, and flies
+ His travels
+ His first employment at Manchester
+ Goes to London, and works at Maudslay's
+ Roberts's numerous inventions
+ Invents a planing machine
+ The self-acting mule
+ Iron billiard-tables
+ Improvements in the locomotive
+ Invents the Jacquard punching machine
+ Makes turret-clocks and electro-magnets
+ Improvement in screw-steamships
+ Mr. Whitworth's improvement of the planing machine
+ His method of securing true surfaces
+ His great mechanical skill
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+JAMES NASMYTH.
+
+ Traditional origin of the Naesmyths
+ Alexander Nasmyth the painter, and his family
+ Early years of James Nasmyth
+ The story of his life told by himself
+ Becomes a pupil of Henry Maudslay
+ How he lived and worked in London
+ Begins business at Manchester
+ Story of the invention of the Steam Hammer
+ The important uses of the Hammer in modern engineering
+ Invents the steam pile-driving machine
+ Designs a new form of steam-engine
+ Other inventions
+ How he "Scotched" a strike
+ Uses of strikes
+ Retirement from business
+ Skill as a draughtsman
+ Curious speculations on antiquarian subjects
+ Mr. Nasmyth's wonderful discoveries in Astronomy
+ described by Sir John Herschel
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+WILLIAM FAIRBAIRN.
+
+ Summary of progress in machine-tools
+ William Fairbairn's early years
+ His education
+ Life in the Highlands
+ Begins work at Kelso Bridge
+ An apprentice at Percy Main Colliery, North Shields
+ Diligent self-culture
+ Voyage to London
+ Adventures
+ Prevented obtaining work by the Millwrights' Union
+ Travels into the country, finds work, and returns to London
+ His first order, to make a sausage-chopping machine
+ Wanderschaft
+ Makes nail-machinery for a Dublin employer
+ Proceeds to Manchester, where he settles and marries
+ Begins business
+ His first job
+ Partnership with Mr. Lillie
+ Employed by Messrs. Adam Murray and Co.
+ Employed by Messrs. MacConnel and Kennedy
+ Progress of the Cotton Trade
+ Memoir of John Kennedy
+ Mr. Fairbairn introduces great improvements in the gearing, &c.
+ of mill machinery
+ Increasing business Improvements in water-wheels
+ Experiments as to the law of traction of boats
+ Begins building iron ships
+ Experiments on the strength of wrought iron
+ Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges
+ Reports on iron
+ On boiler explosions
+ Iron construction
+ Extended use of iron
+ Its importance in civilization
+ Opinion of Mr. Cobden
+ Importance of modern machine-tools
+ Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+INDUSTRIAL BIOGRAPHY.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IRON AND CIVILIZATION.
+
+"Iron is not only the soul of every other manufacture, but the main
+spring perhaps of civilized society."--FRANCIS HORNER.
+
+"Were the use of iron lost among us, we should in a few ages be
+unavoidably reduced to the wants and ignorance of the ancient savage
+Americans; so that he who first made known the use of that contemptible
+mineral may be truly styled the father of Arts and the author of
+Plenty."--JOHN LOCKE.
+
+
+When Captain Cook and the early navigators first sailed into the South
+Seas on their voyages of discovery, one of the things that struck them
+with most surprise was the avidity which the natives displayed for
+iron. "Nothing would go down with our visitors," says Cook, "but
+metal; and iron was their beloved article." A nail would buy a
+good-sized pig; and on one occasion the navigator bought some four
+hundred pounds weight of fish for a few wretched knives improvised out
+of an old hoop.
+
+"For iron tools," says Captain Carteret, "we might have purchased
+everything upon the Freewill Islands that we could have brought away.
+A few pieces of old iron hoop presented to one of the natives threw him
+into an ecstasy little short of distraction." At Otaheite the people
+were found generally well-behaved and honest; but they were not proof
+against the fascinations of iron. Captain Cook says that one of them,
+after resisting all other temptations, "was at length ensnared by the
+charms of basket of nails." Another lurked about for several days,
+watching the opportunity to steal a coal-rake.
+
+The navigators found they could pay their way from island to island
+merely with scraps of iron, which were as useful for the purpose as
+gold coins would have been in Europe. The drain, however, being
+continuous, Captain Cook became alarmed at finding his currency almost
+exhausted; and he relates his joy on recovering an old anchor which the
+French Captain Bougainville had lost at Bolabola, on which he felt as
+an English banker would do after a severe run upon him for gold, when
+suddenly placed in possession of a fresh store of bullion.
+
+The avidity for iron displayed by these poor islanders will not be
+wondered at when we consider that whoever among them was so fortunate
+as to obtain possession of an old nail, immediately became a man of
+greater power than his fellows, and assumed the rank of a capitalist.
+"An Otaheitan chief," says Cook, "who had got two nails in his
+possession, received no small emolument by letting out the use of them
+to his neighbours for the purpose of boring holes when their own
+methods failed, or were thought too tedious."
+
+The native methods referred to by Cook were of a very clumsy sort; the
+principal tools of the Otaheitans being of wood, stone, and flint.
+Their adzes and axes were of stone. The gouge most commonly used by
+them was made out of the bone of the human forearm. Their substitute
+for a knife was a shell, or a bit of flint or jasper. A shark's tooth,
+fixed to a piece of wood, served for an auger; a piece of coral for a
+file; and the skin of a sting-ray for a polisher. Their saw was made
+of jagged fishes' teeth fixed on the convex edge of a piece of hard
+wood. Their weapons were of a similarly rude description; their clubs
+and axes were headed with stone, and their lances and arrows were
+tipped with flint. Fire was another agency employed by them, usually
+in boat-building. Thus, the New Zealanders, whose tools were also of
+stone, wood, or bone, made their boats of the trunks of trees hollowed
+out by fire.
+
+The stone implements were fashioned, Captain Cook says, by rubbing one
+stone upon another until brought to the required shape; but, after all,
+they were found very inefficient for their purpose. They soon became
+blunted and useless; and the laborious process of making new tools had
+to be begun again. The delight of the islanders at being put in
+possession of a material which was capable of taking a comparatively
+sharp edge and keeping it, may therefore readily be imagined; and hence
+the remarkable incidents to which we have referred in the experience of
+the early voyagers. In the minds of the natives, iron became the
+representative of power, efficiency, and wealth; and they were ready
+almost to fall down and worship their new tools, esteeming the axe as a
+deity, offering sacrifices to the saw, and holding the knife in
+especial veneration.
+
+In the infancy of all nations the same difficulties must have been
+experienced for want of tools, before the arts of smelting and working
+in metals had become known; and it is not improbable that the
+Phoenician navigators who first frequented our coasts found the same
+avidity for bronze and iron existing among the poor woad-stained
+Britons who flocked down to the shore to see their ships and exchange
+food and skins with them, that Captain Cook discovered more than two
+thousand years later among the natives of Otaheite and New Zealand.
+For, the tools and weapons found in ancient burying-places in all parts
+of Britain clearly show that these islands also have passed through the
+epoch of stone and flint.
+
+There was recently exhibited at the Crystal Palace a collection of
+ancient European weapons and implements placed alongside a similar
+collection of articles brought from the South Seas; and they were in
+most respects so much alike that it was difficult to believe that they
+did not belong to the same race and period, instead of being the
+implements of races sundered by half the globe, and living at periods
+more than two thousand years apart. Nearly every weapon in the one
+collection had its counterpart in the other,--the mauls or celts of
+stone, the spearheads of flint or jasper, the arrowheads of flint or
+bone, and the saws of jagged stone, showing how human ingenuity, under
+like circumstances, had resorted to like expedients. It would also
+appear that the ancient tribes in these islands, like the New
+Zealanders, used fire to hollow out their larger boats; several
+specimens of this kind of vessel having recently been dug up in the
+valleys of the Witham and the Clyde, some of the latter from under the
+very streets of modern Glasgow.[1] Their smaller boats, or coracles,
+were made of osiers interwoven, covered with hides, and rigged with
+leathern sails and thong tackle.
+
+It will readily be imagined that anything like civilization, as at
+present understood, must have been next to impossible under such
+circumstances. "Miserable indeed," says Carlyle, "was the condition of
+the aboriginal savage, glaring fiercely from under his fleece of hair,
+which with the beard reached down to his loins, and hung round them
+like a matted cloak; the rest of his body sheeted in its thick natural
+fell. He loitered in the sunny glades of the forest, living on wild
+fruits; or, as the ancient Caledonians, squatted himself in morasses,
+lurking for his bestial or human prey; without implements, without
+arms, save the ball of heavy flint, to which, that his sole possession
+and defence might not be lost, he had attached a long cord of plaited
+thongs; thereby recovering as well as hurling it with deadly, unerring
+skill."
+
+The injunction given to man to "replenish the earth and subdue it"
+could not possibly be fulfilled with implements of stone. To fell a
+tree with a flint hatchet would occupy the labour of a month, and to
+clear a small patch of ground for purposes of culture would require the
+combined efforts of a tribe. For the same reason, dwellings could not
+be erected; and without dwellings domestic tranquillity, security,
+culture, and refinement, especially in a rude climate, were all but
+impossible. Mr. Emerson well observes, that "the effect of a house is
+immense on human tranquillity, power, and refinement. A man in a cave
+or a camp--a nomad--dies with no more estate than the wolf or the horse
+leaves. But so simple a labour as a house being achieved, his chief
+enemies are kept at bay. He is safe from the teeth of wild animals,
+from frost, sunstroke, and weather; and fine faculties begin to yield
+their fine harvest. Inventions and arts are born, manners, and social
+beauty and delight." But to build a house which should serve for
+shelter, for safety, and for comfort--in a word, as a home for the
+family, which is the nucleus of society--better tools than those of
+stone were absolutely indispensable.
+
+Hence most of the early European tribes were nomadic: first hunters,
+wandering about from place to place like the American Indians, after
+the game; then shepherds, following the herds of animals which they had
+learnt to tame, from one grazing-ground to another, living upon their
+milk and flesh, and clothing themselves in their skins held together by
+leathern thongs. It was only when implements of metal had been
+invented that it was possible to practise the art of agriculture with
+any considerable success. Then tribes would cease from their
+wanderings, and begin to form settlements, homesteads, villages, and
+towns. An old Scandinavian legend thus curiously illustrates this last
+period:--There was a giantess whose daughter one day saw a husbandman
+ploughing in the field. She ran and picked him up with her finger and
+thumb, put him and his plough and oxen into her apron, and carried them
+to her mother, saying, "Mother, what sort of beetle is this that I have
+found wriggling in the sand?" But the mother said, "Put it away, my
+child; we must begone out of this land, for these people will dwell in
+it."
+
+M. Worsaae of Copenhagen, who has been followed by other antiquaries,
+has even gone so far as to divide the natural history of civilization
+into three epochs, according to the character of the tools used in
+each. The first was the Stone period, in which the implements chiefly
+used were sticks, bones, stones, and flints. The next was the Bronze
+period, distinguished by the introduction and general use of a metal
+composed of copper and tin, requiring a comparatively low degree of
+temperature to smelt it, and render it capable of being fashioned into
+weapons, tools, and implements; to make which, however, indicated a
+great advance in experience, sagacity, and skill in the manipulation of
+metals. With tools of bronze, to which considerable hardness could be
+given, trees were felled, stones hewn, houses and ships built, and
+agriculture practised with comparative facility. Last of all came the
+Iron period, when the art of smelting and working that most difficult
+but widely diffused of the minerals was discovered; from which point
+the progress made in all the arts of life has been of the most
+remarkable character.
+
+Although Mr. Wright rejects this classification as empirical, because
+the periods are not capable of being clearly defined, and all the three
+kinds of implements are found to have been in use at or about the same
+time,[2] there is, nevertheless, reason to believe that it is, on the
+whole, well founded. It is doubtless true that implements of stone
+continued in use long after those of bronze and iron had been invented,
+arising most probably from the dearness and scarcity of articles of
+metal; but when the art of smelting and working in iron and steel had
+sufficiently advanced, the use of stone, and afterwards of bronze tools
+and weapons, altogether ceased.
+
+The views of M. Worsaae, and the other Continental antiquarians who
+follow his classification, have indeed received remarkable confirmation
+of late years, by the discoveries which have been made in the beds of
+most of the Swiss lakes.[3] It appears that a subsidence took place in
+the waters of the Lake of Zurich in the year 1854, laying bare
+considerable portions of its bed. The adjoining proprietors proceeded
+to enclose the new land, and began by erecting permanent dykes to
+prevent the return of the waters. While carrying on the works, several
+rows of stakes were exposed; and on digging down, the labourers turned
+up a number of pieces of charred wood, stones blackened by fire,
+utensils, bones, and other articles, showing that at some remote
+period, a number of human beings had lived over the spot, in dwellings
+supported by stakes driven into the bed of the lake.
+
+The discovery having attracted attention, explorations were made at
+other places, and it was shortly found that there was scarcely a lake
+in Switzerland which did not yield similar evidence of the existence of
+an ancient Lacustrine or Lake-dwelling population. Numbers of their
+tools and implements were brought to light--stone axes and saws, flint
+arrowheads, bone needles, and such like--mixed with the bones of wild
+animals slain in the chase; pieces of old boats, portions of twisted
+branches, bark, and rough planking, of which their dwellings had been
+formed, the latter still bearing the marks of the rude tools by which
+they had been laboriously cut. In the most ancient, or lowest series
+of deposits, no traces of metal, either of bronze or iron, were
+discovered; and it is most probable that these lake-dwellers lived in
+as primitive a state as the South Sea islanders discovered by Captain
+Cook, and that the huts over the water in which they lived resembled
+those found in Papua and Borneo, and the islands of the Salomon group,
+to this day.
+
+These aboriginal Swiss lake-dwellers seem to have been succeeded by a
+race of men using tools, implements, and ornaments of bronze. In some
+places the remains of this bronze period directly overlay those of the
+stone period, showing the latter to have been the most ancient; but in
+others, the village sites are altogether distinct. The articles with
+which the metal implements are intermixed, show that considerable
+progress had been made in the useful arts. The potter's wheel had been
+introduced. Agriculture had begun, and wild animals had given place to
+tame ones. The abundance of bronze also shows that commerce must have
+existed to a certain extent; for tin, which enters into its
+composition, is a comparatively rare metal, and must necessarily have
+been imported from other European countries.
+
+The Swiss antiquarians are of opinion that the men of bronze suddenly
+invaded and extirpated the men of flint; and that at some still later
+period, another stronger and more skilful race, supposed to have been
+Celts from Gaul, came armed with iron weapons, to whom the men of
+bronze succumbed, or with whom, more probably, they gradually
+intermingled. When iron, or rather steel, came into use, its
+superiority in affording a cutting edge was so decisive that it seems
+to have supplanted bronze almost at once;[4] the latter metal
+continuing to be employed only for the purpose of making scabbards or
+sword-handles. Shortly after the commencement of the iron age, the
+lake-habitations were abandoned, the only settlement of this later
+epoch yet discovered being that at Tene, on Lake Neufchatel: and it is
+a remarkable circumstance, showing the great antiquity of the
+lake-dwellings, that they are not mentioned by any of the Roman
+historians.
+
+That iron should have been one of the last of the metals to come into
+general use, is partly accounted for by the circumstance that iron,
+though one of the most generally diffused of minerals, never presents
+itself in a natural state, except in meteorites; and that to recognise
+its ores, and then to separate the metal from its matrix, demands the
+exercise of no small amount of observation and invention. Persons
+unacquainted with minerals would be unable to discover the slightest
+affinity between the rough ironstone as brought up from the mine, and
+the iron or steel of commerce. To unpractised eyes they would seem to
+possess no properties in common, and it is only after subjecting the
+stone to severe processes of manufacture that usable metal can be
+obtained from it. The effectual reduction of the ore requires an
+intense heat, maintained by artificial methods, such as furnaces and
+blowing apparatus.[5] But it is principally in combination with other
+elements that iron is so valuable when compared with other metals.
+Thus, when combined with carbon, in varying proportions, substances are
+produced, so different, but each so valuable, that they might almost be
+regarded in the light of distinct metals,--such, for example, as
+cast-iron, and cast and bar steel; the various qualities of iron
+enabling it to be used for purposes so opposite as a steel pen and a
+railroad, the needle of a mariner's compass and an Armstrong gun, a
+surgeon's lancet and a steam engine, the mainspring of a watch and an
+iron ship, a pair of scissors and a Nasmyth hammer, a lady's earrings
+and a tubular bridge.
+
+The variety of purposes to which iron is thus capable of being applied,
+renders it of more use to mankind than all the other metals combined.
+Unlike iron, gold is found pure, and in an almost workable state; and
+at an early period in history, it seems to have been much more
+plentiful than iron or steel. But gold was unsuited for the purposes
+of tools, and would serve for neither a saw, a chisel, an axe, nor a
+sword; whilst tempered steel could answer all these purposes. Hence we
+find the early warlike nations making the backs of their swords of gold
+or copper, and economizing their steel to form the cutting edge. This
+is illustrated by many ancient Scandinavian weapons in the museum at
+Copenhagen, which indicate the greatest parsimony in the use of steel
+at a period when both gold and copper appear to have been comparatively
+abundant.
+
+The knowledge of smelting and working in iron, like most other arts,
+came from the East. Iron was especially valued for purposes of war, of
+which indeed it was regarded as the symbol, being called "Mars" by the
+Romans.[6] We find frequent mention of it in the Bible. One of the
+earliest notices of the metal is in connexion with the conquest of
+Judea by the Philistines. To complete the subjection of the
+Israelites, their conquerors made captive all the smiths of the land,
+and carried them away. The Philistines felt that their hold of the
+country was insecure so long as the inhabitants possessed the means of
+forging weapons. Hence "there was no smith found throughout all the
+land of Israel; for the Philistines said, Lest the Hebrews make them
+swords or spears. But the Israelites went down to the Philistines, to
+sharpen every man his share, and his coulter, and his axe, and his
+mattock." [7]
+
+At a later period, when Jerusalem was taken by the Babylonians, one of
+their first acts was to carry the smiths and other craftsmen captives
+to Babylon.[8] Deprived of their armourers, the Jews were rendered
+comparatively powerless.
+
+It was the knowledge of the art of iron-forging which laid the
+foundation of the once great empire of the Turks. Gibbon relates that
+these people were originally the despised slaves of the powerful Khan
+of the Geougen. They occupied certain districts of the mountain-ridge
+in the centre of Asia, called Imaus, Caf, and Altai, which yielded iron
+in large quantities. This metal the Turks were employed by the Khan to
+forge for his use in war. A bold leader arose among them, who
+persuaded the ironworkers that the arms which they forged for their
+masters might in their own hands become the instruments of freedom.
+Sallying forth from their mountains, they set up their standard, and
+their weapons soon freed them. For centuries after, the Turkish nation
+continued to celebrate the event of their liberation by an annual
+ceremony, in which a piece of iron was heated in the fire, and a
+smith's hammer was successively handled by the prince and his nobles.
+
+We can only conjecture how the art of smelting iron was discovered.
+Who first applied fire to the ore, and made it plastic; who discovered
+fire itself, and its uses in metallurgy? No one can tell. Tradition
+says that the metal was discovered through the accidental burning of a
+wood in Greece. Mr. Mushet thinks it more probable that the discovery
+was made on the conversion of wood into charcoal for culinary or
+chamber purposes. "If a mass of ore," he says, "accidentally dropped
+into the middle of the burning pile during a period of neglect, or
+during the existence of a thorough draught, a mixed mass, partly earthy
+and partly metallic, would be obtained, possessing ductility and
+extension under pressure. But if the conjecture is pushed still
+further, and we suppose that the ore was not an oxide, but rich in
+iron, magnetic or spicular, the result would in all probability be a
+mass of perfectly malleable iron. I have seen this fact illustrated in
+the roasting of a species of iron-stone, which was united with a
+considerable mass of bituminous matter. After a high temperature had
+been excited in the interior of the pile, plates of malleable iron of a
+tough and flexible nature were formed, and under circumstances where
+there was no fuel but that furnished by the ore itself." [9]
+
+The metal once discovered, many attempts would be made to give to that
+which had been the effect of accident a more unerring result. The
+smelting of ore in an open heap of wood or charcoal being found tedious
+and wasteful, as well as uncertain, would naturally lead to the
+invention of a furnace; with the object of keeping the ore surrounded
+as much as possible with fuel while the process of conversion into iron
+was going forward. The low conical furnaces employed at this day by
+some of the tribes of Central and Southern Africa, are perhaps very
+much the same in character as those adopted by the early tribes of all
+countries where iron was first made. Small openings at the lower end
+of the cone to admit the air, and a larger orifice at the top, would,
+with charcoal, be sufficient to produce the requisite degree of heat
+for the reduction of the ore. To this the foot-blast was added, as
+still used in Ceylon and in India; and afterwards the water-blast, as
+employed in Spain (where it is known as the Catalan forge), along the
+coasts of the Mediterranean, and in some parts of America.
+
+It is worthy of remark, that the ruder the method employed for the
+reduction of the ore, the better the quality of the iron usually is.
+Where the art is little advanced, only the most tractable ores are
+selected; and as charcoal is the only fuel used, the quality of the
+metal is almost invariably excellent. The ore being long exposed to
+the charcoal fire, and the quantity made small, the result is a metal
+having many of the qualities of steel, capable of being used for
+weapons or tools after a comparatively small amount of forging. Dr.
+Livingstone speaks of the excellent quality of the iron made by the
+African tribes on the Zambesi, who refuse to use ordinary English iron,
+which they consider "rotten." [10] Du Chaillu also says of the Fans,
+that, in making their best knives and arrow-heads, they will not use
+European or American iron, greatly preferring their own. The
+celebrated wootz or steel of India, made in little cakes of only about
+two pounds weight, possesses qualities which no European steel can
+surpass. Out of this material the famous Damascus sword-blades were
+made; and its use for so long a period is perhaps one of the most
+striking proofs of the ancient civilization of India.
+
+The early history of iron in Britain is necessarily very obscure. When
+the Romans invaded the country, the metal seems to have been already
+known to the tribes along the coast. The natives had probably smelted
+it themselves in their rude bloomeries, or obtained it from the
+Phoenicians in small quantities in exchange for skins and food, or tin.
+We must, however, regard the stories told of the ancient British
+chariots armed with swords or scythes as altogether apocryphal. The
+existence of iron in sufficient quantity to be used for such a purpose
+is incompatible with contemporary facts, and unsupported by a single
+vestige remaining to our time. The country was then mostly forest, and
+the roads did not as yet exist upon which chariots could be used;
+whilst iron was too scarce to be mounted as scythes upon chariots, when
+the warriors themselves wanted it for swords. The orator Cicero, in a
+letter to Trebatius, then serving with the army in Britain,
+sarcastically advised him to capture and convey one of these vehicles
+to Italy for exhibition; but we do not hear that any specimen of the
+British war-chariot was ever seen in Rome.
+
+It is only in the tumuli along the coast, or in those of the
+Romano-British period, that iron implements are ever found; whilst in
+the ancient burying places of the interior of the country they are
+altogether wanting. Herodian says of the British pursued by Severus
+through the fens and marshes of the east coast, that they wore iron
+hoops round their middles and their necks, esteeming them as ornaments
+and tokens of riches, in like manner as other barbarous people then
+esteemed ornaments of silver and gold. Their only money, according to
+Caesar, consisted of pieces of brass or iron, reduced to a certain
+standard weight.[11] It is particularly important to observe, says M.
+Worsaae, that all the antiquities which have hitherto been found in the
+large burying places of the Iron period, in Switzerland, Bavaria,
+Baden, France, England, and the North, exhibit traces more or less of
+Roman influence.[12] The Romans themselves used weapons of bronze when
+they could not obtain iron in sufficient quantity, and many of the
+Roman weapons dug out of the ancient tumuli are of that metal. They
+possessed the art of tempering and hardening bronze to such a degree as
+to enable them to manufacture swords with it of a pretty good edge; and
+in those countries which they penetrated, their bronze implements
+gradually supplanted those which had been previously fashioned of
+stone. Great quantities of bronze tools have been found in different
+parts of England,--sometimes in heaps, as if they had been thrown away
+in basketfuls as things of little value. It has been conjectured that
+when the Romans came into Britain they found the inhabitants,
+especially those to the northward, in very nearly the same state as
+Captain Cook and other voyagers found the inhabitants of the South Sea
+Islands; that the Britons parted with their food and valuables for
+tools of inferior metal made in imitation of their stone ones; but
+finding themselves cheated by the Romans, as the natives of Otaheite
+have been cheated by Europeans, the Britons relinquished the bad tools
+when they became acquainted with articles made of better metal.[13]
+The Roman colonists were the first makers of iron in Britain on any
+large scale. They availed themselves of the mineral riches of the
+country wherever they went. Every year brings their extraordinary
+industrial activity more clearly to light. They not only occupied the
+best sites for trade, intersected the land with a complete system of
+well-constructed roads, studded our hills and valleys with towns,
+villages, and pleasure-houses, and availed themselves of our medicinal
+springs for purposes of baths to an extent not even exceeded at this
+day, but they explored our mines and quarries, and carried on the
+smelting and manufacture of metals in nearly all parts of the island.
+The heaps of mining refuse left by them in the valleys and along the
+hill-sides of North Derbyshire are still spoken of by the country
+people as "old man," or the "old man's work." Year by year, from
+Dartmoor to the Moray Firth, the plough turns up fresh traces of their
+indefatigable industry and enterprise, in pigs of lead, implements of
+iron and bronze, vessels of pottery, coins, and sculpture; and it is a
+remarkable circumstance that in several districts where the existence
+of extensive iron beds had not been dreamt of until within the last
+twenty years, as in Northamptonshire and North Yorkshire, the remains
+of ancient workings recently discovered show that the Roman colonists
+were fully acquainted with them.
+
+But the principal iron mines worked by that people were those which
+were most conveniently situated for purposes of exportation, more
+especially in the southern counties and on the borders of Wales. The
+extensive cinder heaps found in the--Forest of Dean--which formed the
+readiest resource of the modern iron-smelter when improved processes
+enabled him to reduce them--show that their principal iron manufactures
+were carried on in that quarter.[14] It is indeed matter of history,
+that about seventeen hundred years since (A.D. 120) the Romans had
+forges in the West of England, both in the Forest of Dean and in South
+Wales; and that they sent the metal from thence to Bristol, where it
+was forged and made into weapons for the use of the troops. Along the
+banks of the Wye, the ground is in many places a continuous bed of iron
+cinders, in which numerous remains have been found, furnishing
+unmistakeable proofs of the Roman furnaces. At the same time, the iron
+ores of Sussex were extensively worked, as appears from the cinder
+heaps found at Maresfield and several places in that county, intermixed
+with Roman pottery, coins, and other remains. In a bed of scoriae
+several acres in extent, at Old Land Farm in Maresfield, the Rev. Mr.
+Turner found the remains of Roman pottery so numerous that scarcely a
+barrow-load of cinders was removed that did not contain several
+fragments, together with coins of the reigns of Nero, Vespasian, and
+Dioclesian.[15] In the turbulent infancy of nations it is to be
+expected that we should hear more of the Smith, or worker in iron, in
+connexion with war, than with more peaceful pursuits. Although he was
+a nail-maker and a horse-shoer--made axes, chisels, saws, and hammers
+for the artificer--spades and hoes for the farmer--bolts and fastenings
+for the lord's castle-gates, and chains for his draw-bridge--it was
+principally because of his skill in armour-work that he was esteemed.
+He made and mended the weapons used in the chase and in war--the
+gavelocs, bills, and battle-axes; he tipped the bowmen's arrows, and
+furnished spear-heads for the men-at-arms; but, above all, he forged
+the mail-coats and cuirasses of the chiefs, and welded their swords, on
+the temper and quality of which, life, honour, and victory in battle
+depended. Hence the great estimation in which the smith was held in
+the Anglo-Saxon times. His person was protected by a double penalty.
+He was treated as an officer of the highest rank, and awarded the first
+place in precedency. After him ranked the maker of mead, and then the
+physician. In the royal court of Wales he sat in the great hall with
+the king and queen, next to the domestic chaplain; and even at that
+early day there seems to have been a hot spark in the smith's throat
+which needed much quenching; for he was "entitled to a draught of every
+kind of liquor that was brought into the hall."
+
+The smith was thus a mighty man. The Saxon Chronicle describes the
+valiant knight himself as a "mighty war-smith." But the smith was
+greatest of all in his forging of swords; and the bards were wont to
+sing the praises of the knight's "good sword" and of the smith who made
+it, as well as of the knight himself who wielded it in battle. The
+most extraordinary powers were attributed to the weapon of steel when
+first invented. Its sharpness seemed so marvellous when compared with
+one of bronze, that with the vulgar nothing but magic could account for
+it. Traditions, enshrined in fairy tales, still survive in most
+countries, illustrative of its magical properties. The weapon of
+bronze was dull; but that of steel was bright--the "white sword of
+light," one touch of which broke spells, liberated enchanted
+princesses, and froze giants' marrow. King Arthur's magic sword
+"Excalibur" was regarded as almost heroic in the romance of
+chivalry.[16] So were the swords "Galatin" of Sir Gawain, and
+"Joyeuse" of Charlemagne, both of which were reputed to be the work of
+Weland the Smith, about whose name clusters so much traditional glory
+as an ancient worker in metals.[17] The heroes of the Northmen in like
+manner wielded magic swords. Olave the Norwegian possessed the sword
+"Macabuin," forged by the dark smith of Drontheim, whose feats are
+recorded in the tales of the Scalds. And so, in like manner,
+traditions of the supernatural power of the blacksmith are found
+existing to this day all over the Scottish Highlands.[18] When William
+the Norman invaded Britain, he was well supplied with smiths. His
+followers were clad in armour of steel, and furnished with the best
+weapons of the time. Indeed, their superiority in this respect is
+supposed to have been the principal cause of William's victory over
+Harold; for the men of both armies were equal in point of bravery. The
+Normans had not only smiths to attend to the arms of the knights, but
+farriers to shoe their horses. Henry de Femariis, or Ferrers,
+"prefectus fabrorum," was one of the principal officers entrusted with
+the supervision of the Conqueror's ferriery department; and long after
+the earldom was founded his descendants continued to bear on their coat
+of arms the six horse-shoes indicative of their origin.[19] William
+also gave the town of Northampton, with the hundred of Fackley, as a
+fief to Simon St. Liz, in consideration of his providing shoes for his
+horses.[20] But though the practice of horse-shoeing is said to have
+been introduced to this country at the time of the Conquest, it is
+probably of an earlier date; as, according to Dugdale, an old Saxon
+tenant in capite of Welbeck in Nottinghamshire, named Gamelbere, held
+two carucates of land by the service of shoeing the king's palfrey on
+all four feet with the king's nails, as oft as the king should lie at
+the neighbouring manor of Mansfield.
+
+Although we hear of the smith mostly in connexion with the fabrication
+of instruments of war in the Middle Ages, his importance was no less
+recognized in the ordinary affairs of rural and industrial life. He
+was, as it were, the rivet that held society together. Nothing could
+be done without him. Wherever tools or implements were wanted for
+building, for trade, or for husbandry, his skill was called into
+requisition. In remote places he was often the sole mechanic of his
+district; and, besides being a tool-maker, a farrier, and agricultural
+implement maker, he doctored cattle, drew teeth, practised phlebotomy,
+and sometimes officiated as parish clerk and general newsmonger; for
+the smithy was the very eye and tongue of the village. Hence
+Shakespeare's picture of the smith in King John:
+
+ "I saw a smith stand with his hammer, thus,
+ The whilst his iron did on the anvil cool,
+ With open mouth swallowing a tailor's news."
+
+The smith's tools were of many sorts; but the chief were his hammer,
+pincers, chisel, tongs, and anvil. It is astonishing what a variety of
+articles he turned out of his smithy by the help of these rude
+implements. In the tooling, chasing, and consummate knowledge of the
+capabilities of iron, he greatly surpassed the modern workman; for the
+mediaeval blacksmith was an artist as well as a workman. The numerous
+exquisite specimens of his handicraft which exist in our old gateways,
+church doors, altar railings, and ornamented dogs and andirons, still
+serve as types for continual reproduction. He was, indeed, the most
+"cunninge workman" of his time. But besides all this, he was an
+engineer. If a road had to be made, or a stream embanked, or a trench
+dug, he was invariably called upon to provide the tools, and often to
+direct the work. He was also the military engineer of his day, and as
+late as the reign of Edward III. we find the king repeatedly sending
+for smiths from the Forest of Dean to act as engineers for the royal
+army at the siege of Berwick.
+
+The smith being thus the earliest and most important of mechanics, it
+will readily be understood how, at the time when surnames were adopted,
+his name should have been so common in all European countries.
+
+ "From whence came Smith, all be he knight or squire,
+ But from the smith that forgeth in the fire?" [21]
+
+Hence the multitudinous family of Smiths in England, in some cases
+vainly disguised under the "Smythe" or "De Smijthe;" in Germany, the
+Schmidts; in Italy, the Fabri, Fabricii, or Fabbroni; in France, the Le
+Febres or Lefevres; in Scotland, the Gows, Gowans, or Cowans. We have
+also among us the Brownsmiths, or makers of brown bills; the Nasmyths,
+or nailsmiths; the Arrowsmiths, or makers of arrowheads; the
+Spearsmiths, or spear makers; the Shoosmiths, or horse shoers; the
+Goldsmiths, or workers in gold; and many more. The Smith proper was,
+however, the worker in iron--the maker of iron tools, implements, and
+arms--and hence this name exceeds in number that of all the others
+combined.
+
+In course of time the smiths of particular districts began to
+distinguish themselves for their excellence in particular branches of
+iron-work. From being merely the retainer of some lordly or religious
+establishment, the smith worked to supply the general demand, and
+gradually became a manufacturer. Thus the makers of swords, tools,
+bits, and nails, congregated at Birmingham; and the makers of knives
+and arrowheads at Sheffield. Chaucer speaks of the Miller of
+Trompington as provided with a Sheffield whittle:--
+
+ "A Shefeld thwytel bare he in his hose." [22]
+
+
+The common English arrowheads manufactured at Sheffield were long
+celebrated for their excellent temper, as Sheffield iron and steel
+plates are now. The battle of Hamildon, fought in Scotland in 1402,
+was won mainly through their excellence. The historian records that
+they penetrated the armour of the Earl of Douglas, which had been three
+years in making; and they were "so sharp and strong that no armour
+could repel them." The same arrowheads were found equally efficient
+against French armour on the fields of Crecy and Agincourt.
+
+Although Scotland is now one of the principal sources from which our
+supplies of iron are drawn, it was in ancient times greatly distressed
+for want of the metal. The people were as yet too little skilled to be
+able to turn their great mineral wealth to account. Even in the time
+of Wallace, they had scarcely emerged from the Stone period, and were
+under the necessity of resisting their iron-armed English adversaries
+by means of rude weapons of that material. To supply themselves with
+swords and spearheads, they imported steel from Flanders, and the rest
+they obtained by marauding incursions into England. The district of
+Furness in Lancashire--then as now an iron-producing district--was
+frequently ravaged with that object; and on such occasions the Scotch
+seized and carried off all the manufactured iron they could find,
+preferring it, though so heavy, to every other kind of plunder.[23]
+About the same period, however, iron must have been regarded as almost
+a precious metal even in England itself; for we find that in Edward the
+Third's reign, the pots, spits, and frying-pans of the royal kitchen
+were classed among his Majesty's jewels.[24]
+
+The same famine of iron prevailed to a still greater extent in the
+Highlands, where it was even more valued, as the clans lived chiefly by
+hunting, and were in an almost constant state of feud. Hence the smith
+was a man of indispensable importance among the Highlanders, and the
+possession of a skilful armourer was greatly valued by the chiefs. The
+story is told of some delinquency having been committed by a Highland
+smith, on whom justice must be done; but as the chief could not
+dispense with the smith, he generously offered to hang two weavers in
+his stead!
+
+At length a great armourer arose in the Highlands, who was able to
+forge armour that would resist the best Sheffield arrow-heads, and to
+make swords that would vie with the best weapons of Toledo and Milan.
+This was the famous Andrea de Ferrara, whose swords still maintain
+their ancient reputation. This workman is supposed to have learnt his
+art in the Italian city after which he was called, and returned to
+practise it in secrecy among the Highland hills. Before him, no man in
+Great Britain is said to have known how to temper a sword in such a way
+as to bend so that the point should touch the hilt and spring back
+uninjured. The swords of Andrea de Ferrara did this, and were
+accordingly in great request; for it was of every importance to the
+warrior that his weapon should be strong and sharp without being
+unwieldy, and that it should not be liable to snap in the act of
+combat. This celebrated smith, whose personal identity[25] has become
+merged in the Andrea de Ferrara swords of his manufacture, pursued his
+craft in the Highlands, where he employed a number of skilled workmen
+in forging weapons, devoting his own time principally to giving them
+their required temper. He is said to have worked in a dark cellar, the
+better to enable him to perceive the effect of the heat upon the metal,
+and to watch the nicety of the operation of tempering, as well as
+possibly to serve as a screen to his secret method of working.[26]
+Long after Andrea de Ferrara's time, the Scotch swords were famous for
+their temper; Judge Marshal Fatten, who accompanied the Protector's
+expedition into Scotland in 1547, observing that "the Scots came with
+swords all broad and thin, of exceeding good temper, and universally so
+made to slice that I never saw none so good, so I think it hard to
+devise a better." The quality of the steel used for weapons of war was
+indeed of no less importance for the effectual defence of a country
+then than it is now. The courage of the attacking and defending forces
+being equal, the victory would necessarily rest with the party in
+possession of the best weapons.
+
+England herself has on more than one occasion been supposed to be in
+serious peril because of the decay of her iron manufactures. Before
+the Spanish Armada, the production of iron had been greatly discouraged
+because of the destruction of timber in the smelting of the ore--the
+art of reducing it with pit coal not having yet been invented; and we
+were consequently mainly dependent upon foreign countries for our
+supplies of the material out of which arms were made. The best iron
+came from Spain itself, then the most powerful nation in Europe, and as
+celebrated for the excellence of its weapons as for the discipline and
+valour of its troops. The Spaniards prided themselves upon the
+superiority of their iron, and regarded its scarcity in England as an
+important element in their calculations of the conquest of the country
+by their famous Armada. "I have heard," says Harrison, "that when one
+of the greatest peers of Spain espied our nakedness in this behalf, and
+did solemnly utter in no obscure place, that it would be an easy matter
+in short time to conquer England because it wanted armour, his words
+were not so rashly uttered as politely noted." The vigour of Queen
+Elizabeth promptly supplied a remedy by the large importations of iron
+which she caused to be made, principally from Sweden, as well as by the
+increased activity of the forges in Sussex and the Forest of Dean;
+"whereby," adds Harrison, "England obtained rest, that otherwise might
+have been sure of sharp and cruel wars. Thus a Spanish word uttered by
+one man at one time, overthrew, or at the leastwise hindered sundry
+privy practices of many at another." [27] Nor has the subject which
+occupied the earnest attention of politicians in Queen Elizabeth's time
+ceased to be of interest; for, after the lapse of nearly three hundred
+years, we find the smith and the iron manufacturer still uppermost in
+public discussions. It has of late years been felt that our
+much-prized "hearts of oak" are no more able to stand against the prows
+of mail which were supposed to threaten them, than the sticks and
+stones of the ancient tribes were able to resist the men armed with
+weapons of bronze or steel. What Solon said to Croesus, when the
+latter was displaying his great treasures of gold, still holds
+true:--"If another comes that hath better iron than you, he will be
+master of all that gold." So, when an alchemist waited upon the Duke
+of Brunswick during the Seven Years' War, and offered to communicate
+the secret of converting iron into gold, the Duke replied:--"By no
+means: I want all the iron I can find to resist my enemies: as for
+gold, I get it from England." Thus the strength and wealth of nations
+depend upon coal and iron, not forgetting Men, far more than upon gold.
+
+Thanks to our Armstrongs and Whitworths, our Browns and our Smiths, the
+iron defences of England, manned by our soldiers and our sailors,
+furnish the assurance of continued security for our gold and our
+wealth, and, what is infinitely more precious, for our industry and our
+liberty.
+
+
+
+[1] "Mr. John Buchanan, a zealous antiquary, writing in 1855, informs
+us that in the course of the eight years preceding that date, no less
+than seventeen canoes had been dug out of this estuarine silt [of the
+valley of the Clyde], and that he had personally inspected a large
+number of them before they were exhumed. Five of them lay buried in
+silt under the streets of Glasgow, one in a vertical position with the
+prow uppermost, as if it had sunk in a storm.... Almost every one of
+these ancient boats was formed out of a single oak-stem, hollowed out
+by blunt tools, probably stone axes, aided by the action of fire; a few
+were cut beautifully smooth, evidently with metallic tools. Hence a
+gradation could be traced from a pattern of extreme rudeness to one
+showing great mechanical ingenuity.... In one of the canoes a
+beautifully polished celt or axe of greenstone was found; in the bottom
+of another a plug of cork, which, as Mr. Geikie remarks, 'could only
+have come from the latitudes of Spain, Southern France, or
+Italy.'"--Sir C. LYELL, Antiquity of Man, 48-9.
+
+[2] THOMAS WRIGHT, F.S.A., The Celt, The Roman, and The Saxon, ed. 1861.
+
+[3] Referred to at length in the Antiquity of Man, by Sir C. Lyell, who
+adopts M. Worsaae's classification.
+
+[4] Mr. Mushet, however, observes that "the general use of hardened
+copper by the ancients for edge-tools and warlike instruments, does not
+preclude the supposition that iron was then comparatively plentiful,
+though it is probable that it was confined to the ruder arts of life.
+A knowledge of the mixture of copper, tin, and zinc, seems to have been
+among the first discoveries of the metallurgist. Instruments
+fabricated from these alloys, recommended by the use of ages, the
+perfection of the art, the splendour and polish of their surfaces, not
+easily injured by time and weather, would not soon be superseded by the
+invention of simple iron, inferior in edge and polish, at all times
+easily injured by rust, and in the early stages of its manufacture
+converted with difficulty into forms that required proportion or
+elegance."--(Papers on Iron and Steel, 365-6.) By some secret method
+that has been lost, perhaps because no longer needed since the
+invention of steel, the ancients manufactured bronze tools capable of
+taking a fine edge. In our own time, Chantrey the sculptor, in his
+reverence for classic metallurgy, had a bronze razor made with which he
+martyred himself in shaving; but none were found so hardy and devoted
+as to follow his example.
+
+[5] It may be mentioned in passing, that while Zinc is fusible at 3
+degrees of Wedgwood's pyrometer, Silver at 22 degrees, Copper at 27
+degrees, and Gold at 32 degrees, Cast Iron is only fusible at 130
+degrees. Tin (one of the constituents of the ancient bronze) and Lead
+are fusible at much lower degrees than zinc.
+
+[6] The Romans named the other metals after the gods. Thus Quicksilver
+was called Mercury, Lead Saturn, Tin Jupiter, Copper Venus, Silver
+Luna, and so on; and our own language has received a colouring from the
+Roman nomenclature, which it continues to retain.
+
+[7] I. Samuel xiii. 19, 20.
+
+[8] II. Kings xxiv. 16.
+
+[9] Papers on Iron and Steel, 363-4.
+
+[10] Dr. Livingstone brought with him to England a piece of the Zambesi
+iron, which he sent to a skilled Birmingham blacksmith to test. The
+result was, that he pronounced the metal as strongly resembling Swedish
+or Russian; both of which kinds are smelted with charcoal. The African
+iron was found "highly carbonized," and "when chilled it possessed the
+properties of steel."
+
+[11] HOLINSHED, i. 517. Iron was also the currency of the Spartans,
+but it has been used as such in much more recent times. Adam Smith, in
+his Wealth of Nations (Book I. ch. 4, published in 1776), says, "there
+is at this day a village in Scotland where it is not uncommon, I am
+told, for a workman to carry nails, instead of money, to the baker's
+shop or the alehouse."
+
+[12] Primeval Antiquities of Denmark. London, 1849, p. 140.
+
+[13] See Dr. Pearson's paper in the Philosophical Transactions, 1796,
+relative to certain ancient arms and utensils found in the river Witham
+between Kirkstead and Lincoln.
+
+[14] "In the Forest of Dean and thereabouts the iron is made at this
+day of cinders, being the rough and offal thrown by in the Roman time;
+they then having only foot-blasts to melt the ironstone; but now, by
+the force of a great wheel that drives a pair of Bellows twenty feet
+long, all that iron is extracted out of the cinders which could not be
+forced from it by the Roman foot-blast. And in the Forest of Dean and
+thereabouts, and as high as Worcester, there ave great and infinite
+quantities of these cinders; some in vast mounts above ground, some
+under ground, which will supply the iron works some hundreds of years;
+and these cinders ave they which make the prime and best iron, and with
+much less charcoal than doth the ironstone."--A. YARRANTON, England's
+Improvement by Sea and Land. London, 1677.
+
+[15] M. A. LOWER, Contributions to Literature, Historical, Antiquarian,
+and Metrical. London, 1854, pp. 88-9.
+
+[16] This famous sword was afterwards sent by Richard I. as a present
+to Tancred; and the value attached to the weapon may be estimated by
+the fact that the Crusader sent the English monarch, in return for it,
+"four great ships and fifteen galleys."
+
+[17] Weland was the Saxon Vulcan. The name of Weland's or Wayland's
+Smithy is still given to a monument on Lambourn Downs in Wiltshire.
+The place is also known as Wayland Smith's Cave. It consists of a rude
+gallery of stones.
+
+[18] Among the Scythians the iron sword was a god. It was the image of
+Mars, and sacrifices were made to it. "An iron sword," says Mr.
+Campbell, "really was once worshipped by a people with whom iron was
+rare. Iron is rare, while stone and bronze weapons are common, in
+British tombs, and the sword of these stories is a personage. It
+shines, it cries out--the lives of men are bound up in it. And so this
+mystic sword may, perhaps, have been a god amongst the Celts, or the
+god of the people with whom the Celts contended somewhere on their long
+journey to the west. It is a fiction now, but it may be founded on
+fact, and that fact probably was the first use of iron." To this day an
+old horse-shoe is considered a potent spell in some districts against
+the powers of evil; and for want of a horse-shoe a bit of a rusty
+reaping-hook is supposed to have equal power, "Who were these powers of
+evil who could not resist iron--these fairies who shoot STONE arrows,
+and are of the foes to the human race? Is all this but a dim, hazy
+recollection of war between a people who had iron weapons and a race
+who had not--the race whose remains are found all over Europe? If these
+were wandering tribes, they had leaders; if they were warlike, they had
+weapons. There is a smith in the Pantheon of many nations. Vulcan was
+a smith; Thor wielded a hammer; even Fionn had a hammer, which was
+heard in Lochlann when struck in Eirinn. Fionn may have borrowed his
+hammer from Thor long ago, or both may have got theirs from Vulcan, or
+all three may have brought hammers with them from the land where some
+primeval smith wielded the first sledge-hammer; but may not all these
+'smith-gods be the smiths who made iron weapons for those who fought
+with the skin-clad warriors who shot flint-arrows, and who are now
+bogles, fairies, and demons? In any case, tales about smiths seem to
+belong to mythology, and to be common property."--CAMPBELL, Popular
+Tales of the West Highlands, Preface, 74-6.
+
+[19] BROOK, Discovery of Errors in the Catalogue of the Nobility, 198.
+
+[20] MEYRICK, i. 11.
+
+[21] GILBERT, Cornwall.
+
+[22] Before table-knives were invented, in the sixteenth century, the
+knife was a very important article; each guest at table bearing his
+own, and sharpening it at the whetstone hung up in the passage, before
+sitting down to dinner, Some even carried a whetstone as well as a
+knife; and one of Queen Elizabeth's presents to the Earl of Leicester
+was a whetstone tipped with gold.
+
+[23] The early scarcity of iron in Scotland is confirmed by Froissart,
+who says,--"In Scotland you will never find a man of worth; they are
+like savages, who wish not to be acquainted with any one, are envious
+of the good fortune of others, and suspicious of losing anything
+themselves; for their country is very poor. When the English make
+inroads thither, as they have very frequently done, they order their
+provisions, if they wish to live, to follow close at their backs; for
+nothing is to be had in that country without great difficulty. There
+is neither iron to shoe horses, nor leather to make harness, saddles,
+or bridles: all these things come ready made from Flanders by sea; and
+should these fail, there is none to be had in the country."
+
+[24] PARKER'S English Home, 77
+
+[25] The precise time at which Andrea de Ferrara flourished cannot be
+fixed with accuracy; but Sir Waiter Scott, in one of the notes to
+Waverley, says he is believed to have been a foreign artist brought
+over by James IV. or V. of Scotland to instruct the Scots in the
+manufacture of sword-blades. The genuine weapons have a crown marked
+on the blades.
+
+[26] Mr. Parkes, in his Essay on the Manufacture of Edge Tools, says,
+"Had this ingenious artist thought of a bath of oil, he might have
+heated this by means of a furnace underneath it, and by the use of a
+thermometer, to the exact point which he found necessary; though it is
+inconvenient to have to employ a thermometer for every distinct
+operation. Or, if he had been in the possession of a proper bath of
+fusible metal, he would have attained the necessary certainty in his
+process, and need not have immured himself in a subterranean
+apartment.--PARKES' Essays, 1841, p. 495.
+
+[27] HOLINSHED, History of England. It was even said to have been one
+of the objects of the Spanish Armada to get the oaks of the Forest of
+Dean destroyed, in order to prevent further smelting of the iron. Thus
+Evelyn, in his Sylva, says, "I have heard that in the great expedition
+of 1588 it was expressly enjoined the Spanish Armada that if, when
+landed, they should not be able to subdue our nation and make good
+their conquest, they should yet be sure not to leave a tree standing in
+the Forest of Dean."--NICHOLS, History of the Forest of Dean, p. 22.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+EARLY ENGLISH IRON MANUFACTURE.
+
+"He that well observes it, and hath known the welds of Sussex, Surry,
+and Kent', the grand nursery especially of oake and beech, shal find
+such an alteration, within lesse than 30 yeeres, as may well strike a
+feare, lest few yeeres more, as pestilent as the former, will leave
+fewe good trees standing in those welds. Such a heate issueth out of
+the many forges and furnaces for the making of iron, and out of the
+glasse kilnes, as hath devoured many famous woods within the
+welds,"--JOHN NORDEN, Surveyors' Dialogue (1607).
+
+
+Few records exist of the manufacture of iron in England in early times.
+After the Romans left the island, the British, or more probably the
+Teutonic tribes settled along the south coast, continued the smelting
+and manufacture of the metal after the methods taught them by the
+colonists. In the midst of the insecurity, however, engendered by
+civil war and social changes, the pursuits of industry must necessarily
+have been considerably interfered with, and the art of iron-forging
+became neglected. No notice of iron being made in Sussex occurs in
+Domesday Book, from which it would appear that the manufacture had in a
+great measure ceased in that county at the time of the Conquest, though
+it was continued in the iron-producing districts bordering on Wales.
+In many of the Anglo-Saxon graves which have been opened, long iron
+swords have been found, showing that weapons of that metal were in
+common use. But it is probable that iron was still scarce, as ploughs
+and other agricultural implements continued to be made of wood,--one of
+the Anglo-Saxon laws enacting that no man should undertake to guide a
+plough who could not make one; and that the cords with which it was
+bound should be of twisted willows. The metal was held in esteem
+principally as the material of war. All male adults were required to
+be provided with weapons, and honour was awarded to such artificers as
+excelled in the fabrication of swords, arms, and defensive armour.[1]
+
+Camden incidentally states that the manufacture of iron was continued
+in the western counties during the Saxon era, more particularly in the
+Forest of Dean, and that in the time of Edward the Confessor the
+tribute paid by the city of Gloucester consisted almost entirely of
+iron rods wrought to a size fit for making nails for the king's ships.
+An old religious writer speaks of the ironworkers of that day as
+heathenish in their manners, puffed up with pride, and inflated with
+worldly prosperity. On the occasion of St. Egwin's visit to the
+smiths of Alcester, as we are told in the legend, he found then given
+up to every kind of luxury; and when he proceeded to preach unto them,
+they beat upon their anvils in contempt of his doctrine so as
+completely to deafen him; upon which he addressed his prayers to
+heaven, and the town was immediately destroyed.[2]
+
+But the first reception given to John Wesley by the miners of the
+Forest of Dean, more than a thousand years later, was perhaps scarcely
+more gratifying than that given to St. Egwin.
+
+That working in iron was regarded as an honourable and useful calling
+in the Middle Ages, is apparent from the extent to which it was
+followed by the monks, some of whom were excellent craftsmen. Thus St.
+Dunstan, who governed England in the time of Edwy the Fair, was a
+skilled blacksmith and metallurgist. He is said to have had a forge
+even in his bedroom, and it was there that his reputed encounter with
+Satan occurred, in which of course the saint came off the victor.
+
+There was another monk of St. Alban's, called Anketil, who flourished
+in the twelfth century, so famous for his skill as a worker in iron,
+silver, gold, jewelry, and gilding, that he was invited by the king of
+Denmark to be his goldsmith and banker. A pair of gold and silver
+candlesticks of his manufacture, presented by the abbot of St. Alban's
+to Pope Adrian IV., were so much esteemed for their exquisite
+workmanship that they were consecrated to St. Peter, and were the
+means of obtaining high ecclesiastical distinction for the abbey.
+
+We also find that the abbots of monasteries situated in the iron
+districts, among their other labours, devoted themselves to the
+manufacture of iron from the ore. The extensive beds of cinders still
+found in the immediate neighbourhood of Rievaulx and Hackness, in
+Yorkshire, show that the monks were well acquainted with the art of
+forging, and early turned to account the riches of the Cleveland
+ironstone. In the Forest of Dean also, the abbot of Flaxley was
+possessed of one stationary and one itinerant forge, by grant from
+Henry II, and he was allowed two oaks weekly for fuel,--a privilege
+afterwards commuted, in 1258, for Abbot's Wood of 872 acres, which was
+held by the abbey until its dissolution in the reign of Henry VIII. At
+the same time the Earl of Warwick had forges at work in his woods at
+Lydney; and in 1282, as many as 72 forges were leased from the Crown by
+various iron-smelters in the same Forest of Dean.
+
+There are numerous indications of iron-smelting having been conducted
+on a considerable scale at some remote period in the neighbourhood of
+Leeds, in Yorkshire. In digging out the foundations of houses in
+Briggate, the principal street of that town, many "bell pits" have been
+brought to light, from which ironstone has been removed. The new
+cemetery at Burmandtofts, in the same town, was in like manner found
+pitted over with these ancient holes. The miner seems to have dug a
+well about 6 feet in diameter, and so soon as he reached the mineral,
+he worked it away all round, leaving the bell-shaped cavities in
+question. He did not attempt any gallery excavations, but when the pit
+was exhausted, a fresh one was sunk. The ore, when dug, was
+transported, most probably on horses' backs, to the adjacent districts
+for the convenience of fuel. For it was easier to carry the mineral to
+the wood--then exclusively used for smelting'--than to bring the wood
+to the mineral. Hence the numerous heaps of scoriae found in the
+neighbourhood of Leeds,--at Middleton, Whitkirk, and Horsforth--all
+within the borough. At Horsforth, they are found in conglomerated
+masses from 30 to 40 yards long, and of considerable width and depth.
+The remains of these cinder-beds in various positions, some of them
+near the summit of the hill, tend to show, that as the trees were
+consumed, a new wind furnace was erected in another situation, in order
+to lessen the labour of carrying the fuel. There are also deposits of
+a similar kind at Kirkby Overblow, a village a few miles to the
+north-east of Leeds; and Thoresby states that the place was so called
+because it was the village of the "Ore blowers,"--hence the corruption
+of "Overblow." A discovery has recently been made among the papers of
+the Wentworth family, of a contract for supplying wood and ore for iron
+"blomes" at Kirskill near Otley, in the fourteenth century;[3] though
+the manufacture near that place has long since ceased.
+
+Although the making of iron was thus carried on in various parts of
+England in the Middle Ages, the quantity produced was altogether
+insufficient to meet the ordinary demand, as it appears from our early
+records to have long continued one of the principal articles imported
+from foreign countries. English iron was not only dearer, but it was
+much inferior in quality to that manufactured abroad; and hence all the
+best arms and tools continued to be made of foreign iron. Indeed the
+scarcity of this metal occasionally led to great inconvenience, and to
+prevent its rising in price Parliament enacted, in 1354, that no iron,
+either wrought or unwrought, should be exported, under heavy penalties.
+For nearly two hundred years--that is, throughout the fourteenth and
+fifteenth centuries--the English market was principally supplied with
+iron and steel from Spain and Germany; the foreign merchants of the
+Steelyard doing a large and profitable trade in those commodities.
+While the woollen and other branches of trade were making considerable
+progress, the manufacture of iron stood still. Among the lists of
+articles, the importation of which was prohibited in Edward IV.'s
+reign, with a view to the protection of domestic manufactures, we find
+no mention of iron, which was still, as a matter of necessity, allowed
+to come freely from abroad.
+
+The first indications of revival in the iron manufacture showed
+themselves in Sussex, a district in which the Romans had established
+extensive works, and where smelting operations were carried on to a
+partial extent in the neighbourhood of Lewes, in the thirteenth and
+fourteenth centuries, where the iron was principally made into nails
+and horse-shoes. The county abounds in ironstone, which is contained
+in the sandstone beds of the Forest ridge, lying between the chalk and
+oolite of the district, called by geologists the Hastings sand. The
+beds run in a north-westerly direction, by Ashburnham and Heathfield,
+to Crowborough and thereabouts. In early times the region was covered
+with wood, and was known as the Great Forest of Anderida. The Weald,
+or wild wood, abounded in oaks of great size, suitable for smelting
+ore; and the proximity of the mineral to the timber, as well as the
+situation of the district in the neighbourhood of the capital,
+sufficiently account for the Sussex iron-works being among the most
+important which existed in England previous to the discovery of
+smelting by pit-coal.
+
+The iron manufacturers of the south were especially busy during the
+fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Their works were established near
+to the beds of ore, and in places where water-power existed, or could
+be provided by artificial means. Hence the numerous artificial ponds
+which are still to be found all over the Sussex iron district. Dams of
+earth, called "pond-bays," were thrown across watercourses, with
+convenient outlets built of masonry, wherein was set the great wheel
+which worked the hammer or blew the furnace. Portions of the adjoining
+forest-land were granted or leased to the iron-smelters; and the many
+places still known by the name of "Chart" in the Weald, probably mark
+the lands chartered for the purpose of supplying the iron-works with
+their necessary fuel. The cast-iron tombstones and slabs in many
+Sussex churchyards,--the andirons and chimney backs[4] still found in
+old Sussex mansions and farm-houses, and such names as Furnace Place,
+Cinder Hill, Forge Farm, and Hammer Pond, which are of very frequent
+occurrence throughout the county, clearly mark the extent and activity
+of this ancient branch of industry.[5] Steel was also manufactured at
+several places in the county, more particularly at Steel-Forge Land,
+Warbleton, and at Robertsbridge. The steel was said to be of good
+quality, resembling Swedish--both alike depending for their excellence
+on the exclusive use of charcoal in smelting the ore,--iron so produced
+maintaining its superiority over coal-smelted iron to this day.
+
+When cannon came to be employed in war, the nearness of Sussex to
+London and the Cinque Forts gave it a great advantage over the remoter
+iron-producing districts in the north and west of England, and for a
+long time the iron-works of this county enjoyed almost a monopoly of
+the manufacture. The metal was still too precious to be used for
+cannon balls, which were hewn of stone from quarries on Maidstone
+Heath. Iron was only available, and that in limited quantities, for
+the fabrication of the cannon themselves, and wrought-iron was chiefly
+used for the purpose. An old mortar which formerly lay on Eridge
+Green, near Frant, is said to have been the first mortar made in
+England;[6] only the chamber was cast, while the tube consisted of bars
+strongly hooped together. Although the local distich says that
+
+ "Master Huggett and his man John
+ They did cast the first cannon,"
+
+there is every reason to believe that both cannons and mortars were
+made in Sussex before Huggett's time; the old hooped guns in the Tower
+being of the date of Henry VI. The first cast-iron cannons of English
+manufacture were made at Buxtead, in Sussex, in 1543, by Ralph Hogge,
+master founder, who employed as his principal assistant one Peter
+Baude, a Frenchman. Gun-founding was a French invention, and Mr. Lower
+supposes that Hogge brought over Baude from France to teach his workmen
+the method of casting the guns. About the same time Hogge employed a
+skilled Flemish gunsmith named Peter Van Collet, who, according to
+Stowe, "devised or caused to be made certain mortar pieces, being at
+the mouth from eleven to nine inches wide, for the use whereof the said
+Peter caused to be made certain hollow shot of cast-iron to be stuffed
+with fyrework, whereof the bigger sort for the same has screws of iron
+to receive a match to carry fyre for to break in small pieces the said
+hollow shot, whereof the smallest piece hitting a man would kill or
+spoil him." In short, Peter Van Collet here introduced the manufacture
+of the explosive shell in the form in which it continued to be used
+down to our own day.
+
+Baude, the Frenchman, afterwards set up business on his own account,
+making many guns, both of brass and iron, some of which are still
+preserved in the Tower.[7] Other workmen, learning the trade from him,
+also began to manufacture on their own account; one of Baude's
+servants, named John Johnson, and after him his son Thomas, becoming
+famous for the excellence of their cast-iron guns. The Hogges
+continued the business for several generations, and became a wealthy
+county family. Huggett was another cannon maker of repute; and Owen
+became celebrated for his brass culverins. Mr. Lower mentions, as a
+curious instance of the tenacity with which families continue to follow
+a particular vocation, that many persons of the name of Huggett still
+carry on the trade of blacksmith in East Sussex. But most of the early
+workmen at the Sussex iron-works, as in other branches of skilled
+industry in England during the sixteenth century, were
+foreigners--Flemish and French--many of whom had taken refuge in this
+country from the religious persecutions then raging abroad, while
+others, of special skill, were invited over by the iron manufacturers
+to instruct their workmen in the art of metal-founding.[8]
+
+As much wealth was gained by the pursuit of the revived iron
+manufacture in Sussex, iron-mills rapidly extended over the
+ore-yielding district. The landed proprietors entered with zeal into
+this new branch of industry, and when wood ran short, they did not
+hesitate to sacrifice their ancestral oaks to provide fuel for the
+furnaces. Mr. Lower says even the most ancient families, such as the
+Nevilles, Howards, Percys, Stanleys, Montagues, Pelhams, Ashburnhams,
+Sidneys, Sackvilles, Dacres, and Finches, prosecuted the manufacture
+with all the apparent ardour of Birmingham and Wolverhampton men in
+modern times. William Penn, the courtier Quaker, had iron-furnaces at
+Hawkhurst and other places in Sussex. The ruins of the Ashburnham
+forge, situated a few miles to the north-east of Battle, still serve to
+indicate the extent of the manufacture. At the upper part of the
+valley in which the works were situated, an artificial lake was formed
+by constructing an embankment across the watercourse descending from
+the higher ground,[9] and thus a sufficient fall of water was procured
+for the purpose of blowing the furnaces, the site of which is still
+marked by surrounding mounds of iron cinders and charcoal waste. Three
+quarters of a mile lower down the valley stood the forge, also provided
+with water-power for working the hammer; and some of the old buildings
+are still standing, among others the boring-house, of small size, now
+used as an ordinary labourer's cottage, where the guns were bored. The
+machine was a mere upright drill worked by the water-wheel, which was
+only eighteen inches across the breast. The property belonged, as it
+still does, to the Ashburnham family, who are said to have derived
+great wealth from the manufacture of guns at their works, which were
+among the last carried on in Sussex. The Ashburnham iron was
+distinguished for its toughness, and was said to be equal to the best
+Spanish or Swedish iron.
+
+Many new men also became enriched, and founded county families; the
+Fuller family frankly avowing their origin in the singular motto of
+Carbone et forcipibus--literally, by charcoal and tongs.[10]
+
+Men then went into Sussex to push their fortunes at the forges, as they
+now do in Wales or Staffordshire; and they succeeded then, as they do
+now, by dint of application, industry, and energy. The Sussex
+Archaeological Papers for 1860 contain a curious record of such an
+adventurer, in the history of the founder of the Gale family. Leonard
+Gale was born in 1620 at Riverhead, near Sevenoaks, where his father
+pursued the trade of a blacksmith. When the youth had reached his
+seventeenth year, his father and mother, with five of their sons and
+daughters, died of the plague, Leonard and his brother being the only
+members of the family that survived. The patrimony of 200L. left them
+was soon spent; after which Leonard paid off his servants, and took to
+work diligently at his father's trade. Saving a little money, he
+determined to go down into Sussex, where we shortly find him working
+the St. Leonard's Forge, and afterwards the Tensley Forge near
+Crawley, and the Cowden Iron-works, which then bore a high reputation.
+After forty years' labour, he accumulated a good fortune, which he left
+to his son of the same name, who went on iron-forging, and eventually
+became a county gentleman, owner of the house and estate of Crabbett
+near Worth, and Member of Parliament for East Grinstead.
+
+Several of the new families, however, after occupying a high position
+in the county, again subsided into the labouring class, illustrating
+the Lancashire proverb of "Twice clogs, once boots," the sons
+squandering what the father's had gathered, and falling back into the
+ranks again. Thus the great Fowles family of Riverhall disappeared
+altogether from Sussex. One of them built the fine mansion of
+Riverhall, noble even in decay. Another had a grant of free warren
+from King James over his estates in Wadhurst, Frant, Rotherfield, and
+Mayfield. Mr. Lower says the fourth in descent from this person kept
+the turnpike-gate at Wadhurst, and that the last of the family, a
+day-labourer, emigrated to America in 1839, carrying with him, as the
+sole relic of his family greatness, the royal grant of free warren
+given to his ancestor. The Barhams and Mansers were also great
+iron-men, officiating as high sheriffs of the county at different
+times, and occupying spacious mansions. One branch of these families
+terminated, Mr. Lower says, with Nicholas Barham, who died in the
+workhouse at Wadhurst in 1788; and another continues to be represented
+by a wheelwright at Wadhurst of the same name.
+
+The iron manufacture of Sussex reached its height towards the close of
+the reign of Elizabeth, when the trade became so prosperous that,
+instead of importing iron, England began to export it in considerable
+quantities, in the shape of iron ordnance. Sir Thomas Leighton and Sir
+Henry Neville had obtained patents from the queen, which enabled them
+to send their ordnance abroad, the consequence of which was that the
+Spaniards were found arming their ships and fighting us with guns of
+our own manufacture. Sir Walter Raleigh, calling attention to the
+subject in the House of Commons, said, "I am sure heretofore one ship
+of Her Majesty's was able to beat ten Spaniards, but now, by reason of
+our own ordnance, we are hardly matcht one to one." Proclamations were
+issued forbidding the export of iron and brass ordnance, and a bill was
+brought into Parliament to put a stop to the trade; but, not
+withstanding these prohibitions, the Sussex guns long continued to be
+smuggled out of the country in considerable numbers. "It is almost
+incredible," says Camden, "how many guns are made of the iron in this
+county. Count Gondomar (the Spanish ambassador) well knew their
+goodness when he so often begged of King James the boon to export
+them." Though the king refused his sanction, it appears that Sir
+Anthony Shirley of Weston, an extensive iron-master, succeeded in
+forwarding to the King of Spain a hundred pieces of cannon.
+
+So active were the Sussex manufacturers, and so brisk was the trade
+they carried on, that during the reign of James I. it is supposed
+one-half of the whole quantity of iron produced in England was made
+there. Simon Sturtevant, in his 'Treatise of Metallica,' published in
+1612, estimates the whole number of iron-mills in England and Wales at
+800, of which, he says, "there are foure hundred milnes in Surry, Kent,
+and Sussex, as the townsmen of Haslemere have testified and numbered
+unto me." But the townsmen of Haslemere must certainly have been
+exaggerating, unless they counted smiths' and farriers' shops in the
+number of iron-mills. About the same time that Sturtevant's treatise
+was published, there appeared a treatise entitled the 'Surveyor's
+Dialogue,' by one John Norden, the object of which was to make out a
+case against the iron-works and their being allowed to burn up the
+timber of the country for fuel. Yet Norden does not make the number of
+iron-works much more than a third of Sturtevant's estimate. He says,
+"I have heard that there are or lately were in Sussex neere 140 hammers
+and furnaces for iron, and in it and Surrey adjoining three or four
+glasse-houses." Even the smaller number stated by Norden, however,
+shows that Sussex was then regarded as the principal seat of the
+iron-trade. Camden vividly describes the noise and bustle of the
+manufacture--the working of the heavy hammers, which, "beating upon the
+iron, fill the neighbourhood round about, day and night, with continual
+noise." These hammers were for the most part worked by the power of
+water, carefully stored in the artificial "Hammer-ponds" above
+described. The hammer-shaft was usually of ash, about 9 feet long,
+clamped at intervals with iron hoops. It was worked by the revolutions
+of the water-wheel, furnished with projecting arms or knobs to raise
+the hammer, which fell as each knob passed, the rapidity of its action
+of course depending on the velocity with which the water-wheel
+revolved. The forge-blast was also worked for the most part by
+water-power. Where the furnaces were small, the blast was produced by
+leather bellows worked by hand, or by a horse walking in a gin. The
+foot-blasts of the earlier iron-smelters were so imperfect that but a
+small proportion of the ore was reduced, so that the iron-makers of
+later times, more particularly in the Forest of Dean, instead of
+digging for ironstone, resorted to the beds of ancient scoriae for
+their principal supply of the mineral.
+
+Notwithstanding the large number of furnaces in blast throughout the
+county of Sussex at the period we refer to, their produce was
+comparatively small, and must not be measured by the enormous produce
+of modern iron-works; for while an iron-furnace of the present day will
+easily turn out 150 tons of pig per week, the best of the older
+furnaces did not produce more than from three to four tons. One of the
+last extensive contracts executed in Sussex was the casting of the iron
+rails which enclose St. Paul's Cathedral. The contract was thought
+too large for one iron-master to undertake, and it was consequently
+distributed amongst several contractors, though the principal part of
+the work was executed at Lamberhurst, near Tunbridge Wells. But to
+produce the comparatively small quantity of iron turned out by the old
+works, the consumption of timber was enormous; for the making of every
+ton of pig-iron required four loads of timber converted into charcoal
+fuel, and the making of every ton of bar-iron required three additional
+loads. Thus, notwithstanding the indispensable need of iron, the
+extension of the manufacture, by threatening the destruction of the
+timber of the southern counties, came to be regarded in the light of a
+national calamity. Up to a certain point, the clearing of the Weald of
+its dense growth of underwood had been of advantage, by affording
+better opportunities for the operations of agriculture. But the
+"voragious iron-mills" were proceeding to swallow up everything that
+would burn, and the old forest growths were rapidly disappearing. An
+entire wood was soon exhausted, and long time was needed before it grew
+again. At Lamberhurst alone, though the produce was only about five
+tons of iron a-week, the annual consumption of wood was about 200,000
+cords! Wood continued to be the only material used for fuel
+generally--a strong prejudice existing against the use of sea-coal for
+domestic purposes.[11] It therefore began to be feared that there
+would be no available fuel left within practicable reach of the
+metropolis; and the contingency of having to face the rigorous cold of
+an English winter without fuel naturally occasioning much alarm, the
+action of the Government was deemed necessary to remedy the apprehended
+evil.
+
+To check the destruction of wood near London, an Act was passed in 1581
+prohibiting its conversion into fuel for the making of iron within
+fourteen miles of the Thames, forbidding the erection of new ironworks
+within twenty-two miles of London, and restricting the number of works
+in Kent, Surrey, and Sussex, beyond the above limits. Similar
+enactments were made in future Parliaments with the same object, which
+had the effect of checking the trade, and several of the Sussex
+ironmasters were under the necessity of removing their works elsewhere.
+Some of them migrated to Glamorganshire, in South Wales, because of the
+abundance of timber as well as ironstone in that quarter, and there set
+up their forges, more particularly at Aberdare and Merthyr Tydvil. Mr.
+Llewellin has recently published an interesting account of their
+proceedings, with descriptions of their works,[12] remains of which
+still exist at Llwydcoed, Pontyryns, and other places in the Aberdare
+valley. Among the Sussex masters who settled in Glamorganshire for the
+purpose of carrying on the iron manufacture, were Walter Burrell, the
+friend of John Ray, the naturalist, one of the Morleys of Glynde in
+Sussex, the Relfes from Mayfield, and the Cheneys from Crawley.
+
+Notwithstanding these migrations of enterprising manufacturers, the
+iron trade of Sussex continued to exist until the middle of the
+seventeenth century, when the waste of timber was again urged upon the
+attention of Parliament, and the penalties for infringing the statutes
+seem to have been more rigorously enforced. The trade then suffered a
+more serious check; and during the civil wars, a heavy blow was given
+to it by the destruction of the works belonging to all royalists, which
+was accomplished by a division of the army under Sir William Waller.
+Most of the Welsh ironworks were razed to the ground about the same
+time, and were not again rebuilt. And after the Restoration, in 1674,
+all the royal ironworks in the Forest of Dean were demolished, leaving
+only such to be supplied with ore as were beyond the forest limits; the
+reason alleged for this measure being lest the iron manufacture should
+endanger the supply of timber required for shipbuilding and other
+necessary purposes.
+
+From this time the iron manufacture of Sussex, as of England generally,
+rapidly declined. In 1740 there were only fifty-nine furnaces in all
+England, of which ten were in Sussex; and in 1788 there were only two.
+A few years later, and the Sussex iron furnaces were blown out
+altogether. Farnhurst, in western, and Ashburnham, in eastern Sussex,
+witnessed the total extinction of the manufacture. The din of the iron
+hammer was hushed, the glare of the furnace faded, the last blast of
+the bellows was blown, and the district returned to its original rural
+solitude. Some of the furnace-ponds were drained and planted with hops
+or willows; others formed beautiful lakes in retired pleasure-grounds;
+while the remainder were used to drive flour-mills, as the streams in
+North Kent, instead of driving fulling-mills, were employed to work
+paper-mills. All that now remains of the old iron-works are the
+extensive beds of cinders from which material is occasionally taken to
+mend the Sussex roads, and the numerous furnace-ponds, hammer-posts,
+forges, and cinder places, which mark the seats of the ancient
+manufacture.
+
+
+
+[1] WILKINS, Leges Sax. 25.
+
+[2] Life of St. Egwin, in Capgrave's Nova Legenda Anglioe. Alcester
+was, as its name indicates, an old Roman settlement (situated on the
+Icknild Street), where the art of working in iron was practised from an
+early period. It was originally called Alauna, being situated on the
+river Alne in Warwickshire. It is still a seat of the needle
+manufacture.
+
+[3] The following is an extract of this curious document, which is
+dated the 26th Dec. 1352: "Ceste endenture fait entre monsire Richard
+de Goldesburghe, chivaler, dune part, et Robert Totte, seignour, dautre
+tesmoigne qe le dit monsire Richard ad graunte et lesse al dit Robert
+deuz Olyveres contenaunz vynt quatre blomes de la feste seynt Piere ad
+vincula lan du regne le Roi Edward tierce apres le conqueste vynt
+sysme, en sun parke de Creskelde, rendant al dit monsire Richard
+chesqune semayn quatorzse soutz dargent duraunt les deux Olyvers avaunt
+dist; a tenir et avoir al avaunt dit Robert del avaunt dit monsire
+Richard de la feste seynt Piere avaunt dist, taunque le bois soit ars
+du dit parke a la volunte le dit monsire Richard saunz interrupcione [e
+le dicte monsieur Richard trovera a dit Robert urre suffisaunt pur lez
+ditz Olyvers pur le son donaunt: these words are interlined]. Et fait
+a savoir qe le dit Robert ne nule de soens coupard ne abatera nule
+manere darbre ne de boys put les deuz olyvers avaunt ditz mes par la
+veu et la lyvere le dit monsire Richard, ou par ascun autre par le dit
+monsire Richard assigne. En tesmoigaunz (sic) de quenx choses a cestes
+presentes endentures les parties enterchaungablement ount mys lour
+seals. Escript a Creskelde le meskerdy en le semayn de Pasque lan
+avaunt diste."
+
+It is probable that the "blomes" referred to in this agreement were the
+bloomeries or fires in which the iron was made; and that the "olyveres"
+were forges or erections, each of which contained so many bloomeries,
+but were of limited durability, and probably perished in the using.
+
+[4] The back of a grate has recently been found, cast by Richard
+Leonard at Brede Furnace in 1636. It is curious as containing a
+representation of the founder with his dog and cups; a drawing of the
+furnace, with the wheelbarrow and other implements for the casting, and
+on a shield the pincers and other marks of the blacksmith. Leonard was
+tenant of the Sackville furnace at Little Udimore.--Sussex
+Archaeological Collections, vol. xii.
+
+[5] For an interesting account of the early iron industry of Sussex see
+M. A. LOWER'S Contributions to Literature, Historical, Antiquarian, and
+Metrical. London, 1854.
+
+[6] Archaeologia, vol. x. 472.
+
+[7] One of these, 6 1/2 feet long, and of 2 1/2 inches bore,
+manufactured in 1543, bears the cast inscription of Petrus Baude Gallus
+operis artifex.
+
+[8] Mr. Lower says, "Many foreigners were brought over to carry on the
+works; which perhaps may account for the number of Frenchmen and
+Germans whose names appear in our parish registers about the middle of
+the sixteenth century ."--Contributions to Literature, 108.
+
+[9] The embankment and sluices of the furnace-pond at the upper part of
+the valley continue to be maintained, the lake being used by the
+present Lord Ashburnham as a preserve for fish and water-fowl.
+
+[10] Reminding one of the odd motto assumed by Gillespie, the
+tobacconist of Edinburgh, founder of Gillespie's Hospital, on whose
+carriage-panels was emblazoned a Scotch mull, with the motto,
+
+ "Wha wad ha' thocht it,
+ That noses could ha' bought it!"
+
+It is just possible that the Fullers may have taken their motto from
+the words employed by Juvenal in describing the father of Demosthenes,
+who was a blacksmith and a sword-cutler--
+
+ "Quem pater ardentis massae fuligine lippus,
+ A carbone et forcipibus gladiosque parante
+ Incude et luteo Vulcano ad rhetora misit."
+
+[11] It was then believed that sea or pit-coal was poisonous when burnt
+in dwellings, and that it was especially injurious to the human
+complexion. All sorts of diseases were attributed to its use, and at
+one time it was even penal to burn it. The Londoners only began to
+reconcile themselves to the use of coal when the wood within reach of
+the metropolis had been nearly all burnt up, and no other fuel was to
+be had.
+
+[12] Archaeologia Cambrensis, 3rd Series, No. 34, April, 1863. Art.
+"Sussex Ironmasters in Glamorganshire."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IRON-SMELTING BY PIT-COAL--DUD DUDLEY.
+
+"God of his Infinite goodness (if we will but take notice of his
+goodness unto this Nation) hath made this Country a very Granary for
+the supplying of Smiths with Iron, Cole, and Lime made with cole, which
+hath much supplied these men with Corn also of late; and from these men
+a great part, not only of this Island, but also of his Majestie's other
+Kingdoms and Territories, with Iron wares have their supply, and Wood
+in these parts almost exhausted, although it were of late a mighty
+woodland country."--DUDLEY's Metallum Martis, 1665.
+
+
+The severe restrictions enforced by the legislature against the use of
+wood in iron-smelting had the effect of almost extinguishing the
+manufacture. New furnaces ceased to be erected, and many of the old
+ones were allowed to fall into decay, until it began to be feared that
+this important branch of industry would become completely lost. The
+same restrictions alike affected the operations of the glass
+manufacture, which, with the aid of foreign artisans, had been
+gradually established in England, and was becoming a thriving branch of
+trade. It was even proposed that the smelting of iron should be
+absolutely prohibited: "many think," said a contemporary writer, "that
+there should be NO WORKS ANYWHERE--they do so devour the woods."
+
+The use of iron, however, could not be dispensed with. The very
+foundations of society rested upon an abundant supply of it, for tools
+and implements of peace, as well as for weapons of war. In the dearth
+of the article at home, a supply of it was therefore sought for abroad;
+and both iron and steel came to be imported in largely-increased
+quantities. This branch of trade was principally in the hands of the
+Steelyard Company of Foreign Merchants, established in Upper Thames
+Street, a little above London Bridge; and they imported large
+quantities of iron and steel from foreign countries, principally from
+Sweden, Germany, and Spain. The best iron came from Spain, though the
+Spaniards on their part coveted our English made cannons, which were
+better manufactured than theirs; while the best steel came from Germany
+and Sweden.[1]
+
+Under these circumstances, it was natural that persons interested in
+the English iron manufacture should turn their attention to some other
+description of fuel which should serve as a substitute for the
+prohibited article. There was known to be an abundance of coal in the
+northern and midland counties, and it occurred to some speculators more
+than usually daring, to propose it as a substitute for the charcoal
+fuel made from wood. But the same popular prejudice which existed
+against the use of coal for domestic purposes, prevented its being
+employed for purposes of manufacture; and they were thought very
+foolish persons indeed who first promulgated the idea of smelting iron
+by means of pit-coal. The old manufacturers held it to be impossible
+to reduce the ore in any other way than by means of charcoal of wood.
+It was only when the wood in the neighbourhood of the ironworks had
+been almost entirely burnt up, that the manufacturers were driven to
+entertain the idea of using coal as a substitute; but more than a
+hundred years passed before the practice of smelting iron by its means
+became general.
+
+The first who took out a patent for the purpose was one Simon
+Sturtevant, a German skilled in mining operations; the professed object
+of his invention being "to neale, melt, and worke all kind of metal
+oares, irons, and steeles with sea-coale, pit-coale, earth-coale, and
+brush fewell." The principal end of his invention, he states in his
+Treatise of Metallica,[2] is to save the consumption and waste of the
+woods and timber of the country; and, should his design succeed, he
+holds that it "will prove to be the best and most profitable business
+and invention that ever was known or invented in England these many
+yeares." He says he has already made trial of the process on a small
+scale, and is confident that it will prove equally successful on a
+large one. Sturtevant was not very specific as to his process; but it
+incidentally appears to have been his purpose to reduce the coal by an
+imperfect combustion to the condition of coke, thereby ridding it of
+"those malignant proprieties which are averse to the nature of
+metallique substances." The subject was treated by him, as was
+customary in those days, as a great mystery, made still more mysterious
+by the multitude of learned words under which he undertook to describe
+his "Ignick Invention" All the operations of industry were then treated
+as secrets. Each trade was a craft, and those who followed it were
+called craftsmen. Even the common carpenter was a handicraftsman; and
+skilled artisans were "cunning men." But the higher branches of work
+were mysteries, the communication of which to others was carefully
+guarded by the regulations of the trades guilds. Although the early
+patents are called specifications, they in reality specify nothing.
+They are for the most part but a mere haze of words, from which very
+little definite information can be gleaned as to the processes
+patented. It may be that Sturtevant had not yet reduced his idea to
+any practicable method, and therefore could not definitely explain it.
+However that may be, it is certain that his process failed when tried
+on a large scale, and Sturtevant's patent was accordingly cancelled at
+the end of a year.
+
+
+The idea, however, had been fairly born, and repeated patents were
+taken out with the same object from time to time. Thus, immediately on
+Sturtevant's failure becoming known, one John Rovenzon, who had been
+mixed up with the other's adventure, applied for a patent for making
+iron by the same process, which was granted him in 1613. His 'Treatise
+of Metallica'[3] shows that Rovenzon had a true conception of the
+method of manufacture. Nevertheless he, too, failed in carrying out
+the invention in practice, and his patent was also cancelled. Though
+these failures were very discouraging, like experiments continued to be
+made and patents taken out,--principally by Dutchmen and
+Germans,[4]--but no decided success seems to have attended their
+efforts until the year 1620, when Lord Dudley took out his patent "for
+melting iron ore, making bar-iron, &c., with coal, in furnaces, with
+bellows." This patent was taken out at the instance of his son Dud
+Dudley, whose story we gather partly from his treatise entitled
+'Metallum Martis,' and partly from various petitions presented by him
+to the king, which are preserved in the State Paper Office, and it runs
+as follows:--
+
+Dud Dudley was born in 1599, the natural son of Edward Lord Dudley of
+Dudley Castle in the county of Worcester. He was the fourth of eleven
+children by the same mother, who is described in the pedigree of the
+family given in the Herald's visitation of the county of Stafford in
+the year 1663, signed by Dud Dudley himself, as "Elizabeth, daughter of
+William Tomlinson of Dudley, concubine of Edward Lord Dudley." Dud's
+eldest brother is described in the same pedigree as Robert Dudley,
+Squire, of Netherton Hall; and as his sisters mostly married well,
+several of them county gentlemen, it is obvious that the family,
+notwithstanding that the children were born out of wedlock, held a good
+position in their neighbourhood, and were regarded with respect. Lord
+Dudley, though married and having legitimate heirs at the time, seems
+to have attended to the up-bringing of his natural children; educating
+them carefully, and afterwards employing them in confidential offices
+connected with the management of his extensive property. Dud describes
+himself as taking great delight, when a youth, in his father's
+iron-works near Dudley, where he obtained considerable knowledge of the
+various processes of the manufacture.
+
+The town of Dudley was already a centre of the iron manufacture, though
+chiefly of small wares, such as nails, horse-shoes, keys, locks, and
+common agricultural tools; and it was estimated that there were about
+20,000 smiths and workers in iron of various kinds living within a
+circuit of ten miles of Dudley Castle. But, as in the southern
+counties, the production of iron had suffered great diminution from the
+want of fuel in the district, though formerly a mighty woodland
+country; and many important branches of the local trade were brought
+almost to a stand-still. Yet there was an extraordinary abundance of
+coal to be met with in the neighbourhood--coal in some places lying in
+seams ten feet thick--ironstone four feet thick immediately under the
+coal, with limestone conveniently adjacent to both. The conjunction
+seemed almost providential--"as if," observes Dud, "God had decreed the
+time when and how these smiths should be supplied, and this island
+also, with iron, and most especially that this cole and ironstone
+should give the first and just occasion for the invention of smelting
+iron with pit-cole;" though, as we have already seen, all attempts
+heretofore made with that object had practically failed.
+
+Dud was a special favourite of the Earl his father, who encouraged his
+speculations with reference to the improvement of the iron manufacture,
+and gave him an education calculated to enable him to turn his
+excellent practical abilities to account. He was studying at Baliol
+College, Oxford, in the year 1619, when the Earl sent for him to take
+charge of an iron furnace and two forges in the chase of Pensnet in
+Worcestershire. He was no sooner installed manager of the works, than,
+feeling hampered by the want of wood for fuel, his attention was
+directed to the employment of pit-coal as a substitute. He altered his
+furnace accordingly, so as to adapt it to the new process, and the
+result of the first trial was such as to induce him to persevere. It
+is nowhere stated in Dud Dudley's Treatise what was the precise nature
+of the method adopted by him; but it is most probable that, in
+endeavouring to substitute coal for wood as fuel, he would subject the
+coal to a process similar to that of charcoal-burning. The result
+would be what is called Coke; and as Dudley informs us that he followed
+up his first experiment with a second blast, by means of which he was
+enabled to produce good marketable iron, the presumption is that his
+success was also due to an improvement of the blast which he contrived
+for the purpose of keeping up the active combustion of the fuel.
+Though the quantity produced by the new process was comparatively
+small--not more than three tons a week from each furnace--Dudley
+anticipated that greater experience would enable him to increase the
+quantity; and at all events he had succeeded in proving the
+practicability of smelting iron with fuel made from pit-coal, which so
+many before him had tried in vain.
+
+Immediately after the second trial had been made with such good issue,
+Dud wrote to his father the Earl, then in London, informing him what he
+had done, and desiring him at once to obtain a patent for the invention
+from King James. This was readily granted, and the patent (No. 18),
+dated the 22nd February, 1620, was taken out in the name of Lord Dudley
+himself.
+
+Dud proceeded with the manufacture of iron at Pensnet, and also at
+Cradley in Staffordshire, where he erected another furnace; and a year
+after the patent was granted he was enabled to send up to the Tower, by
+the King's command, a considerable quantity of the new iron for trial.
+Many experiments were made with it: its qualities were fairly tested,
+and it was pronounced "good merchantable iron." Dud adds, in his
+Treatise, that his brother-in-law, Richard Parkshouse, of Sedgeley,[5]
+"had a fowling-gun there made of the Pit-cole iron," which was "well
+approved." There was therefore every prospect of the new method of
+manufacture becoming fairly established, and with greater experience
+further improvements might with confidence be anticipated, when a
+succession of calamities occurred to the inventor which involved him in
+difficulties and put an effectual stop to the progress of his
+enterprise.
+
+The new works had been in successful operation little more than a year,
+when a flood, long after known as the "Great May-day Flood," swept away
+Dudley's principal works at Cradley, and otherwise inflicted much
+damage throughout the district. "At the market town called
+Stourbridge," says Dud, in the course of his curious narrative,
+"although the author sent with speed to preserve the people from
+drowning, and one resolute man was carried from the bridge there in the
+day-time, the nether part of the town was so deep in water that the
+people had much ado to preserve their lives in the uppermost rooms of
+their houses." Dudley himself received very little sympathy for his
+losses. On the contrary, the iron-smelters of the district rejoiced
+exceedingly at the destruction of his works by the flood. They had
+seen him making good iron by his new patent process, and selling it
+cheaper than they could afford to do. They accordingly put in
+circulation all manner of disparaging reports about his iron. It was
+bad iron, not fit to be used; indeed no iron, except what was smelted
+with charcoal of wood, could be good. To smelt it with coal was a
+dangerous innovation, and could only result in some great public
+calamity. The ironmasters even appealed to King James to put a stop to
+Dud's manufacture, alleging that his iron was not merchantable. And
+then came the great flood, which swept away his works; the hostile
+ironmasters now hoping that there was an end for ever of Dudley's
+pit-coal iron.
+
+But Dud, with his wonted energy, forthwith set to work and repaired his
+furnaces and forges, though at great cost; and in the course of a short
+time the new manufacture was again in full progress. The ironmasters
+raised a fresh outcry against him, and addressed another strong
+memorial against Dud and his iron to King James. This seems to have
+taken effect; and in order to ascertain the quality of the article by
+testing it upon a large scale, the King commanded Dudley to send up to
+the Tower of London, with every possible speed, quantities of all the
+sorts of bar-iron made by him, fit for the "making of muskets,
+carbines, and iron for great bolts for shipping; which iron," continues
+Dud, "being so tried by artists and smiths, the ironmasters and
+iron-mongers were all silenced until the 21st year of King James's
+reign." The ironmasters then endeavoured to get the Dudley patent
+included in the monopolies to be abolished by the statute of that year;
+but all they could accomplish was the limitation of the patent to
+fourteen years instead of thirty-one; the special exemption of the
+patent from the operation of the statute affording a sufficient
+indication of the importance already attached to the invention. After
+that time Dudley "went on with his invention cheerfully, and made
+annually great store of iron, good and merchantable, and sold it unto
+diverse men at twelve pounds per ton." "I also," said he, "made all
+sorts of cast-iron wares, as brewing cisterns, pots, mortars, &c.,
+better and cheaper than any yet made in these nations with charcoal,
+some of which are yet to be seen by any man (at the author's house in
+the city of Worcester) that desires to be satisfied of the truth of the
+invention."
+
+Notwithstanding this decided success, Dudley encountered nothing but
+trouble and misfortune. The ironmasters combined to resist his
+invention; they fastened lawsuit's upon him, and succeeded in getting
+him ousted from his works at Cradley. From thence he removed to Himley
+in the county of Stafford, where he set up a pit-coal furnace; but
+being without the means of forging the iron into bars, he was
+constrained to sell the pig-iron to the charcoal-ironmasters, "who did
+him much prejudice, not only by detaining his stock, but also by
+disparaging his iron." He next proceeded to erect a large new furnace
+at Hasco Bridge, near Sedgeley, in the same county, for the purpose of
+carrying out the manufacture on the most improved principles. This
+furnace was of stone, twenty-seven feet square, provided with unusually
+large bellows; and when in full work he says he was enabled to turn out
+seven tons of iron per week, "the greatest quantity of pit-coal iron
+ever yet made in Great Britain." At the same place he discovered and
+opened out new workings of coal ten feet thick, lying immediately over
+the ironstone, and he prepared to carry on his operations on a large
+scale; but the new works were scarcely finished when a mob of rioters,
+instigated by the charcoal-ironmasters, broke in upon them, cut in
+pieces the new bellows, destroyed the machinery, and laid the results
+of all his deep-laid ingenuity and persevering industry in ruins. From
+that time forward Dudley was allowed no rest nor peace: he was
+attacked by mobs, worried by lawsuits, and eventually overwhelmed by
+debts. He was then seized by his creditors and sent up to London,
+where he was held a prisoner in the Comptoir for several thousand
+pounds. The charcoal-iron men thus for a time remained masters of the
+field.
+
+Charles I. seems to have taken pity on the suffering inventor; and on
+his earnest petition, setting forth the great advantages to the nation
+of his invention, from which he had as yet derived no advantage, but
+only losses, sufferings, and persecution, the King granted him a
+renewal of his patent[6] in the year 1638; three other gentlemen
+joining him as partners, and doubtless providing the requisite capital
+for carrying on the manufacture after the plans of the inventor. But
+Dud's evil fortune continued to pursue him. The patent had scarcely
+been securedere the Civil War broke out, and the arts of peace must at
+once perforce give place to the arts of war. Dud's nature would not
+suffer him to be neutral at such a time; and when the nation divided
+itself into two hostile camps, his predilections being strongly
+loyalist, he took the side of the King with his father. It would
+appear from a petition presented by him to Charles II. in 1660, setting
+forth his sufferings in the royal cause, and praying for restoral to
+certain offices which he had enjoyed under Charles I., that as early as
+the year 1637 he had been employed by the King on a mission into
+Scotland,[7] in the train of the Marquis of Hamilton, the King's
+Commissioner. Again in 1639, leaving his ironworks and partners, he
+accompanied Charles on his expedition across the Scotch border, and was
+present with the army until its discomfiture at Newburn near Newcastle
+in the following year.
+
+The sword was now fairly drawn, and Dud seems for a time to have
+abandoned his iron-works and followed entirely the fortunes of the
+king. He was sworn surveyor of the Mews or Armoury in 1640, but being
+unable to pay for the patent, another was sworn in in his place. Yet
+his loyalty did not falter, for in the beginning of 1642, when Charles
+set out from London, shortly after the fall of Strafford and Laud, Dud
+went with him.[8] He was present before Hull when Sir John Hotham shut
+its gates in the king's face; at York when the royal commissions of
+array were sent out enjoining all loyal subjects to send men, arms,
+money, and horses, for defence of the king and maintenance of the law;
+at Nottingham, where the royal standard was raised; at Coventry, where
+the townspeople refused the king entrance and fired upon his troops
+from the walls; at Edgehill, where the first great but indecisive
+battle was fought between the contending parties; in short, as Dud
+Dudley states in his petition, he was "in most of the battailes that
+year, and also supplyed his late sacred Majestie's magazines of
+Stafford, Worcester, Dudley Castle, and Oxford, with arms, shot,
+drakes, and cannon; and also, became major unto Sir Frauncis Worsley's
+regiment, which was much decaied."
+
+In 1643, according to the statement contained in his petition above
+referred to, Dud Dudley acted as military engineer in setting out the
+fortifications of Worcester and Stafford, and furnishing them with
+ordnance. After the taking of Lichfield, in which he had a share, he
+was made Colonel of Dragoons, and accompanied the Queen with his
+regiment to the royal head-quarters at Oxford. The year after we find
+him at the siege of Gloucester, then at the first battle of Newbury
+leading the forlorn hope with Sir George Lisle, afterwards marching
+with Sir Charles Lucas into the associate counties, and present at the
+royalist rout at Newport. That he was esteemed a valiant and skilful
+officer is apparent from the circumstance, that in 1645 he was
+appointed general of Prince Maurice's train of artillery, and
+afterwards held the same rank under Lord Ashley. The iron districts
+being still for the most part occupied by the royal armies, our
+military engineer turned his practical experience to account by
+directing the forging of drakes[9] of bar-iron, which were found of
+great use, giving up his own dwelling-house in the city of Worcester
+for the purpose of carrying on the manufacture of these and other arms.
+But Worcester and the western towns fell before the Parliamentarian
+armies in 1646, and all the iron-works belonging to royalists, from
+which the principal supplies of arms had been drawn by the King's army,
+were forthwith destroyed.
+
+Dudley fully shared in the dangers and vicissitudes of that trying
+period, and bore his part throughout like a valiant soldier. For two
+years nothing was heard of him, until in 1648, when the king's party
+drew together again, and made head in different parts of the country,
+north and south. Goring raised his standard in Essex, but was driven
+by Fairfax into Colchester, where he defended himself for two months.
+While the siege was in progress, the royalists determined to make an
+attempt to raise it. On this Dud Dudley again made his appearance in
+the field, and, joining sundry other counties, he proceeded to raise
+200 men, mostly at his own charge. They were, however, no sooner
+mustered in Bosco Bello woods near Madeley, than they were attacked by
+the Parliamentarians, and dispersed or taken prisoners. Dud was among
+those so taken, and he was first carried to Hartlebury Castle and
+thence to Worcester, where he was imprisoned. Recounting the
+sufferings of himself and his followers on this occasion, in the
+petition presented to Charles II. in 1660,[10] he says, "200 men were
+dispersed, killed, and some taken, namely, Major Harcourt, Major
+Elliotts, Capt. Long, and Cornet Hodgetts, of whom Major Harcourt was
+miserably burned with matches. The petitioner and the rest were
+stripped almost naked, and in triumph and scorn carried up to the city
+of Worcester (which place Dud had fortified for the king), and kept
+close prisoners, with double guards set upon the prison and the city."
+
+Notwithstanding this close watch and durance, Dudley and Major Elliotts
+contrived to break out of gaol, making their way over the tops of the
+houses, afterwards passing the guards at the city gates, and escaping
+into the open country. Being hotly pursued, they travelled during the
+night, and took to the trees during the daytime. They succeeded in
+reaching London, but only to drop again into the lion's mouth; for
+first Major Elliotts was captured, then Dudley, and both were taken
+before Sir John Warner, the Lord Mayor, who forthwith sent them before
+the "cursed committee of insurrection," as Dudley calls them. The
+prisoners were summarily sentenced to be shot to death, and were
+meanwhile closely imprisoned in the Gatehouse at Westminster, with
+other Royalists.
+
+The day before their intended execution, the prisoners formed a plan of
+escape. It was Sunday morning, the 20th August, 1648, when they seized
+their opportunity, "at ten of the cloeke in sermon time;" and,
+overpowering the gaolers, Dudley, with Sir Henry Bates, Major Elliotts,
+Captain South, Captain Paris, and six others, succeeded in getting
+away, and making again for the open country. Dudley had received a
+wound in the leg, and could only get along with great difficulty. He
+records that he proceeded on crutches, through Worcester, Tewkesbury,
+and Gloucester, to Bristol, having been "fed three weeks in private in
+an enemy's hay mow." Even the most lynx-eyed Parliamentarian must have
+failed to recognise the quondam royalist general of artillery in the
+helpless creature dragging himself along upon crutches; and he reached
+Bristol in safety.
+
+His military career now over, he found himself absolutely penniless.
+His estate of about 200L. per annum had been sequestrated and sold by
+the government;[11] his house in Worcester had been seized and his
+sickly wife turned out of doors; and his goods, stock, great shop, and
+ironworks, which he himself valued at 2000L., were destroyed. He had
+also lost the offices of Serjeant-at-arms, Lieutenant of Ordnance, and
+Surveyor of the Mews, which he had held under the king; in a word, he
+found himself reduced to a state of utter destitution.
+
+Dudley was for some time under the necessity of living in great privacy
+at Bristol; but when the king had been executed, and the royalists were
+finally crushed at Worcester, Dud gradually emerged from his
+concealment. He was still the sole possessor of the grand secret of
+smelting iron with pit-coal, and he resolved upon one more commercial
+adventure, in the hope of yet turning it to good account. He succeeded
+in inducing Walter Stevens, linendraper, and John Stone, merchant, both
+of Bristol, to join him as partners in an ironwork, which they
+proceeded to erect near that city. The buildings were well advanced,
+and nearly 700L. had been expended, when a quarrel occurred between
+Dudley and his partners, which ended in the stoppage of the works, and
+the concern being thrown into Chancery. Dudley alleges that the other
+partners "cunningly drew him into a bond," and "did unjustly enter
+staple actions in Bristol of great value against him, because he was of
+the king's party;" but it would appear as if there had been some twist
+or infirmity of temper in Dudley himself, which prevented him from
+working harmoniously with such persons as he became associated with in
+affairs of business.
+
+In the mean time other attempts were made to smelt iron with pit-coal.
+Dudley says that Cromwell and the then Parliament granted a patent to
+Captain Buck for the purpose; and that Cromwell himself, Major Wildman,
+and various others were partners in the patent. They erected furnaces
+and works in the Forest of Dean;[12] but, though Cromwell and his
+officers could fight and win battles, they could not smelt and forge
+iron with pit-coal. They brought one Dagney, an Italian glass-maker,
+from Bristol, to erect a new furnace for them, provided with sundry
+pots of glass-house clay; but no success attended their efforts. The
+partners knowing of Dudley's possession of the grand secret, invited
+him to visit their works; but all they could draw from him was that
+they would never succeed in making iron to profit by the methods they
+were pursuing. They next proceeded to erect other works at Bristol,
+but still they failed. Major Wildman[13] bought Dudley's sequestrated
+estate, in the hope of being able to extort his secret of making iron
+with pit-coal; but all their attempts proving abortive, they at length
+abandoned the enterprise in despair. In 1656, one Captain Copley
+obtained from Cromwell a further patent with a similar object; and
+erected works near Bristol, and also in the Forest of Kingswood. The
+mechanical engineers employed by Copley failed in making his bellows
+blow; on which he sent for Dudley, who forthwith "made his bellows to
+be blown feisibly;" but Copley failed, like his predecessors, in making
+iron, and at length he too desisted from further experiments.
+
+Such continued to be the state of things until the Restoration, when we
+find Dud Dudley a petitioner to the king for the renewal of his patent.
+He was also a petitioner for compensation in respect of the heavy
+losses he had sustained during the civil wars. The king was besieged
+by crowds of applicants of a similar sort, but Dudley was no more
+successful than the others. He failed in obtaining the renewal of his
+patent. Another applicant for the like privilege, probably having
+greater interest at court, proved more successful. Colonel Proger and
+three others[14] were granted a patent to make iron with coal; but
+Dudley knew the secret, which the new patentees did not; and their
+patent came to nothing.
+
+Dudley continued to address the king in importunate petitions, asking
+to be restored to his former offices of Serjeant-at-arms, Lieutenant of
+Ordnance, and Surveyor of the Mews or Armoury. He also petitioned to
+be appointed Master of the Charter House in Smithfield, professing
+himself willing to take anything, or hold any living.[15] We find him
+sending in two petitions to a similar effect in June, 1660; and a third
+shortly after. The result was, that he was reappointed to the office
+of Serjeant-at-Arms; but the Mastership of the Charter-House was not
+disposed of until 1662, when it fell to the lot of one Thomas
+Watson.[16] In 1661, we find a patent granted to Wm. Chamberlaine
+and--Dudley, Esq., for the sole use of their new invention of plating
+steel, &c., and tinning the said plates; but whether Dud Dudley was the
+person referred to, we are unable precisely to determine. A few years
+later, he seems to have succeeded in obtaining the means of prosecuting
+his original invention; for in his Metallum Martis, published in 1665,
+he describes himself as living at Green's Lodge, in Staffordshire; and
+he says that near it are four forges, Green's Forge, Swin Forge, Heath
+Forge, and Cradley Forge, where he practises his "perfect invention."
+These forges, he adds, "have barred all or most part of their iron with
+pit-coal since the authors first invention In 1618, which hath
+preserved much wood. In these four, besides many other forges, do the
+like [sic ]; yet the author hath had no benefit thereby to this
+present." From that time forward, Dud becomes lost to sight. He seems
+eventually to have retired to St. Helen's in Worcestershire, where he
+died in 1684, in the 85th year of his age. He was buried in the parish
+church there, and a monument, now destroyed, was erected to his memory,
+bearing the inscription partly set forth underneath.[17]
+
+
+
+[1] As late as 1790, long after the monopoly of the foreign merchants
+had been abolished, Pennant says, "The present Steelyard is the great
+repository of imported iron, which furnishes our metropolis with that
+necessary material. The quantity of bars that fills the yards and
+warehouses of this quarter strikes with astonishment the most
+indifferent beholder."--PENNANT, Account of London, 309.
+
+[2] STURTEVANT'S Metallica; briefly comprehending the Doctrine of
+Diverse New Metallical Inventions, &c. Reprinted and published at the
+Great Seal Patent Office, 1858.
+
+[3] Reprinted and published at the Great Seal Patent Office, 1858.
+
+[4] Among the early patentees, besides the names of Sturtevant and
+Rovenzon, we find those of Jordens, Francke, Sir Phillibert Vernatt,
+and other foreigners of the above nations.
+
+[5] Mr. Parkshouse was one of the esquires to Sir Ferdinando Dudley
+(the legitimate son of the Earl of Dudley) When he was made Knight of
+the Bath. Sir Ferdinando's only daughter Frances married Humble Ward,
+son and heir of William Ward, goldsmith and jeweller to Charles the
+First's queen. Her husband having been created a baron by the title of
+Baron Ward of Birmingham, and Frances becoming Baroness of Dudley in
+her own right on the demise of her father, the baronies of Dudley and
+Ward thus became united in their eldest son Edward in the year 1697.
+
+[6] Patent No. 117, Old Series, granted in 1638, to Sir George Horsey,
+David Ramsey, Roger Foulke, and Dudd Dudley.
+
+[7] By his own account, given in Metallum Martis, while in Scotland in
+1637, he visited the Highlands as well as the Lowlands, spending the
+whole summer of that year "in opening of mines and making of
+discoveries;" spending part of the time with Sir James Hope of Lead
+Hills, near where, he says, "he got gold." It does not appear,
+however, that any iron forges existed in Scotland at the time: indeed
+Dudley expressly says that "Scotland maketh no iron;" and in his
+treatise of 1665 he urges that the Corporation of the Mines Royal
+should set him and his inventions at work to enable Scotland to enjoy
+the benefit of a cheap and abundant supply of the manufactured article.
+
+[8] The Journals of the House of Commons, of the 13th June, 1642,
+contain the resolution "that Captain Wolseley, Ensign Dudley, and John
+Lometon be forthwith sent for, as delinquents, by the Serjeant-at-Arms
+attending on the House, for giving interruption to the execution of the
+ordinance of the militia in the county of Leicester."
+
+[9] Small pieces of artillery, specimens of which are still to be seen
+in the museum at Woolwich Arsenal and at the Tower.
+
+[10] State Paper Office, Dom. Charles II., vol. xi. 54.
+
+[11] The Journals of the House of Commons, on the 2nd Nov. 1652, have
+the following entry: "The House this day resumed the debate upon the
+additional Bill for sale of several lands and estates forfeited to the
+Commonwealth for treason, when it was resolved that the name of Dud
+Dudley of Green Lodge be inserted into this Bill."
+
+[12] Mr. Mushet, in his 'Papers on Iron,' says, that "although he had
+carefully examined every spot and relic in Dean Forest likely to denote
+the site of Dud Dudley's enterprising but unfortunate experiment of
+making pig-iron with pit coal," it had been without success; neither
+could he find any traces of the like operations of Cromwell and his
+partners.
+
+[13] Dudley says, "Major Wildman, more barbarous to me than a wild man,
+although a minister, bought the author's estate, near 200L. per annum,
+intending to compell from the author his inventions of making iron with
+pitcole, but afterwards passed my estate unto two barbarous brokers of
+London, that pulled down the author's two mantion houses, sold 500
+timber trees off his land, and to this day are his houses unrepaired."
+Wildman himself fell under the grip of Cromwell. Being one of the
+chiefs of the Republican party, he was seized at Exton, near
+Marlborough, in 1654, and imprisoned in Chepstow Castle.
+
+[14] June 13, 1661. Petition of Col. Jas. Proger and three others to
+the king for a patent for the sole exercise of their invention of
+melting down iron and other metals with coal instead of wood, as the
+great consumption of coal [charcoal?] therein causes detriment to
+shipping, &c. With reference thereon to Attorney-General Palmer, and
+his report, June 18, in favour of the petition,--State Papers, Charles
+II. (Dom. vol. xxxvii, 49.)
+
+[15] In his second petition he prays that a dwelling-house situated in
+Worcester, and belonging to one Baldwin, "a known traitor," may be
+assigned to him in lieu of Alderman Nash's, which had reverted to that
+individual since his return to loyalty; Dudley reminding the king that
+his own house in that city had been given up by him for the service of
+his father Charles I., and turned into a factory for arms. It does not
+appear that this part of his petition was successful.
+
+[16] State Papers, vol. xxxi. Doquet Book, p.89.
+
+[17]
+
+ Pulvis et umbra sumus
+ Memento mori.
+
+Dodo Dudley chiliarchi nobilis Edwardi nuper domini de Dudley filius,
+patri charus et regiae Majestatis fidissimus subditus et servus in
+asserendo regein, in vindicartdo ecclesiam, in propugnando legem ac
+libertatem Anglicanam, saepe captus, anno 1648, semel condemnatus et
+tamen non decollatus, renatum denuo vidit diadaema hic inconcussa
+semper virtute senex.
+
+ Differt non aufert mortem longissima vita
+ Sed differt multam cras hodiere mori.
+ Quod nequeas vitare, fugis:
+ Nec formidanda est.
+
+Plot frequently alludes to Dudley in his Natural History of
+Staffordshire, and when he does so he describes him as the "worshipful
+Dud Dudley," showing the estimation in which he was held by his
+contemporaries.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ANDREW YARRANTON.
+
+"There never have been wanting men to whom England's improvement by sea
+and land was one of the dearest thoughts of their lives, and to whom
+England's good was the foremost of their worldly considerations. And
+such, emphatically, was Andrew Yarranton, a true patriot in the best
+sense of the word."--DOVE, Elements of Political Science.
+
+
+That industry had a sore time of it during the civil wars will further
+appear from the following brief account of Andrew Yarranton, which may
+be taken as a companion memoir to that of Dud Dudley. For Yarranton
+also was a Worcester ironmaster and a soldier--though on the opposite
+side,--but more even than Dudley was he a man of public spirit and
+enterprise, an enlightened political economist (long before political
+economy had been recognised as a science), and in many respects a true
+national benefactor. Bishop Watson said that he ought to have had a
+statue erected to his memory because of his eminent public services;
+and an able modern writer has gone so far as to say of him that he was
+"the founder of English political economy, the first man in England who
+saw and said that peace was better than war, that trade was better than
+plunder, that honest industry was better than martial greatness, and
+that the best occupation of a government was to secure prosperity at
+home, and let other nations alone." [1]
+
+Yet the name of Andrew Yarranton is scarcely remembered, or is at most
+known to only a few readers of half-forgotten books. The following
+brief outline of his history is gathered from his own narrative and
+from documents in the State Paper Office.
+
+Andrew Yarranton was born at the farmstead of Larford, in the parish of
+Astley, in Worcestershire, in the year 1616.[2] In his sixteenth year
+he was put apprentice to a Worcester linendraper, and remained at that
+trade for some years; but not liking it, he left it, and was leading a
+country life when the civil wars broke out. Unlike Dudley, he took the
+side of the Parliament, and joined their army, in which he served for
+some time as a soldier. His zeal and abilities commended him to his
+officers, and he was raised from one position to another, until in the
+course of a few years we find him holding the rank of captain. "While
+a soldier," says he, "I had sometimes the honour and misfortune to
+lodge and dislodge an army;" but this is all the information he gives
+us of his military career. In the year 1648 he was instrumental in
+discovering and frustrating a design on the part of the Royalists to
+seize Doyley House in the county of Hereford, and other strongholds,
+for which he received the thanks of Parliament "for his ingenuity,
+discretion, and valour," and a substantial reward of 500L.[3] He was
+also recommended to the Committee of Worcester for further employment.
+But from that time we hear no more of him in connection with the civil
+wars. When Cromwell assumed the supreme control of affairs, Yarranton
+retired from the army with most of the Presbyterians, and devoted
+himself to industrial pursuits.
+
+We then find him engaged in carrying on the manufacture of iron at
+Ashley, near Bewdley, in Worcestershire. "In the year 1652", says he,
+"I entered upon iron-works, and plied them for several years." [4] He
+made it a subject of his diligent study how to provide employment for
+the poor, then much distressed by the late wars. With the help of his
+wife, he established a manufacture of linen, which was attended with
+good results. Observing how the difficulties of communication, by
+reason of the badness of the roads, hindered the development of the
+rich natural resources of the western counties,[5] he applied himself
+to the improvement of the navigation of the larger rivers, making
+surveys of them at his own cost, and endeavouring to stimulate local
+enterprise so as to enable him to carry his plans into effect.
+
+While thus occupied, the restoration of Charles II. took place, and
+whether through envy or enmity Yarranton's activity excited the
+suspicion of the authorities. His journeys from place to place seemed
+to them to point to some Presbyterian plot on foot. On the 13th of
+November, 1660, Lord Windsor, Lord-Lieutenant of the county, wrote to
+the Secretary of State--"There is a quaker in prison for speaking
+treason against his Majesty, and a countryman also, and Captain
+Yarrington for refusing to obey my authority." [6] It would appear
+from subsequent letters that Yarranton must have lain in prison for
+nearly two years, charged with conspiring against the king's authority,
+the only evidence against him consisting of some anonymous letter's.
+At the end of May, 1662, he succeeded in making his escape from the
+custody of the Provost Marshal. The High Sheriff scoured the country
+after him at the head of a party of horse, and then he communicated to
+the Secretary of State, Sir Edward Nicholas, that the suspected
+conspirator could not be found, and was supposed to have made his way
+to London. Before the end of a month Yarranton was again in custody,
+as appears from the communication of certain justices of Surrey to Sir
+Edward Nicholas.[7] As no further notice of Yarranton occurs in the
+State Papers, and as we shortly after find him publicly occupied in
+carrying out his plans for improving the navigation of the western
+rivers, it is probable that his innocence of any plot was established
+after a legal investigation. A few years later he published in London
+a 4to. tract entitled 'A Full Discovery of the First Presbyterian Sham
+Plot,' which most probably contained a vindication of his conduct.[8]
+
+Yarranton was no sooner at liberty than we find him again occupied with
+his plans of improved inland navigation. His first scheme was to
+deepen the small river Salwarp, so as to connect Droitwich with the
+Severn by a water communication, and thus facilitate the transport of
+the salt so abundantly yielded by the brine springs near that town. In
+1665, the burgesses of Droitwich agreed to give him 750L. and eight
+salt vats in Upwich, valued at 80L. per annum, with three-quarters of a
+vat in Northwich, for twenty-one years, in payment for the work. But
+the times were still unsettled, and Yarranton and his partner Wall not
+being rich, the scheme was not then carried into effect.[9] In the
+following year we find him occupied with a similar scheme to open up
+the navigation of the river Stour, passing by Stourport and
+Kidderminster, and connect it by an artificial cut with the river
+Trent. Some progress was made with this undertaking, so far in advance
+of the age, but, like the other, it came to a stand still for want of
+money, and more than a hundred years passed before it was carried out
+by a kindred genius--James Brindley, the great canal maker. Mr.
+Chambers says that when Yarranton's scheme was first brought forward,
+it met with violent opposition and ridicule. The undertaking was
+thought wonderfully bold, and, joined to its great extent, the sandy,
+spongy nature of the ground, the high banks necessary to prevent the
+inundation of the Stour on the canal, furnished its opponents, if not
+with sound argument, at least with very specious topics for opposition
+and laughter.[10] Yarranton's plan was to make the river itself
+navigable, and by uniting it with other rivers, open up a communication
+with the Trent; while Brindley's was to cut a canal parallel with the
+river, and supply it with water from thence. Yarranton himself thus
+accounts for the failure of his scheme in 'England's Improvement by Sea
+and Land':--"It was my projection," he says, "and I will tell you the
+reason why it was not finished. The river Stour and some other rivers
+were granted by an Act of Parliament to certain persons of honor, and
+some progress was made in the work, but within a small while after the
+Act passed[11] it was let fall again; but it being a brat of my own, I
+was not willing it should be abortive, wherefore I made offers to
+perfect it, having a third part of the inheritance to me and my heirs
+for ever, and we came to an agreement, upon which I fell on, and made
+it completely navigable from Stourbridge to Kidderminster, and carried
+down many hundred tons of coal, and laid out near 1000L., and there it
+was obstructed for want of money." [12]
+
+Another of Yarranton's far-sighted schemes of a similar kind was one to
+connect the Thames with the Severn by means of an artificial cut, at
+the very place where, more than a century after his death, it was
+actually carried out by modern engineers. This canal, it appears, was
+twice surveyed under his direction by his son. He did, however,
+succeed in his own time in opening up the navigation of the Avon, and
+was the first to carry barges upon its waters from Tewkesbury to
+Stratford.
+
+The improvement of agriculture, too, had a share of Yarranton's
+attention. He saw the soil exhausted by long tillage and constantly
+repeated crops of rye, and he urged that the land should have rest or
+at least rotation of crop. With this object he introduced clover-seed,
+and supplied it largely to the farmers of the western counties, who
+found their land doubled in value by the new method of husbandry, and
+it shortly became adopted throughout the country. Seeing how commerce
+was retarded by the small accommodation provided for shipping at the
+then principal ports, Yarranton next made surveys and planned docks for
+the city of London; but though he zealously advocated the subject, he
+found few supporters, and his plans proved fruitless. In this respect
+he was nearly a hundred and fifty years before his age, and the London
+importers continued to conduct their shipping business in the crowded
+tideway of the Thames down even to the beginning of the present century.
+
+While carrying on his iron works, it occurred to Yarranton that it
+would be of great national advantage if the manufacture of tin-plate
+could be introduced into England. Although the richest tin mines then
+known existed in this country, the mechanical arts were at so low an
+ebb that we were almost entirely dependent upon foreigners for the
+supply of the articles manufactured from the metal. The Saxons were
+the principal consumers of English tin, and we obtained from them in
+return nearly the whole of our tin-plates. All attempts made to
+manufacture them in England had hitherto failed; the beating out of the
+iron by hammers into laminae sufficiently thin and smooth, and the
+subsequent distribution and fixing of the film of tin over the surface
+of the iron, proving difficulties which the English manufacturers were
+unable to overcome. To master these difficulties the indefatigable
+Yarranton set himself to work. "Knowing," says he, "the usefulness of
+tin-plates and the goodness of our metals for that purpose, I did,
+about sixteen years since (i.e. about 1665), endeavour to find out the
+way for making thereof; whereupon I acquainted a person of much riches,
+and one that was very understanding in the iron manufacture, who was
+pleased to say that he had often designed to get the trade into
+England, but never could find out the way. Upon which it was agreed
+that a sum of monies should be advanced by several persons,[13] for the
+defraying of my charges of travelling to the place where these plates
+are made, and from thence to bring away the art of making them. Upon
+which, an able fire-man, that well understood the nature of iron, was
+made choice of to accompany me; and being fitted with an ingenious
+interpreter that well understood the language, and that had dealt much
+in that commodity, we marched first for Hamburgh, then to Leipsic, and
+from thence to Dresden, the Duke of Saxony's court, where we had notice
+of the place where the plates were made; which was in a large tract of
+mountainous land, running from a place called Seger-Hutton unto a town
+called Awe [Au], being in length about twenty miles." [14]
+
+It is curious to find how much the national industry of England has
+been influenced by the existence from time to time of religious
+persecutions abroad, which had the effect of driving skilled Protestant
+artisans, more particularly from Flanders and France, into England,
+where they enjoyed the special protection of successive English
+Governments, and founded various important branches of manufacture.
+But it appears from the history of the tin manufactures of Saxony, that
+that country also had profited in like manner by the religious
+persecutions of Germany, and even of England itself. Thus we are told
+by Yarranton that it was a Cornish miner, a Protestant, banished out of
+England for his religion in Queen Mary's time, who discovered the tin
+mines at Awe, and that a Romish priest of Bohemia, who had been
+converted to Lutheranism and fled into Saxony for refuge, "was the
+chief instrument in the manufacture until it was perfected." These two
+men were held in great regard by the Duke of Saxony as well as by the
+people of the country; for their ingenuity and industry proved the
+source of great prosperity and wealth, "several fine cities," says
+Yarranton, "having been raised by the riches proceeding from the
+tin-works"--not less than 80,000 men depending upon the trade for their
+subsistence; and when Yarranton visited Awe, he found that a statue had
+been erected to the memory of the Cornish miner who first discovered
+the tin.
+
+Yarranton was very civilly received by the miners, and, contrary to his
+expectation, he was allowed freely to inspect the tin-works and examine
+the methods by which the iron-plates were rolled out, as well as the
+process of tinning them. He was even permitted to engage a number of
+skilled workmen, whom he brought over with him to England for the
+purpose of starting the manufacture in this country. A beginning was
+made, and the tin-plates manufactured by Yarranton's men were
+pronounced of better quality even than those made in Saxony. "Many
+thousand plates," Yarranton says, "were made from iron raised in the
+Forest of Dean, and were tinned over with Cornish tin; and the plates
+proved far better than the German ones, by reason of the toughness and
+flexibleness of our forest iron. One Mr. Bison, a tinman in Worcester,
+Mr. Lydiate near Fleet Bridge, and Mr. Harrison near the King's Bench,
+have wrought many, and know their goodness." As Yarranton's account was
+written and published during the lifetime of the parties, there is no
+reason to doubt the accuracy of his statement.
+
+Arrangements were made to carry on the manufacture upon a large scale;
+but the secret having got wind, a patent was taken out, or "trumpt up"
+as Yarranton calls it, for the manufacture, "the patentee being
+countenanced by some persons of quality," and Yarranton was precluded
+from carrying his operations further. It is not improbable that the
+patentee in question was William Chamberlaine, Dud Dudley's quondam
+partner in the iron manufacture.[15] "What with the patent being in
+our way," says Yarranton, "and the richest of our partners being afraid
+to offend great men in power, who had their eye upon us, it caused the
+thing to cool, and the making of the tin-plates was neither proceeded
+in by us, nor possibly could be by him that had the patent; because
+neither he that hath the patent, nor those that have countenanced him,
+can make one plate fit for use." Yarranton's labours were thus lost to
+the English public for a time; and we continued to import all our
+tin-plates from Germany until about sixty years later, when a tin-plate
+manufactory was established by Capel Hanbury at Pontypool in
+Monmouthshire, where it has since continued to be successfully carried
+on.
+
+We can only briefly refer to the subsequent history of Andrew
+Yarranton. Shortly after his journey into Saxony, he proceeded to
+Holland to examine the inland navigations of the Dutch, to inspect
+their linen and other manufactures, and to inquire into the causes of
+the then extraordinary prosperity of that country compared with
+England. Industry was in a very languishing state at home. "People
+confess they are sick," said Yarranton, "that trade is in a
+consumption, and the whole nation languishes." He therefore determined
+to ascertain whether something useful might not be learnt from the
+example of Holland. The Dutch were then the hardest working and the
+most thriving people in Europe. They were manufacturers and carriers
+for the world. Their fleets floated on every known sea; and their
+herring-busses swarmed along our coasts as far north as the Hebrides.
+The Dutch supplied our markets with fish caught within sight of our own
+shores, while our coasting population stood idly looking on. Yarranton
+regarded this state of things as most discreditable, and he urged the
+establishment of various branches of home industry as the best way of
+out-doing the Dutch without fighting them.
+
+Wherever he travelled abroad, in Germany or in Holland, he saw industry
+attended by wealth and comfort, and idleness by poverty and misery.
+The same pursuits, he held, would prove as beneficial to England as
+they were abundantly proved to have been to Holland. The healthy life
+of work was good for all--for individuals as for the whole nation; and
+if we would out-do the Dutch, he held that we must out-do them in
+industry. But all must be done honestly and by fair means. "Common
+Honesty," said Yarranton, "is as necessary and needful in kingdoms and
+commonwealths that depend upon Trade, as discipline is in an army; and
+where there is want of common Honesty in a kingdom or commonwealth,
+from thence Trade shall depart. For as the Honesty of all governments
+is, so shall be their Riches; and as their Honour, Honesty, and Riches
+are, so will be their Strength; and as their Honour, Honesty, Riches,
+and Strength are, so will be their Trade. These are five sisters that
+go hand in hand, and must not be parted." Admirable sentiments, which
+are as true now as they were two hundred years ago, when Yarranton
+urged them upon the attention of the English public.
+
+On his return from Holland, he accordingly set on foot various schemes
+of public utility. He stirred up a movement for the encouragement of
+the British fisheries. He made several journeys into Ireland for the
+purpose of planting new manufactures there. He surveyed the River
+Slade with the object of rendering it navigable, and proposed a plan
+for improving the harbour of Dublin. He also surveyed the Dee in
+England with a view to its being connected with the Severn. Chambers
+says that on the decline of his popularity in 1677, he was taken by
+Lord Clarendon to Salisbury to survey the River Avon, and find out how
+that river might be made navigable, and also whether a safe harbour for
+ships could be made at Christchurch; and that having found where he
+thought safe anchorage might be obtained, his Lordship proceeded to act
+upon Yarranton's recommendations.[16]
+
+Another of his grand schemes was the establishment of the linen
+manufacture in the central counties of England, which, he showed, were
+well adapted for the growth of flax; and he calculated that if success
+attended his efforts, at least two millions of money then sent out of
+the country for the purchase of foreign linen would be retained at
+home, besides increasing the value of the land on which the flax was
+grown, and giving remunerative employment to our own people, then
+emigrating for want of work. "Nothing but Sloth or Envy," he said,
+"can possibly hinder my labours from being crowned with the wished for
+success; our habitual fondness for the one hath already brought us to
+the brink of ruin, and our proneness to the other hath almost
+discouraged all pious endeavours to promote our future happiness."
+
+In 1677 he published the first part of his England's Improvement by Sea
+and Land--a very remarkable book, full of sagacious insight as
+respected the future commercial and manufacturing greatness of England.
+Mr. Dove says of this book that "Yarranton chalks out in it the future
+course of Britain with as free a hand as if second-sight had revealed
+to him those expansions of her industrial career which never fail to
+surprise us, even when we behold them realized." Besides his extensive
+plans for making harbours and improving internal navigation with the
+object of creating new channels for domestic industry, his schemes for
+extending the iron and the woollen trades, establishing the linen
+manufacture, and cultivating the home fisheries, we find him throwing
+out various valuable suggestions with reference to the means of
+facilitating commercial transactions, some of winch have only been
+carried out in our own day. One of his grandest ideas was the
+establishment of a public bank, the credit of which, based upon the
+security of freehold land,[17] should enable its paper "to go in trade
+equal with ready money." A bank of this sort formed one of the
+principal means by which the Dutch had been enabled to extend their
+commercial transactions, and Yarranton accordingly urged its
+introduction into England. Part of his scheme consisted of a voluntary
+register of real property, for the purpose of effecting simplicity of
+title, and obtaining relief from the excessive charges for law,[18] as
+well as enabling money to be readily raised for commercial purposes on
+security of the land registered.
+
+He pointed out very graphically the straits to which a man is put who
+is possessed of real property enough, but in a time of pressure is
+unable to turn himself round for want of ready cash. "Then," says he,
+"all his creditors crowd to him as pigs do through a hole to a bean and
+pease rick." "Is it not a sad thing," he asks, "that a goldsmith's boy
+in Lombard Street, who gives notes for the monies handed him by the
+merchants, should take up more monies upon his notes in one day than
+two lords, four knights, and eight esquires in twelve months upon all
+their personal securities? We are, as it were, cutting off our legs and
+arms to see who will feed the trunk. But we cannot expect this from
+any of our neighbours abroad, whose interest depends upon our loss."
+
+He therefore proposed his registry of property as a ready means of
+raising a credit for purposes of trade. Thus, he says, "I can both in
+England and Wales register my wedding, my burial, and my christening,
+and a poor parish clerk is entrusted with the keeping of the book; and
+that which is registered there is held good by our law. But I cannot
+register my lands, to be honest, to pay every man his own, to prevent
+those sad things that attend families for want thereof, and to have the
+great benefit and advantage that would come thereby. A register will
+quicken trade, and the land registered will be equal as cash in a man's
+hands, and the credit thereof will go and do in trade what ready money
+now doth." His idea was to raise money, when necessary, on the land
+registered, by giving security thereon after a form which he suggested.
+He would, in fact, have made land, as gold now is, the basis of an
+extended currency; and he rightly held that the value of land as a
+security must always be unexceptionable, and superior to any metallic
+basis that could possibly be devised.
+
+This indefatigable man continued to urge his various designs upon the
+attention of the public until he was far advanced in years. He
+professed that he was moved to do so (and we believe him) solely by an
+ardent love for his country, "whose future flourishing," said he, "is
+the only reward I ever hope to see of all my labours." Yarranton,
+however, received but little thanks for his persistency, while he
+encountered many rebuffs. The public for the most part turned a deaf
+ear to his entreaties; and his writings proved of comparatively small
+avail, at least during his own lifetime. He experienced the lot of
+many patriots, even the purest--the suspicion and detraction of his
+contemporaries. His old political enemies do not seem to have
+forgotten him, of which we have the evidence in certain rare
+"broadsides" still extant, twitting him with the failure of his
+schemes, and even trumping up false charges of disloyalty against
+him.[19]
+
+In 1681 he published the second part of 'England's Improvement,'[20] in
+which he gave a summary account of its then limited growths and
+manufactures, pointing out that England and Ireland were the only
+northern kingdoms remaining unimproved; he re-urged the benefits and
+necessity of a voluntary register of real property; pointed out a
+method of improving the Royal Navy, lessening the growing power of
+France, and establishing home fisheries; proposed the securing and
+fortifying of Tangier; described a plan for preventing fires in London,
+and reducing the charge for maintaining the Trained Bands; urged the
+formation of a harbour at Newhaven in Sussex; and, finally, discoursed
+at considerable length upon the tin, iron, linen, and woollen trades,
+setting forth various methods for their improvement. In this last
+section, after referring to the depression in the domestic tin trade
+(Cornish tin selling so low as 70s. the cwt.), he suggested a way of
+reviving it. With the Cornish tin he would combine "the Roman cinders
+and iron-stone in the Forest of Dean, which makes the best iron for
+most uses in the world, and works up to the best advantage, with
+delight and pleasure to the workmen." He then described the history of
+his own efforts to import the manufacture of tin-plates into England
+some sixteen years before, in which he had been thwarted by
+Chamberlaine's patent, as above described,--and offered sundry queries
+as to the utility of patents generally, which, says he, "have the
+tendency to drive trade out of the kingdom." Appended to the chapter on
+Tin is an exceedingly amusing dialogue between a tin-miner of Cornwall,
+an iron-miner of Dean Forest, and a traveller (himself). From this we
+gather that Yarranton's business continued to be that of an
+iron-manufacturer at his works at Ashley near Bewdley. Thus the
+iron-miner says, "About 28 years since Mr. Yarranton found out a vast
+quantity of Roman cinders, near the walls of the city of Worcester,
+from whence he and others carried away many thousand tons or loads up
+the river Severn, unto their iron-furnaces, to be melted down into
+iron, with a mixture of the Forest of Dean iron-stone; and within 100
+yards of the walls of the city of Worcester there was dug up one of the
+hearths of the Roman foot-blasts, it being then firm and in order, and
+was 7 foot deep in the earth; and by the side of the work there was
+found a pot of Roman coin to the quantity of a peck, some of which was
+presented to Sir [Wm.] Dugdale, and part thereof is now in the King's
+Closet." [21]
+
+In the same year (1681) in which the second part of 'England's
+Improvement' appeared, Yarranton proceeded to Dunkirk for the purpose
+of making a personal survey of that port, then belonging to England;
+and on his return he published a map of the town, harbour, and castle
+on the sea, with accompanying letterpress, in which he recommended, for
+the safety of British trade, the demolition of the fortifications of
+Dunkirk before they were completed, which he held would only be for the
+purpose of their being garrisoned by the French king. His 'Full
+Discovery of the First Presbyterian Sham Plot' was published in the
+same year; and from that time nothing further is known of Andrew
+Yarranton. His name and his writings have been alike nearly forgotten;
+and, though Bishop Watson declared of him that he deserved to have a
+statue erected to his memory as a great public benefactor, we do not
+know that he was so much as honoured with a tombstone; for we have been
+unable, after careful inquiry, to discover when and where he died.
+
+Yarranton was a man whose views were far in advance of his age. The
+generation for whom he laboured and wrote were not ripe for their
+reception and realization; and his voice sounded among the people like
+that of one crying in the wilderness. But though his exhortations to
+industry and his large plans of national improvement failed to work
+themselves into realities in his own time, he broke the ground, he
+sowed the seed, and it may be that even at this day we are in some
+degree reaping the results of his labours. At all events, his books
+still live to show how wise and sagacious Andrew Yarranton was beyond
+his contemporaries as to the true methods of establishing upon solid
+foundations the industrial prosperity of England.
+
+
+
+[1] PATRICK EDWARD DOVE, Elements of Political Science. Edinburgh,
+1854.
+
+[2] A copy of the entries in the parish register relating to the
+various members of the Yarranton family, kindly forwarded to us by the
+Rev. H. W. Cookes, rector of Astley, shows them to have resided in that
+parish for many generations. There were the Yarrantons of Yarranton,
+of Redstone, of Larford, of Brockenton, and of Longmore. With that
+disregard for orthography in proper names which prevailed some three
+hundred years since, they are indifferently designated as Yarran,
+Yarranton, and Yarrington. The name was most probably derived from two
+farms named Great and Little Yarranton, or Yarran (originally
+Yarhampton), situated in the parish of Astley. The Yarrantons
+frequently filled local offices in that parish, and we find several of
+them officiating at different periods as bailiffs of Bewdley.
+
+[3] Journals of the House of Commons, 1st July, 1648.
+
+[4] YARRANTON'S England's Improvement by Sea and Land. Part I.
+London, 1677.
+
+[5] There seems a foundation of truth in the old English distich--
+
+ The North for Greatness, the East for Health,
+ The South for Neatness, the West for Wealth.
+
+[6] State Paper Office. Dom. Charles II. 1660-1. Yarranton afterwards
+succeeded in making a friend of Lord Windsor, as would appear from his
+dedication of England's Improvement to his Lordship, whom he thanks for
+the encouragement he had given to him in his survey of several rivers
+with a view to their being rendered navigable.
+
+[7] The following is a copy of the document from the State
+Papers:--"John Bramfield, Geo. Moore, and Thos. Lee, Esqrs. and
+Justices of Surrey, to Sir Edw. Nicholas.--There being this day brought
+before us one Andrew Yarranton, and he accused to have broken prison,
+or at least made his escape out of the Marshalsea at Worcester, being
+there committed by the Deputy-Lieuts. upon suspicion of a plot in
+November last; we having thereupon examined him, he allegeth that his
+Majesty hath been sought unto on his behalf, and hath given order to
+yourself for his discharge, and a supersedeas against all persons and
+warrants, and thereupon hath desired to appeal unto you. The which we
+conceiving to be convenient and reasonable (there being no positive
+charge against him before us), have accordingly herewith conveyed him
+unto you by a safe hand, to be further examined or disposed of as you
+shall find meet."--S. P. O. Dom. Chas. II. 23rd June, 1662.
+
+[8] We have been unable to refer to this tract, there being no copy of
+it in the British Museum.
+
+[9] NASH'S Worcestershire, i. 306.
+
+[10] JOHN CHAMBERS, Biographical Illustrations of Worcestershire.
+London, 1820.
+
+[11] The Act for making the Stour and Salwarp navigable originated in
+the Lords and was passed in the year 1661.
+
+[12] Nash, in his Hist. of Worc., intimates that Lord Windsor
+subsequently renewed the attempt to make the Salwarp navigable. He
+constructed five out of the six locks, and then abandoned the scheme.
+Gough, in his edition of Camden's Brit. ii. 357, Lond. 1789, says, "It
+is not long since some of the boats made use of in Yarranton's
+navigation were found. Neither tradition nor our projector's account
+of the matter perfectly satisfy us why this navigation was
+neglected..... We must therefore conclude that the numerous works and
+glass-houses upon the Stour, and in the neighbourhood of Stourbridge,
+did not then exist, A.D. 1666. ....The navigable communication which
+now connects Trent and Severn, and which runs in the course of
+Yarranton's project, is already of general use.... The canal since
+executed under the inspection of Mr. Brindley, running parallel with
+the river.... cost the proprietors 105,000L."
+
+[13] In the dedication of his book, entitled Englands Improvement by
+Sea and Land, Part I., Yarranton gives the names of the "noble
+patriots" who sent him on his journey of inquiry. They were Sir Waiter
+Kirtham Blount, Bart., Sir Samuel Baldwin and Sir Timothy Baldwin,
+Knights, Thomas Foley and Philip Foley, Esquires, and six other
+gentlemen. The father of the Foleys was himself supposed to have
+introduced the art of iron-splitting into England by an expedient
+similar to that adopted by Yarranton in obtaining a knowledge of the
+tin-plate manufacture (Self-Help, p.145). The secret of the
+silk-throwing machinery of Piedmont was in like manner introduced into
+England by Mr. Lombe of Derby, who shortly succeeded in founding a
+flourishing branch of manufacture. These were indeed the days of
+romance and adventure in manufactures.
+
+[14] The district is known as the Erzgebirge or Ore Mountains, and the
+Riesengebirge or Giant Mountains, MacCulloch says that upwards of 500
+mines are wrought in the former district, and that one-thirtieth of the
+entire population of Saxony to this day derive their subsistence from
+mining industry and the manufacture of metallic products.--
+Geographical Dict. ii. 643, edit. 1854.
+
+[15] Chamberlaine and Dudley's first licence was granted in 1661 for
+plating steel and tinning the said plates; and Chamberlaine's sole
+patent for "plating and tinning iron, copper, &c.," was granted in
+1673, probably the patent in question.
+
+[16] JOHN CHAMBERS, Biographical Illustrations of Worcestershire.
+London, 1820.
+
+[17] Yarranton's Land Bank was actually projected in 1695, and received
+the sanction of Parliament; though the Bank of England (founded in the
+preceding year) petitioned against it, and the scheme was dropped.
+
+[18] It is interesting to note in passing, that part of Yarranton's
+scheme has recently been carried into effect by the Act (25 and 26
+Vict. c. 53) passed in 1862 for the Registration of Real Estate.
+
+[19] One of these is entitled 'A Coffee-house Dialogue, or a Discourse
+between Captain Y---- and a Young Barrister of the Middle Temple; with
+some Reflections upon the Bill against the D. of Y.' In this broadside,
+of 3 1/2 pages folio, published about 1679, Yarranton is made to favour
+the Duke of York's exclusion from the throne, not only because he was a
+papist, but for graver reasons than he dare express. Another
+scurrilous pamphlet, entitled 'A Word Without Doors,' was also aimed at
+him. Yarranton, or his friends, replied to the first attack in a folio
+of two pages, entitled 'The Coffee-house Dialogue Examined and Refuted,
+by some Neighbours in the Country, well-wishers to the Kingdom's
+interest.' The controversy was followed up by 'A Continuation of the
+Coffee-house Dialogue,' in which the chief interlocutor hits Yarranton
+rather hard for the miscarriage of his "improvements." "I know," says
+he, "when and where you undertook for a small charge to make a river
+navigable, and it has cost the proprietors about six times as much, and
+is not yet effective; nor can any man rationally predict when it will
+be. I know since you left it your son undertook it, and this winter
+shamefully left his undertaking." Yarranton's friends immediately
+replied in a four-page folio, entitled 'England's Improvements
+Justified; and the Author thereof, Captain Y., vindicated from the
+Scandals in a paper called a Coffee-house Dialogue; with some
+Animadversions upon the Popish Designs therein contained.' The writer
+says he writes without the privity or sanction of Yarranton, but
+declares the dialogue to be a forgery, and that the alleged conference
+never took place. "His innocence, when he heard of it, only provoked a
+smile, with this answer, Spreta vilescunt, falsehoods mu st perish, and
+are soonest destroyed by contempt; so that he needs no further
+vindication. The writer then proceeds at some length to vindicate the
+Captain's famous work and the propositions contained in it.
+
+[20] This work (especially with the plates) is excessively rare. There
+is a copy of it in perfect condition in the Grenville Library, British
+Museum.
+
+[21] Dr. Nash, in his History of Worcestershire, has thrown some doubts
+upon this story; but Mr. Green, in his Historical Antiquities of the
+city, has made a most able defence of Yarranton's statement (vol.i. 9,
+in foot-note).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+COALBROOKDALE IRON WORKS--THE DARBYS AND REYNOLDSES.
+
+"The triumph of the industrial arts will advance the cause of
+civilization more rapidly than its warmest advocates could have hoped,
+and contribute to the permanent prosperity and strength of the country
+far move than the most splendid victories of successful war."--C.
+BABBAGE, The Exposition of 1851.
+
+
+Dud Dudley's invention of smelting iron with coke made of pit-coal was,
+like many others, born before its time. It was neither appreciated by
+the iron-masters nor by the workmen. All schemes for smelting ore with
+any other fuel than charcoal made from wood were regarded with
+incredulity. As for Dudley's Metallum Martis, as it contained no
+specification, it revealed no secret; and when its author died, his
+secret, whatever it might be, died with him. Other improvements were
+doubtless necessary before the invention could be turned to useful
+account. Thus, until a more powerful blowing-furnace had been
+contrived, the production of pit-coal iron must necessarily have been
+limited. Dudley himself does not seem to have been able to make more
+on an average than five tons a-week, and seven tons at the outside.
+Nor was the iron so good as that made by charcoal; for it is admitted
+to have been especially liable to deterioration by the sulphureous
+fumes of the coal in the process of manufacture.
+
+Dr. Plot, in his 'History of Staffordshire,' speaks of an experiment
+made by one Dr. Blewstone, a High German, as "the last effort" made in
+that county to smelt iron-ore with pit-coal. He is said to have "built
+his furnace at Wednesbury, so ingeniously contrived (that only the
+flame of the coal should come to the ore, with several other
+conveniences), that many were of opinion he would succeed in it. But
+experience, that great baffler of speculation, showed it would not be;
+the sulphureous vitriolic steams that issue from the pyrites, which
+frequently, if not always, accompanies pit-coal, ascending with the
+flame, and poisoning the ore sufficiently to make it render much worse
+iron than that made with charcoal, though not perhaps so much worse as
+the body of the coal itself would possibly do." [1] Dr. Plot does not
+give the year in which this "last effort" was made; but as we find that
+one Dr. Frederic de Blewston obtained a patent from Charles II. on the
+25th October, 1677, for "a new and effectual way of melting down,
+forging, extracting, and reducing of iron and all metals and minerals
+with pit-coal and sea-coal, as well and effectually as ever hath yet
+been done by charcoal, and with much less charge;" and as Dr. Plot's
+History, in which he makes mention of the experiment and its failure,
+was published in 1686, it is obvious that the trial must have been made
+between those years.
+
+As the demand for iron steadily increased with the increasing
+population of the country, and as the supply of timber for smelting
+purposes was diminishing from year to year, England was compelled to
+rely more and more upon foreign countries for its supply of
+manufactured iron. The number of English forges rapidly dwindled, and
+the amount of the home production became insignificant in comparison
+with what was imported from abroad. Yarranton, writing in 1676, speaks
+of "the many iron-works laid down in Kent, Sussex, Surrey, and in the
+north of England, because the iron of Sweadland, Flanders, and Spain,
+coming in so cheap, it cannot be made to profit here." There were many
+persons, indeed, who held that it was better we should be supplied with
+iron from Spain than make it at home, in consequence of the great waste
+of wood involved by the manufacture; but against this view Yarranton
+strongly contended, and held, what is as true now as it was then, that
+the manufacture of iron was the keystone of England's industrial
+prosperity. He also apprehended great danger to the country from want
+of iron in event of the contingency of a foreign war. "When the
+greatest part of the iron-works are asleep," said he, "if there should
+be occasion for great quantities of guns and bullets, and other sorts
+of iron commodities, for a present unexpected war, and the Sound happen
+to be locked up, and so prevent iron coming to us, truly we should then
+be in a fine case!"
+
+Notwithstanding these apprehended national perils arising from the want
+of iron, no steps seem to have been taken to supply the deficiency,
+either by planting woods on a large scale, as recommended by Yarranton,
+or by other methods; and the produce of English iron continued steadily
+to decline. In 1720-30 there were found only ten furnaces remaining in
+blast in the whole Forest of Dean, where the iron-smelters were
+satisfied with working up merely the cinders left by the Romans. A
+writer of the time states that we then bought between two and three
+hundred thousand pounds' worth of foreign iron yearly, and that England
+was the best customer in Europe for Swedish and Russian iron.[2] By
+the middle of the eighteenth century the home manufacture had so much
+fallen off, that the total production of Great Britain is supposed to
+have amounted to not more than 18,000 tons a year; four-fifths of the
+iron used in the country being imported from Sweden.[3]
+
+The more that the remaining ironmasters became straitened for want of
+wood, the more they were compelled to resort to cinders and coke made
+from coal as a substitute. And it was found that under certain
+circumstances this fuel answered the purpose almost as well as charcoal
+of wood. The coke was made by burning the coal in heaps in the open
+air, and it was usually mixed with coal and peat in the process of
+smelting the ore. Coal by itself was used by the country smiths for
+forging whenever they could procure it for their smithy fires; and in
+the midland counties they had it brought to them, sometimes from great
+distances, slung in bags across horses' backs,--for the state of the
+roads was then so execrable as not to admit of its being led for any
+considerable distance in carts. At length we arrive at a period when
+coal seems to have come into general use, and when necessity led to its
+regular employment both in smelting the ore and in manufacturing the
+metal. And this brings us to the establishment of the Coalbrookdale
+works, where the smelting of iron by means of coke and coal was first
+adopted on a large scale as the regular method of manufacture.
+
+Abraham Darby, the first of a succession of iron manufacturers who bore
+the same name, was the son of a farmer residing at Wrensnest, near
+Dudley. He served an apprenticeship to a maker of malt-kilns near
+Birmingham, after which he married and removed to Bristol in 1700, to
+begin business on his own account. Industry is of all politics and
+religions: thus Dudley was a Royalist and a Churchman, Yarranton was a
+Parliamentarian and a Presbyterian, and Abraham Darby was a Quaker. At
+Bristol he was joined by three partners of the same persuasion, who
+provided the necessary capital to enable him to set up works at Baptist
+Mills, near that city, where he carried on the business of malt-mill
+making, to which he afterwards added brass and iron founding.
+
+At that period cast-iron pots were in very general use, forming the
+principal cooking utensils of the working class. The art of casting
+had, however, made such small progress in England that the pots were
+for the most part imported from abroad. Darby resolved, if possible,
+to enter upon this lucrative branch of manufacture; and he proceeded to
+make a number of experiments in pot-making. Like others who had
+preceded him, he made his first moulds of clay; but they cracked and
+burst, and one trial failed after another. He then determined to find
+out the true method of manufacturing the pots, by travelling into the
+country from whence the best were imported, in order to master the
+grand secret of the trade. With this object he went over to Holland in
+the year 1706, and after diligent inquiry he ascertained that the only
+sure method of casting "Hilton ware," as such castings were then
+called, was in moulds of fine dry sand. This was the whole secret.
+
+Returning to Bristol, accompanied by some skilled Dutch workmen, Darby
+began the new manufacture, and succeeded to his satisfaction. The work
+was at first carried on with great secrecy, lest other makers should
+copy the art; and the precaution was taken of stopping the keyhole of
+the workshop-door while the casting was in progress. To secure himself
+against piracy, he proceeded to take out a patent for the process in
+the year 1708, and it was granted for the term of fourteen years. The
+recital of the patent is curious, as showing the backward state of
+English iron-founding at that time. It sets forth that "whereas our
+trusty and well-beloved Abraham Darby, of our city of Bristol, smith,
+hath by his petition humbly represented to us, that by his study,
+industry, and expense, he hath found out and brought to perfection a
+new way of casting iron bellied pots and other iron bellied ware in
+sand only, without loam or clay, by which such iron pots and other ware
+may be cast fine and with more ease and expedition, and may be afforded
+cheaper than they can be by the way commonly used; and in regard to
+their cheapness may be of great advantage to the poor of this our
+kingdom, who for the most part use such ware, and in all probability
+will prevent the merchants of England going to foreign markets for such
+ware, from whence great quantities are imported, and likewise may in
+time supply other markets with that manufacture of our dominions,
+&c..... grants the said Abraham Darby the full power and sole privilege
+to make and sell such pots and ware for and during the term of fourteen
+years thence ensuing."
+
+Darby proceeded to make arrangements for carrying on the manufacture
+upon a large scale at the Baptist Mills; but the other partners
+hesitated to embark more capital in the concern, and at length refused
+their concurrence. Determined not to be baulked in his enterprise,
+Darby abandoned the Bristol firm; and in the year 1709 he removed to
+Coalbrookdale in Shropshire, with the intention of prosecuting the
+enterprise on his own account. He took the lease of a little furnace
+which had existed at the place for more than a century, as the records
+exist of a "smethe" or "smeth-house" at Coalbrookdale in the time of
+the Tudors. The woods of oak and hazel which at that time filled the
+beautiful dingles of the dale, and spread in almost a continuous forest
+to the base of the Wrekin, furnished abundant fuel for the smithery.
+As the trade of the Coalbrookdale firm extended, these woods became
+cleared, until the same scarcity of fuel began to be experienced that
+had already desolated the forests of Sussex, and brought the
+manufacture of iron in that quarter to a stand-still.
+
+It appears from the 'Blast Furnace Memorandum Book' of Abraham Darby,
+which we have examined, that the make of iron at the Coalbrookdale
+foundry, in 1713, varied from five to ten tons a week. The principal
+articles cast were pots, kettles, and other "hollow ware," direct from
+the smelting-furnace; the rest of the metal was run into pigs. In
+course of time we find that other castings were turned out: a few
+grates, smoothing-irons, door-frames, weights, baking-plates,
+cart-bushes, iron pestles and mortars, and occasionally a tailor's
+goose. The trade gradually increased, until we find as many as 150
+pots and kettles cast in a week.
+
+The fuel used in the furnaces appears, from the Darby Memorandum-Book,
+to have been at first entirely charcoal; but the growing scarcity of
+wood seems to have gradually led to the use of coke, brays or small
+coke, and peat. An abundance of coals existed in the neighbourhood: by
+rejecting those of inferior quality, and coking the others with great
+care, a combustible was obtained better fitted even than charcoal
+itself for the fusion of that particular kind of ore which is found in
+the coal-measures. Thus we find Darby's most favourite charge for his
+furnaces to have been five baskets of coke, two of brays, and one of
+peat; next followed the ore, and then the limestone. The use of
+charcoal was gradually given up as the art of smelting with coke and
+brays improved, most probably aided by the increased power of the
+furnace-blast, until at length we find it entirely discontinued.
+
+The castings of Coalbrookdale gradually acquired a reputation, and the
+trade of Abraham Darby continued to increase until the date of his
+death, which occurred at Madeley Court in 1717. His sons were too
+young at the time to carry on the business which he had so successfully
+started, and several portions of the works were sold at a serious
+sacrifice. But when the sons had grown up to manhood, they too entered
+upon the business of iron-founding; and Abraham Darby's son and
+grandson, both of the same name, largely extended the operations of the
+firm, until Coalbrookdale, or, as it was popularly called, "Bedlam,"
+became the principal seat of one of the most important branches of the
+iron trade.
+
+There seems to be some doubt as to the precise time when pit-coal was
+first regularly employed at Coalbrookdale in smelting the ore. Mr.
+Scrivenor says, "pit-coal was first used by Mr. Abraham Darby, in his
+furnace at Coalbrookdale, in 1713;" [4] but we can find no confirmation
+of this statement in the records of the Company. It is probable that
+Mr. Darby used raw coal, as was done in the Forest of Dean at the same
+time,[5] in the process of calcining the ore; but it would appear from
+his own Memoranda that coke only was used in the process of smelting.
+We infer from other circumstances that pit-coal was not employed for
+the latter purpose until a considerably later period. The merit of its
+introduction, and its successful use in iron-smelting, is due to Mr.
+Richard Ford, who had married a daughter of Abraham Darby, and managed
+the Coalbrookdale works in 1747. In a paper by the Rev. Mr. Mason,
+Woodwardian Professor at Cambridge, given in the 'Philosophical
+Transactions' for that year,[6] the first account of its successful
+employment is stated as follows:--"Several attempts have been made to
+run iron-ore with pit-coal: he (Mr. Mason) thinks it has not succeeded
+anywhere, as we have had no account of its being practised; but Mr.
+Ford, of Coalbrookdale in Shropshire, from iron-ore and coal, both got
+in the same dale, makes iron brittle or tough as he pleases, there
+being cannon thus cast so soft as to bear turning like wrought-iron."
+Most probably, however, it was not until the time of Richard Reynolds,
+who succeeded Abraham Darby the second in the management of the works
+in 1757, that pit-coal came into large and regular use in the
+blasting-furnaces as well as the fineries of Coalbrookdale.
+
+Richard Reynolds was born at Bristol in 1735. His parents, like the
+Darbys, belonged to the Society of Friends, and he was educated in that
+persuasion. Being a spirited, lively youth, the "old Adam"
+occasionally cropped out in him; and he is even said, when a young man,
+to have been so much fired by the heroism of the soldier's character
+that he felt a strong desire to embrace a military career; but this
+feeling soon died out, and he dropped into the sober and steady rut of
+the Society. After serving an apprenticeship in his native town, he
+was sent to Coalbrookdale on a mission of business, where he became
+acquainted with the Darby family, and shortly after married Hannah, the
+daughter of Abraham the second. He then entered upon the conduct of
+the iron and coal works at Ketley and Horsehay, where he resided for
+six years, removing to Coalbrookdale in 1763, to take charge of the
+works there, on the death of his father-in-law.
+
+By the exertions and enterprise of the Darbys, the Coalbrookdale Works
+had become greatly enlarged, giving remunerative employment to a large
+and increasing population. The firm had extended their operations far
+beyond the boundaries of the Dale: they had established foundries at
+London, Bristol, and Liverpool, and agencies at Newcastle and Truro for
+the disposal of steam-engines and other iron machinery used in the deep
+mines of those districts. Watt had not yet perfected his steam-engine;
+but there was a considerable demand for pumping-engines of Newcomen's
+construction, many of which were made at the Coalbrookdale Works. The
+increasing demand for iron gave an impetus to coal-mining, which in its
+turn stimulated inventors in their improvement of the power of the
+steam-engine; for the coal could not be worked quickly and
+advantageously unless the pits could be kept clear of water. Thus one
+invention stimulates another; and when the steam-engine had been
+perfected by Watt, and enabled powerful-blowing apparatus to be worked
+by its agency, we shall find that the production of iron by means of
+pit-coal being rendered cheap and expeditious, soon became enormously
+increased.
+
+We are informed that it was while Richard Reynolds had charge of the
+Coalbrookdale works that a further important improvement was effected
+in the manufacture of iron by pit-coal. Up to this time the conversion
+of crude or cast iron into malleable or bar iron had been effected
+entirely by means of charcoal. The process was carried on in a fire
+called a finery, somewhat like that of a smith's forge; the iron being
+exposed to the blast of powerful bellows, and in constant contact with
+the fuel. In the first process of fusing the ironstone, coal had been
+used for some time with increasing success; but the question arose,
+whether coal might not also be used with effect in the second or
+refining stage. Two of the foremen, named Cranege, suggested to Mr.
+Reynolds that this might be performed in what is called a reverberatory
+furnace,[7] in which the iron should not mix with the coal, but be
+heated solely by the flame. Mr. Reynolds greatly doubted the
+feasibility of the operation, but he authorized the Cranege, to make an
+experiment of their process, the result of which will be found
+described in the following extract of a letter from Mr. Reynolds to Mr.
+Thomas Goldney of Bristol, dated "Coalbrookdale, 25th April, 1766":--
+
+.... "I come now to what I think a matter of very great consequence.
+It is some time since Thos. Cranege, who works at Bridgenorth Forge,
+and his brother George, of the Dale, spoke to me about a notion they
+had conceived of making bar iron without wood charcoal. I told them,
+consistent with the notion I had adopted in common with all others I
+had conversed with, that I thought it impossible, because the vegetable
+salts in the charcoal being an alkali acted as an absorbent to the
+sulphur of the iron, which occasions the red-short quality of the iron,
+and pit coal abounding with sulphur would increase it. This specious
+answer, which would probably have appeared conclusive to most, and
+which indeed was what I really thought, was not so to them. They
+replied that from the observations they had made, and repeated
+conversations together, they were both firmly of opinion that the
+alteration from the quality of pig iron into that of bar iron was
+effected merely by heat, and if I would give them leave, they would
+make a trial some day. I consented, but, I confess, without any great
+expectation of their success; and so the matter rested some weeks, when
+it happening that some repairs had to be done at Bridgenorth, Thomas
+came up to the Dale, and, with his brother, made a trial in Thos.
+Tilly's air-furnace with such success as I thought would justify the
+erection of a small air-furnace at the Forge for the more perfectly
+ascertaining the merit of the invention. This was accordingly done,
+and a trial of it has been made this week, and the success has
+surpassed the most sanguine expectations. The iron put into the
+furnace was old Bushes, which thou knowest are always made of hard
+iron, and the iron drawn out is the toughest I ever saw. A bar 1 1/4
+inch square, when broke, appears to have very little cold short in it.
+I look upon it as one of the most important discoveries ever made, and
+take the liberty of recommending thee and earnestly requesting thou
+wouldst take out a patent for it immediately.... The specification of
+the invention will be comprised in a few words, as it will only set
+forth that a reverberatory furnace being built of a proper
+construction, the pig or cast iron is put into it, and without the
+addition of anything else than common raw pit coal, is converted into
+good malleable iron, and, being taken red-hot from the reverberatory
+furnace to the forge hammer, is drawn out into bars of various shapes
+and sizes, according to the will of the workmen."
+
+Mr. Reynolds's advice was implicitly followed. A patent was secured in
+the name of the brothers Cranege, dated the 17th June, 1766; and the
+identical words in the above letter were adopted in the specification
+as descriptive of the process. By this method of puddling, as it is
+termed, the manufacturer was thenceforward enabled to produce iron in
+increased quantity at a large reduction in price; and though the
+invention of the Craneges was greatly improved upon by Onions, and
+subsequently by Cort, there can be no doubt as to the originality and
+the importance of their invention. Mr. Tylor states that he was
+informed by the son of Richard Reynolds that the wrought iron made at
+Coalbrookdale by the Cranege process "was very good, quite tough, and
+broke with a long, bright, fibrous fracture: that made by Cort
+afterwards was quite different." [8] Though Mr. Reynolds's generosity
+to the Craneges is apparent; in the course which he adopted in securing
+for them a patent for the invention in their own names, it does not
+appear to have proved of much advantage to them; and they failed to
+rise above the rank which they occupied when their valuable discovery
+was patented. This, however, was no fault of Richard Reynolds, but was
+mainly attributable to the circumstance of other inventions in a great
+measure superseding their process, and depriving them of the benefits
+of their ingenuity.
+
+Among the important improvements introduced by Mr. Reynolds while
+managing the Coalbrookdale Works, was the adoption by him for the first
+time of iron instead of wooden rails in the tram-roads along which coal
+and iron were conveyed from one part of the works to another, as well
+as to the loading-places along the river Severn. He observed that the
+wooden rails soon became decayed, besides being liable to be broken by
+the heavy loads passing over them, occasioning much loss of time,
+interruption to business, and heavy expenses in repairs. It occurred
+to him that these inconveniences would be obviated by the use of rails
+of cast-iron; and, having tried an experiment with them, it answered so
+well, that in 1767 the whole of the wooden rails were taken up and
+replaced by rails of iron. Thus was the era of iron railroads fairly
+initiated at Coalbrookdale, and the example of Mr. Reynolds was shortly
+after followed on all the tramroads throughout the Country.
+
+It is also worthy of note that the first iron bridge ever erected was
+cast and made at the Coalbrookdale Works--its projection as well as its
+erection being mainly due to the skill and enterprise of Abraham Darby
+the third. When but a young man, he showed indications of that
+sagacity and energy in business which seemed to be hereditary in his
+family. One of the first things he did on arriving at man's estate was
+to set on foot a scheme for throwing a bridge across the Severn at
+Coalbrookdale, at a point where the banks were steep and slippery, to
+accommodate the large population which had sprung up along both banks
+of the river. There were now thriving iron, brick, and pottery works
+established in the parishes of Madeley and Broseley; and the old ferry
+on the Severn was found altogether inadequate for ready communication
+between one bank and the other. The want of a bridge had long been
+felt, and a plan of one had been prepared during the life time of
+Abraham Darby the second; but the project was suspended at his death.
+When his son came of age, he resolved to take up his father's dropped
+scheme, and prosecute it to completion, which he did. Young Mr. Darby
+became lord of the manor of Madeley in 1776, and was the owner of
+one-half of the ferry in right of his lordship. He was so fortunate as
+to find the owner of the other or Broseley half of the ferry equally
+anxious with himself to connect the two banks of the river by means of
+a bridge. The necessary powers were accordingly obtained from
+Parliament, and a bridge was authorized to be built "of cast-iron,
+stone, brick, or timber." A company was formed for the purpose of
+carrying out the project, and the shares were taken by the adjoining
+owners, Abraham Darby being the principal subscriber.[9]
+
+The construction of a bridge of iron was an entirely new idea. An
+attempt had indeed been made at Lyons, in France, to construct such a
+bridge more than twenty years before; but it had entirely failed, and a
+bridge of timber was erected instead. It is not known whether the
+Coalbrookdale masters had heard of that attempt; but, even if they had,
+it could have been of no practical use to them.
+
+Mr. Pritchard, an architect of Shrewsbury, was first employed to
+prepare a design of the intended structure, which is still preserved.
+Although Mr. Pritchard proposed to introduce cast-iron in the arch of
+the bridge, which was to be of 120 feet span, it was only as a sort of
+key, occupying but a few feet at the crown of the arch. This sparing
+use of cast iron indicates the timidity of the architect in dealing
+with the new material--his plan exhibiting a desire to effect a
+compromise between the tried and the untried in bridge-construction.
+But the use of iron to so limited an extent, and in such a part of the
+structure, was of more than questionable utility; and if Mr.
+Pritchard's plan had been adopted, the problem of the iron bridge would
+still have remained unsolved.
+
+The plan, however, after having been duly considered, was eventually
+set aside, and another, with the entire arch of cast-iron, was prepared
+under the superintendence of Abraham Darby, by Mr. Thomas Gregory, his
+foreman of pattern-makers. This plan was adopted, and arrangements
+were forthwith made for carrying it into effect. The abutments of the
+bridge were built in 1777-8, during which the castings were made at the
+foundry, and the ironwork was successfully erected in the course of
+three months. The bridge was opened for traffic in 1779, and proved a
+most serviceable structure. In 1788 the Society of Arts recognised Mr.
+Darby's merit as its designer and erector by presenting him with their
+gold medal; and the model of the bridge is still to be seen in the
+collection of the Society. 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." [10] Mr.
+Stephenson adds that from a defect in the construction the abutments
+were thrust inwards at the approaches and the ribs partially fractured.
+We are, however, informed that this is a mistake, though it does appear
+that the apprehension at one time existed that such an accident might
+possibly occur.
+
+To remedy the supposed defect, two small land arches were, in the year
+1800, substituted for the stone approach on the Broseley side of the
+bridge. While the work was in progress, Mr. Telford, the well-known
+engineer, carefully examined the bridge, and thus spoke of its
+condition at the time:--"The great improvement of erecting upon a
+navigable river a bridge of cast-iron of one arch only was first put in
+practice near Coalbrookdale. The bridge was executed in 1777 by Mr.
+Abraham Darby, and the ironwork is now quite as perfect as when it was
+first put up. Drawings of this bridge have long been before the
+public, and have been much and justly admired." [11] A Coalbrookdale
+correspondent, writing in May, 1862, informs us that "at the present
+time the bridge is undergoing repair; and, special examination having
+been made, there is no appearance either that the abutments have moved,
+or that the ribs have been broken in the centre or are out of their
+proper right line. There has, it is true, been a strain on the land
+arches, and on the roadway plates, which, however, the main arch has
+been able effectually to resist."
+
+The bridge has now been in profitable daily use for upwards of eighty
+years, and has during that time proved of the greatest convenience to
+the population of the district. So judicious was the selection of its
+site, and so great its utility, that a thriving town of the name of
+Ironbridge has grown up around it upon what, at the time of its
+erection, was a nameless part of "the waste of the manor of Madeley."
+And it is probable that the bridge will last for centuries to come.
+Thus, also, was the use of iron as an important material in
+bridge-building fairly initiated at Coalbrookdale by Abraham Darby, as
+the use of iron rails was by Richard Reynolds. We need scarcely add
+that since the invention and extensive adoption of railway locomotion,
+the employment of iron in various forms in railway and bridge
+structures has rapidly increased, until iron has come to be regarded as
+the very sheet-anchor of the railway engineer.
+
+In the mean time the works at Coalbrookdale had become largely
+extended. In 1784, when the government of the day proposed to levy a
+tax on pit-coal, Richard Reynolds strongly urged upon Mr. Pitt, then
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, as well as on Lord Gower, afterwards
+Marquis of Stafford, the impolicy of such a tax. To the latter he
+represented that large capitals had been invested in the iron trade,
+which was with difficulty carried on in the face of the competition
+with Swedish and Russian iron. At Coalbrookdale, sixteen "fire
+engines," as steam engines were first called, were then at work, eight
+blast-furnaces and nine forges, besides the air furnaces and mills at
+the foundry, which, with the levels, roads, and more than twenty miles
+of iron railways, gave employment to a very large number of people.
+"The advancement of the iron trade within these few years," said he,
+"has been prodigious. It was thought, and justly, that the making of
+pig-iron with pit coal was a great acquisition to the country by saving
+the wood and supplying a material to manufactures, the production of
+which, by the consumption of all the wood the country produced, was
+formerly unequal to the demand, and the nail trade, perhaps the most
+considerable of any one article of manufactured iron, would have been
+lost to this country had it not been found practicable to make nails of
+iron made with pit coal. We have now another process to attempt, and
+that is to make BAR IRON with pit coal; and it is for that purpose we
+have made, or rather are making, alterations at Donnington Wood,
+Ketley, and elsewhere, which we expect to complete in the present year,
+but not at a less expense than twenty thousand pounds, which will be
+lost to us, and gained by nobody, if this tax is laid upon our coals."
+He would not, however, have it understood that he sought for any
+PROTECTION for the homemade iron, notwithstanding the lower prices of
+the foreign article. "From its most imperfect state as pig-iron," he
+observed to Lord Sheffield, "to its highest finish in the regulating
+springs of a watch, we have nothing to fear if the importation into
+each country should be permitted without duty." We need scarcely add
+that the subsequent history of the iron trade abundantly justified
+these sagacious anticipations of Richard Reynolds.
+
+He was now far advanced in years. His business had prospered, his
+means were ample, and he sought retirement. He did not desire to
+possess great wealth, which in his opinion entailed such serious
+responsibilities upon its possessor; and he held that the accumulation
+of large property was more to be deprecated than desired. He therefore
+determined to give up his shares in the ironworks at Ketley to his sons
+William and Joseph, who continued to carry them on. William was a man
+of eminent ability, well versed in science, and an excellent mechanic.
+He introduced great improvements in the working of the coal and iron
+mines, employing new machinery for the purpose, and availing himself
+with much ingenuity of the discoveries then being made in the science
+of chemistry. He was also an inventor, having been the first to employ
+(in 1788) inclined planes, consisting of parallel railways, to connect
+and work canals of different levels,--an invention erroneously
+attributed to Fulton, but which the latter himself acknowledged to
+belong to William Reynolds. In the first chapter of his 'Treatise on
+Canal Navigation,' published in 1796, Fulton says:--"As local
+prejudices opposed the Duke of Bridgewater's canal in the first
+instance, prejudices equally strong as firmly adhered to the principle
+on which it was constructed; and it was thought impossible to lead one
+through a country, or to work it to any advantage, unless by locks and
+boats of at least twenty-five tons, till the genius of Mr. William
+Reynolds, of Ketley, in Shropshire, stepped from the accustomed path,
+constructed the first inclined plane, and introduced boats of five
+tons. This, like the Duke's canal, was deemed a visionary project, and
+particularly by his Grace, who was partial to locks; yet this is also
+introduced into practice, and will in many instances supersede lock
+canals." Telford, the engineer, also gracefully acknowledged the
+valuable assistance he received from William Reynolds in planning the
+iron aqueduct by means of which the Ellesmere Canal was carried over
+the Pont Cysylltau, and in executing the necessary castings for the
+purpose at the Ketley foundry.
+
+The future management of his extensive ironworks being thus placed in
+able hands, Richard Reynolds finally left Coalbrookdale in 1804, for
+Bristol, his native town, where he spent the remainder of his life in
+works of charity and mercy. Here we might leave the subject, but
+cannot refrain from adding a few concluding words as to the moral
+characteristics of this truly good man. Though habitually religious,
+he was neither demure nor morose, but cheerful, gay, and humorous. He
+took great interest in the pleasures of the young people about him, and
+exerted himself in all ways to promote their happiness. He was fond of
+books, pictures, poetry, and music, though the indulgence of artistic
+tastes is not thought becoming in the Society to which he belonged.
+His love for the beauties of nature amounted almost to a passion, and
+when living at The Bank, near Ketley, it was his great delight in the
+summer evenings to retire with his pipe to a rural seat commanding a
+full view of the Wrekin, the Ercall Woods, with Cader Idris and the
+Montgomeryshire hills in the distance, and watch the sun go down in the
+west in his glory. Once in every year he assembled a large party to
+spend a day with him on the Wrekin, and amongst those invited were the
+principal clerks in the company's employment, together with their
+families. At Madeley, near Coalbrookdale, where he bought a property,
+he laid out, for the express use of the workmen, extensive walks
+through the woods on Lincoln Hill, commanding beautiful views. They
+were called "The Workmen's Walks," and were a source of great enjoyment
+to them and their families, especially on Sunday afternoons.
+
+When Mr. Reynolds went to London on business, he was accustomed to make
+a round of visits, on his way home, to places remarkable for their
+picturesque beauty, such as Stowe, Hagley Park, and the Leasowes.
+After a visit to the latter place in 1767, he thus, in a letter to his
+friend John Maccappen, vindicated his love for the beautiful in
+nature:--"I think it not only lawful but expedient to cultivate a
+disposition to be pleased with the beauties of nature, by frequent
+indulgences for that purpose. The mind, by being continually applied
+to the consideration of ways and means to gain money, contracts an
+indifferency if not an insensibility to the profusion of beauties which
+the benevolent Creator has impressed upon every part of the material
+creation. A sordid love of gold, the possession of what gold can
+purchase, and the reputation of being rich, have so depraved the finer
+feelings of some men, that they pass through the most delightful grove,
+filled with the melody of nature, or listen to the murmurings of the
+brook in the valley, with as little pleasure and with no more of the
+vernal delight which Milton describes, than they feel in passing
+through some obscure alley in a town."
+
+When in the prime of life, Mr. Reynolds was an excellent rider,
+performing all his journeys on horseback. He used to give a ludicrous
+account of a race he once ran with another youth, each having a lady
+seated on a pillion behind him; Mr. Reynolds reached the goal first,
+but when he looked round he found that he had lost his fair companion,
+who had fallen off in the race! On another occasion he had a hard run
+with Lord Thurlow during a visit paid by the latter to the Ketley
+Iron-Works. Lord Thurlow pulled up his horse first, and observed,
+laughing, "I think, Mr. Reynolds, this is probably the first time that
+ever a Lord Chancellor rode a race with a Quaker!" But a stranger
+rencontre was one which befel Mr. Reynolds on Blackheath. Though he
+declined Government orders for cannon, he seems to have had a secret
+hankering after the "pomp and circumstance" of military life. At all
+event's he was present on Blackheath one day when George III. was
+reviewing some troops. Mr. Reynold's horse, an old trooper, no sooner
+heard the sound of the trumpet than he started off at full speed, and
+made directly for the group of officers before whom the troops were
+defiling. Great was the surprise of the King when he saw the Quaker
+draw up alongside of him, but still greater, perhaps, was the confusion
+of the Quaker at finding himself in such company.
+
+During the later years of his life, while living at Bristol, his hand
+was in every good work; and it was often felt where it was not seen.
+For he carefully avoided ostentation, and preferred doing his good in
+secret. He strongly disapproved of making charitable bequests by will,
+which he observed in many cases to have been the foundation of enormous
+abuses, but held it to be the duty of each man to do all the possible
+good that he could during his lifetime. Many were the instances of his
+princely, though at the time unknown, munificence. Unwilling to be
+recognised as the giver of large sums, he employed agents to dispense
+his anonymous benefactions. He thus sent 20,000L. to London to be
+distributed during the distress of 1795. He had four almoners
+constantly employed in Bristol, finding out cases of distress,
+relieving them, and presenting their accounts to him weekly, with
+details of the cases relieved. He searched the debtors' prisons, and
+where, as often happened, deserving but unfortunate men were found
+confined for debt, he paid the claims against them and procured their
+release. Such a man could not fail to be followed with blessings and
+gratitude; but these he sought to direct to the Giver of all Good. "My
+talent," said he to a friend, "is the meanest of all talents--a little
+sordid dust; but as the man in the parable who had but one talent was
+held accountable, I also am accountable for the talent that I possess,
+humble as it is, to the great Lord of all." On one occasion the case
+of a poor orphan boy was submitted to him, whose parents, both dying
+young, had left him destitute, on which Mr. Reynolds generously offered
+to place a sum in the names of trustees for his education and
+maintenance until he could be apprenticed to a business. The lady who
+represented the case was so overpowered by the munificence of the act
+that she burst into tears, and, struggling to express her gratitude,
+concluded with--"and when the dear child is old enough, I will teach
+him to thank his benefactor." "Thou must teach him to look higher,"
+interrupted Reynolds: "Do we thank the clouds for rain? When the child
+grows up, teach him to thank Him who sendeth both the clouds and the
+rain." Reynolds himself deplored his infirmity of temper, which was by
+nature hasty; and, as his benevolence was known, and appeals were made
+to him at all times, seasonable and unseasonable, he sometimes met them
+with a sharp word, which, however, he had scarcely uttered before he
+repented of it: and he is known to have followed a poor woman to her
+home and ask forgiveness for having spoken hastily in answer to her
+application for help.
+
+This "great good man" died on the 10th of September, 1816, in the 81st
+year of his age. At his funeral the poor of Bristol were the chief
+mourners. The children of the benevolent societies which he had
+munificently supported during his lifetime, and some of which he had
+founded, followed his body to the grave. The procession was joined by
+the clergy and ministers of all denominations, and by men of all
+classes and persuasions. And thus was Richard Reynolds laid to his
+rest, leaving behind him a name full of good odour, which will long be
+held in grateful remembrance by the inhabitants of Bristol.
+
+
+
+[1] Dr. PLOT, Natural History of Staffordshire, 2nd ed. 1686, p. 128.
+
+[2] JOSHUA GEE, The Trade and Navigation of Great Britain considered,
+1731.
+
+[3] When a bill was introduced into Parliament in 1750 with the object
+of encouraging the importation of iron from our American colonies, the
+Sheffield tanners petitioned against it, on the ground that, if it
+passed, English iron would be undersold; many forges would consequently
+be discontinued; in which case the timber used for fuel would remain
+uncut, and the tanners would thereby be deprived of bark for the
+purposes of their trade!
+
+[4] History of the Iron Trade, p. 56.
+
+[5] See Mr. Powle's account of the Iron Works in the Forest of Dean
+(1677-8), in the Philosophical Transactions, vol. ii. p. 418, where he
+says, "After they have pounded their ore, their first work is to
+calcine it, which is done in kilns, much after the fashion of ordinary
+lime-kilns, These they fill up to the top with coal and ore, stratum
+super stratum, until it be full; and so setting fire to the bottom,
+they let it burn till the coal be wasted, and then renew the kilns with
+fresh ore and coal, in the same manner as before. This is done without
+fusion of the metal, and serves to consume the more drossy parts of the
+ore and to make it friable." The writer then describes the process of
+smelting the ore mixed with cinder in the furnaces, where, he says, the
+fuel is "always of charcoal." "Several attempts," he adds, "have been
+made to introduce the use of sea-coal in these works instead of
+charcoal, the former being to be had at an easier rate than the latter;
+but hitherto they have proved ineffectual, the workmen finding by
+experience that a sea-coal fire, how vehement soever, will not
+penetrate the most fixed parts of the ore, and so leaves much of the
+metal unmelted"
+
+[6] Phil. Trans. vol. xliv. 305.
+
+[7] Reverberatory, so called because the flame or current of heated
+gases from the fuel is caused to be reverberated or reflected down upon
+the substance under operation before passing into the chimney. It is
+curious that Rovenson, in his Treatise of Metallica of 1613, describes
+a reverberatory furnace in which iron was to be smelted by pit-coal,
+though it does not appear that he succeeded in perfecting his
+invention. Dr. Percy, in his excellent work on Metallurgy, thus
+describes a reverberatory furnace:--"It consists essentially of three
+parts--a fireplace at one end, a stack or chimney at the other, and a
+bed between both on which the matter is heated. The fireplace is
+separated from the bed by a low partition wall called the fire-bridge,
+and both are covered by an arched roof which rises from the end wall of
+the fireplace and gradually dips toward the furthest end of the bed
+connected with the stack. On one or both sides of the bed, or at the
+end near the stack, may be openings through which the ore spread over
+the surface of the bed may be stirred about and exposed to the action
+of the air. The matter is heated in such a furnace by flame, and is
+kept from contact with the solid fuel. The flame in its course from
+the fireplace to the stack is reflected downwards or REVERBERATED on
+the matter beneath, whence the name REVERBERATORY furnace."
+
+[8] Mr. TYLOR on Metal Work--Reports on the Paris Exhibition of 1855.
+Part II. 182. We are informed by Mr. Reynolds of Coed-du, a grandson
+of Richard Reynolds, that "on further trials many difficulties arose.
+The bottoms of the furnaces were destroyed by the heat, and the quality
+of the iron varied. Still, by a letter dated May, 1767, it appears
+there had been sold of iron made in the new way to the value of 247L.
+14s. 6d."
+
+[9] Among the other subscribers were the Rev. Mr. Harris, Mr. Jennings,
+and Mr. John Wilkinson, an active promoter of the scheme, who gave the
+company the benefit of his skill and experience when it was determined
+to construct the bridge of iron. For an account of John Wilkinson see
+Lives of the Engineers, vol. ii. 337, 356. In the description of the
+first iron bridge given in that work we have, it appears, attributed
+rather more credit to Mr. Wilkinson than he is entitled to. Mr. Darby
+was the most active promoter of the scheme, and had the principal share
+in the design. Wilkinson nevertheless was a man of great energy and
+originality. Besides being the builder of the first iron ship, he was
+the first to invent, for James Watt, a machine that would bore a
+tolerably true cylinder. He afterwards established iron works in
+France, and Arthur Young says, that "until that well-known English
+manufacturer arrived, the French knew nothing of the art of casting
+cannon solid and then boring them" (Travels in France, 4to. ed. London,
+1792, p.90). Yet England had borrowed her first cannon-maker from
+France in the person of Peter Baude, as described in chap. iii.
+Wilkinson is also said to have invented a kind of hot-blast, in respect
+of which various witnesses gave evidence on the trial of Neilson's
+patent in 1839; but the invention does not appear to have been
+perfected by him.
+
+[10] Encyclopaedia Britannica, 8th ed. Art.
+
+[11] PLYMLEY, General View of the Agriculture of Shropshire. "Iron
+Bridges."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+INVENTION OF CAST STEEL--BENJAMIN HUNTSMAN.
+
+"It may be averred that as certainly as the age of iron superseded that
+of bronze, so will the age of steel reign triumphant over iron."--HENRY
+BESSEMER.
+
+"Aujourd'hui la revolution que devait amener en Grande-Bretagne la
+memorable decouverte de Benjamin Huntsman est tout a fait accomplie, et
+chaque jour les consequetces sen feront plus vivement sentir sur le
+confinent."--LE PLAY, Sur la Fabrication de l' Acier en Yorkshire.
+
+
+Iron, besides being used in various forms as bar and cast iron, is also
+used in various forms as bar and cast steel; and it is principally
+because of its many admirable qualities in these latter forms that iron
+maintains its supremacy over all the other metals.
+
+The process of converting iron into steel had long been known among the
+Eastern nations before it was introduced into Europe. The Hindoos were
+especially skilled in the art of making steel, as indeed they are to
+this day; and it is supposed that the tools with which the Egyptians
+covered their obelisks and temples of porphyry and syenite with
+hieroglyphics were made of Indian steel, as probably no other metal was
+capable of executing such work. The art seems to have been well known
+in Germany in the Middle Ages, and the process is on the whole very
+faithfully described by Agricola in his great work on Metallurgy.[1]
+England then produced very little steel, and was mainly dependent for
+its supply of the article upon the continental makers.
+
+From an early period Sheffield became distinguished for its manufacture
+of iron and steel into various useful articles. We find it mentioned
+in the thirteenth century as a place where the best arrowheads were
+made,--the Earl of Richmond owing his success at the battle of Bosworth
+partly to their superior length, sharpness, and finish. The
+manufactures of the town became of a more pacific character in the
+following centuries, during which knives, tools, and implements of
+husbandry became the leading articles.
+
+Chaucer's reference to the 'Sheffield thwytel' (or case-knife) in his
+Canterbury Tales, written about the end of the fourteenth century,
+shows that the place had then become known for its manufacture of
+knives. In 1575 we find the Earl of Shrewsbury presenting to his
+friend Lord Burleigh "a case of Hallamshire whittells, being such
+fruites as his pore cuntrey affordeth with fame throughout the realme."
+Fuller afterwards speaks of the Sheffield knives as "for common use of
+the country people," and he cites an instance of a knave who cozened
+him out of fourpence for one when it was only worth a penny.
+
+In 1600 Sheffield became celebrated for its tobacco-boxes and
+Jew's-harps. The town was as yet of small size and population; for
+when a survey of it was made in 1615 it was found to contain not more
+than 2207 householders, of whom one-third, or 725, were "not able to
+live without the charity of their neighbours: these are all Begging
+poor." [2] It must, however, have continued its manufacture of knives;
+for we find that the knife with which Felton stabbed the Duke of
+Buckingham at Portsmouth in 1628 was traced to Sheffield. The knife
+was left sticking in the duke's body, and when examined was found to
+bear the Sheffield corporation mark. It was ultimately ascertained to
+have been made by one Wild, a cutler, who had sold the knife for
+tenpence to Felton when recruiting in the town. At a still later
+period, the manufacture of clasp or spring knives was introduced into
+Sheffield by Flemish workmen. Harrison says this trade was begun in
+1650. The clasp-knife was commonly known in the North as a jocteleg.
+Hence Burns, describing the famous article treasured by Captain Grose
+the antiquarian, says that--
+
+ "It was a faulding jocteleq,
+ Or lang-kail gully;"
+
+the word being merely a corruption of Jacques de Liege, a famous
+foreign cutler, whose knives were as well known throughout Europe as
+those of Rogers or Mappin are now. Scythes and sickles formed other
+branches of manufacture introduced by the Flemish artisans, the makers
+of the former principally living in the parish of Norton, those of the
+latter in Eckington.
+
+Many improvements were introduced from time to time in the material of
+which these articles were made. Instead of importing the German steel,
+as it was called, the Sheffield manufacturers began to make it
+themselves, principally from Dannemora iron imported from Sweden. The
+first English manufacturer of the article was one Crowley, a Newcastle
+man; and the Sheffield makers shortly followed his example. We may
+here briefly state that the ordinary method of preparing this valuable
+material of manufactures is by exposing iron bars, placed in contact
+with roughly-granulated charcoal, to an intense heat,--the process
+lasting for about a week, more or less, according to the degree of
+carbonization required. By this means, what is called BLISTERED STEEL
+is produced, and it furnishes the material out of which razors, files,
+knives, swords, and various articles of hardware are manufactured. A
+further process is the manufacture of the metal thus treated into SHEAR
+STEEL, by exposing a fasciculus of the blistered steel rods, with sand
+scattered over them for the purposes of a flux, to the heat of a
+wind-furnace until the whole mass becomes of a welding heat, when it is
+taken from the fire and drawn out under a forge-hammer,--the process of
+welding being repeated, after which the steel is reduced to the
+required sizes. The article called FAGGOT steel is made after a
+somewhat similar process.
+
+But the most valuable form in which steel is now used in the
+manufactures of Sheffield is that of cast-steel, in which iron is
+presented in perhaps its very highest state of perfection. Cast-steel
+consists of iron united to carbon in an elastic state together with a
+small portion of oxygen; whereas crude or pig iron consists of iron
+combined with carbon in a material state.[3] Chief merits of
+cast-steel consist in its possessing great cohesion and closeness of
+grain, with an astonishing degree of tenacity and
+flexibility,--qualities which render it of the highest value in all
+kinds of tools and instruments where durability, polish, and fineness
+of edge are essential requisites. It is to this material that we are
+mainly indebted for the exquisite cutting instrument of the surgeon,
+the chisel of the sculptor, the steel plate on which the engraver
+practises his art, the cutting tools employed in the various processes
+of skilled handicraft, down to the common saw or the axe used by the
+backwoodsman in levelling the primeval forest.
+
+The invention of cast-steel is due to Benjamin Huntsman, of
+Attercliffe, near Sheffield. M. Le Play, Professor of Metallurgy in
+the Royal School of Mines of France, after making careful inquiry and
+weighing all the evidence on the subject, arrived at the conclusion
+that the invention fairly belongs to Huntsman. The French professor
+speaks of it as a "memorable discovery," made and applied with
+admirable perseverance; and he claims for its inventor the
+distinguished merit of advancing the steel manufactures of Yorkshire to
+the first rank, and powerfully contributing to the establishment on a
+firm foundation of the industrial and commercial supremacy of Great
+Britain. It is remarkable that a French writer should have been among
+the first to direct public attention to the merits of this inventor,
+and to have first published the few facts known as to his history in a
+French Government Report,--showing the neglect which men of this class
+have heretofore received at home, and the much greater esteem in which
+they are held by scientific foreigners.[4] Le Play, in his
+enthusiastic admiration of the discoverer of so potent a metal as
+cast-steel, paid a visit to Huntsman's grave in Atterclifle Churchyard,
+near Sheffield, and from the inscription on his tombstone recites the
+facts of his birth, his death, and his brief history. With the
+assistance of his descendants, we are now enabled to add the following
+record of the life and labours of this remarkable but almost forgotten
+man.
+
+Benjamin Huntsman was born in Lincolnshire in the year 1704. His
+parents were of German extraction, and had settled in this country only
+a few years previous to his birth. The boy being of an ingenious turn,
+was bred to a mechanical calling; and becoming celebrated for his
+expertness in repairing clocks, he eventually set up in business as a
+clock maker and mender in the town of Doncaster. He also undertook
+various other kinds of metal work, such as the making and repairing of
+locks, smoke-jacks, roasting-jacks, and other articles requiring
+mechanical skill. He was remarkably shrewd, observant, thoughtful, and
+practical; so much so that he came to be regarded as the "wise man" of
+his neighbourhood, and was not only consulted as to the repairs of
+machinery, but also of the human frame. He practised surgery with
+dexterity, though after an empirical fashion, and was held in especial
+esteem as an oculist. His success was such that his advice was sought
+in many surgical diseases, and he was always ready to give it, but
+declined receiving any payment in return.
+
+In the exercise of his mechanical calling, he introduced several
+improved tools, but was much hindered by the inferior quality of the
+metal supplied to him, which was common German steel. He also
+experienced considerable difficulty in finding a material suitable for
+the springs and pendulums of his clocks. These circumstances induced
+him to turn his attention to the making of a better kind of steel than
+was then procurable, for the purposes of his trade. His first
+experiments were conducted at Doncaster;[5] but as fuel was difficult
+to be had at that place, he determined, for greater convenience, to
+remove to the neighbourhood of Sheffield, which he did in 1740. He
+first settled at Handsworth, a few miles to the south of that town, and
+there pursued his investigations in secret. Unfortunately, no records
+have been preserved of the methods which he adopted in overcoming the
+difficulties he had necessarily to encounter. That they must have been
+great is certain, for the process of manufacturing cast-steel of a
+first-rate quality even at this day is of a most elaborate and delicate
+character, requiring to be carefully watched in its various stages. He
+had not only to discover the fuel and flux suitable for his purpose,
+but to build such a furnace and make such a crucible as should sustain
+a heat more intense than any then known in metallurgy. Ingot-moulds
+had not yet been cast, nor were there hoops and wedges made that would
+hold them together, nor, in short, were any of those materials at his
+disposal which are now so familiar at every melting-furnace.
+
+Huntsman's experiments extended over many years before the desired
+result was achieved. Long after his death, the memorials of the
+numerous failures through which he toilsomely worked his way to
+success, were brought to light in the shape of many hundredweights of
+steel, found buried in the earth in different places about his
+manufactory. From the number of these wrecks of early experiments, it
+is clear that he had worked continuously upon his grand idea of
+purifying the raw steel then in use, by melting it with fluxes at an
+intense heat in closed earthen crucibles. The buried masses were found
+in various stages of failure, arising from imperfect melting, breaking
+of crucibles, and bad fluxes; and had been hid away as so much spoiled
+steel of which nothing could be made. At last his perseverance was
+rewarded, and his invention perfected; and though a hundred years have
+passed since Huntsman's discovery, the description of fuel (coke) which
+he first applied for the purpose of melting the steel, and the
+crucibles and furnaces which he used, are for the most part similar to
+those in use at the present day. Although the making of cast-steel is
+conducted with greater economy and dexterity, owing to increased
+experience, it is questionable whether any maker has since been able to
+surpass the quality of Huntsman's manufacture.
+
+The process of making cast-steel, as invented by Benjamin Huntsman, may
+be thus summarily described. The melting is conducted in clay pots or
+crucibles manufactured for the purpose, capable of holding about 34
+lbs. each. Ten or twelve of such crucibles are placed in a
+melting-furnace similar to that used by brass founders; and when the
+furnace and pots are at a white heat, to which they are raised by a
+coke fire, they are charged with bar steel reduced to a certain degree
+of hardness, and broken into pieces of about a pound each. When the
+pots are all thus charged with steel, lids are placed over them, the
+furnace is filled with coke, and the cover put down. Under the intense
+heat to which the metal is exposed, it undergoes an apparent
+ebullition. When the furnace requires feeding, the workmen take the
+opportunity of lifting the lid of each crucible and judging how far the
+process has advanced. After about three hours' exposure to the heat,
+the metal is ready for "teeming." The completion of the melting
+process is known by the subsidence of all ebullition, and by the clear
+surface of the melted metal, which is of a dazzling brilliancy like the
+sun when looked at with the naked eye on a clear day. The pots are
+then lifted out of their place, and the liquid steel is poured into
+ingots of the shape and size required. The pots are replaced, filled
+again, and the process is repeated; the red-hot pots thus serving for
+three successive charges, after which they are rejected as useless.
+
+When Huntsman had perfected his invention, it would naturally occur to
+him that the new metal might be employed for other purposes besides
+clock-springs and pendulums. The business of clock-making was then of
+a very limited character, and it could scarcely have been worth his
+while to pursue so extensive and costly a series of experiments merely
+to supply the requirements of that trade. It is more probable that at
+an early stage of his investigations he shrewdly foresaw the extensive
+uses to which cast-steel might be applied in the manufacture of tools
+and cutlery of a superior kind; and we accordingly find him early
+endeavouring to persuade the manufacturers of Sheffield to employ it in
+the manufacture of knives and razors. But the cutlers obstinately
+refused to work a material so much harder than that which they had been
+accustomed to use; and for a time he gave up all hopes of creating a
+demand in that quarter. Foiled in his endeavours to sell his steel at
+home, Huntsman turned his attention to foreign markets; and he soon
+found he could readily sell abroad all that he could make. The merit
+of employing cast-steel for general purposes belongs to the French,
+always so quick to appreciate the advantages of any new discovery, and
+for a time the whole of the cast-steel that Huntsman could manufacture
+was exported to France. When he had fairly established his business
+with that country, the Sheffield cutlers became alarmed at the
+reputation which cast-steel was acquiring abroad; and when they heard
+of the preference displayed by English as well as French consumers for
+the cutlery manufactured of that metal, they readily apprehended the
+serious consequences that must necessarily result to their own trade if
+cast-steel came into general use. They then appointed a deputation to
+wait upon Sir George Savile, one of the members for the county of York,
+and requested him to use his influence with the government to obtain an
+order to prohibit the exportation of cast-steel. But on learning from
+the deputation that the Sheffield manufacturers themselves would not
+make use of the new steel, he positively declined to comply with their
+request. It was indeed fortunate for the interests of the town that
+the object of the deputation was defeated, for at that time Mr.
+Huntsman had very pressing and favourable offers from some spirited
+manufacturers in Birmingham to remove his furnaces to that place; and
+it is extremely probable that had the business of cast-steel making
+become established there, one of the most important and lucrative
+branches of its trade would have been lost to the town of Sheffield.
+
+The Sheffield makers were therefore under the necessity of using the
+cast-steel, if they would retain their trade in cutlery against France;
+and Huntsman's home trade rapidly increased. And then began the
+efforts of the Sheffield men to wrest his secret from him. For
+Huntsman had not taken out any patent for his invention, his only
+protection being in preserving his process as much a mystery as
+possible. All the workmen employed by him were pledged to inviolable
+secrecy; strangers were carefully excluded from the works; and the
+whole of the steel made was melted during the night. There were many
+speculations abroad as to Huntsman's process. It was generally
+believed that his secret consisted in the flux which he employed to
+make the metal melt more readily; and it leaked out amongst the workmen
+that he used broken bottles for the purpose. Some of the
+manufacturers, who by prying and bribing got an inkling of the process,
+followed Huntsman implicitly in this respect; and they would not allow
+their own workmen to flux the pots lest they also should obtain
+possession of the secret. But it turned out eventually that no such
+flux was necessary, and the practice has long since been discontinued.
+A Frenchman named Jars, frequently quoted by Le Play in his account of
+the manufacture of steel in Yorkshire,[6] paid a visit to Sheffield
+towards the end of last century, and described the process so far as he
+was permitted to examine it. According to his statement all kinds of
+fragments of broken steel were used; but this is corrected by Le Play,
+who states that only the best bar steel manufactured of Dannemora iron
+was employed. Jars adds that "the steel is put into the crucible with
+A FLUX, the composition of which is kept secret;" and he states that
+the time then occupied in the conversion was five hours.
+
+It is said that the person who first succeeded in copying Huntsman's
+process was an ironfounder named Walker, who carried on his business at
+Greenside near Sheffield, and it was certainly there that the making of
+cast-steel was next begun. Walker adopted the "ruse" of disguising
+himself as a tramp, and, feigning great distress and abject poverty, he
+appeared shivering at the door of Huntsman's foundry late one night
+when the workmen were about to begin their labours at steel-casting,
+and asked for admission to warm himself by the furnace fire. The
+workmen's hearts were moved, and they permitted him to enter. We have
+the above facts from the descendants of the Huntsman family; but we add
+the traditional story preserved in the neighbourhood, as given in a
+well-known book on metallurgy:--
+
+"One cold winter's night, while the snow was falling in heavy flakes,
+and the manufactory threw its red glared light over the neighbourhood,
+a person of the most abject appearance presented himself at the
+entrance, praying for permission to share the warmth and shelter which
+it afforded. The humane workmen found the appeal irresistible, and the
+apparent beggar was permitted to take up his quarters in a warm corner
+of the building. A careful scrutiny would have discovered little real
+sleep in the drowsiness which seemed to overtake the stranger; for he
+eagerly watched every movement of the workmen while they went through
+the operations of the newly discovered process. He observed, first of
+all, that bars of blistered steel were broken into small pieces, two or
+three inches in length, and placed in crucibles of fire clay. When
+nearly full, a little green glass broken into small fragments was
+spread over the top, and the whole covered over with a closely-fitting
+cover. The crucibles were then placed in a furnace previously prepared
+for them, and after a lapse of from three to four hours, during which
+the crucibles were examined from time to time to see that the metal was
+thoroughly melted and incorporated, the workmen proceeded to lift the
+crucible from its place on the furnace by means of tongs, and its
+molten contents, blazing, sparkling, and spurting, were poured into a
+mould of cast-iron previously prepared: here it was suffered to cool,
+while the crucibles were again filled, and the process repeated. When
+cool, the mould was unscrewed, and a bar of cast-steel presented
+itself, which only required the aid of the hammerman to form a finished
+bar of cast-steel. How the unauthorized spectator of these operations
+effected his escape without detection tradition does not say; but it
+tells us that, before many months had passed, the Huntsman manufactory
+was not the only one where cast-steel was produced." [7]
+
+However the facts may be, the discovery of the elder Huntsman proved of
+the greatest advantage to Sheffield; for there is scarcely a civilized
+country where Sheffield steel is not largely used, either in its most
+highly finished forms of cutlery, or as the raw material for some home
+manufacture. In the mean time the demand for Huntsman's steel steadily
+increased, and in 1770, for the purpose of obtaining greater scope for
+his operations, he removed to a large new manufactory which he erected
+at Attercliffe, a little to the north of Sheffield, more conveniently
+situated for business purposes. There he continued to flourish for six
+years more, making steel and practising benevolence; for, like the
+Darbys and Reynoldses of Coalbrookdale, he was a worthy and highly
+respected member of the Society of Friends. He was well versed in the
+science of his day, and skilled in chemistry, which doubtless proved of
+great advantage to him in pursuing his experiments in metallurgy.[8]
+That he was possessed of great perseverance will be obvious from the
+difficulties he encountered and overcame in perfecting his valuable
+invention. He was, however, like many persons of strong original
+character, eccentric in his habits and reserved in his manner. The
+Royal Society wished to enrol him as a member in acknowledgment of the
+high merit of his discovery of cast-steel, as well as because of his
+skill in practical chemistry; but as this would have drawn him in some
+measure from his seclusion, and was also, as he imagined, opposed to
+the principles of the Society to which he belonged, he declined the
+honour. Mr. Huntsman died in 1776, in his seventy-second year, and was
+buried in the churchyard at Attercliffe, where a gravestone with an
+inscription marks his resting-place.
+
+His son continued to carry on the business, and largely extended its
+operations. The Huntsman mark became known throughout the civilised
+world. Le Play the French Professor of Metallurgy, in his Memoire of
+1846, still speaks of the cast-steel bearing the mark of "Huntsman and
+Marshall" as the best that is made, and he adds, "the buyer of this
+article, who pays a higher price for it than for other sorts, is not
+acting merely in the blind spirit of routine, but pays a logical and
+well-deserved homage to all the material and moral qualities of which
+the true Huntsman mark has been the guarantee for a century." [9]
+
+Many other large firms now compete for their share of the trade; and
+the extent to which it has grown, the number of furnaces constantly at
+work, and the quantity of steel cast into ingots, to be tilted or
+rolled for the various purposes to which it is applied, have rendered
+Sheffield the greatest laboratory in the world of this valuable
+material. Of the total quantity of cast-steel manufactured in England,
+not less than five-sixths are produced there; and the facilities for
+experiment and adaptation on the spot have enabled the Sheffield
+steel-makers to keep the lead in the manufacture, and surpass all
+others in the perfection to which they have carried this important
+branch of our national industry. It is indeed a remarkable fact that
+this very town, which was formerly indebted to Styria for the steel
+used in its manufactures, now exports a material of its own conversion
+to the Austrian forges and other places on the Continent from which it
+was before accustomed to draw its own supplies.
+
+Among the improved processes invented of late years for the manufacture
+of steel are those of Heath, Mushet, and Bessemer. The last promises
+to effect before long an entire revolution in the iron and steel trade.
+By it the crude metal is converted by one simple process, directly as
+it comes from the blast-furnace. This is effected by driving through
+it, while still in a molten state, several streams of atmospheric air,
+on which the carbon of the crude iron unites with the oxygen of the
+atmosphere, the temperature is greatly raised, and a violent ebullition
+takes place, during which, if the process be continued, that part of
+the carbon which appears to be mechanically mixed and diffused through
+the crude iron is entirely consumed. The metal becomes thoroughly
+cleansed, the slag is ejected and removed, while the sulphur and other
+volatile matters are driven off; the result being an ingot of malleable
+iron of the quality of charcoal iron. An important feature in the
+process is, that by stopping it at a particular stage, immediately
+following the boil, before the whole of the carbon has been abstracted
+by the oxygen, the crude iron will be found to have passed into the
+condition of cast-steel of ordinary quality. By continuing the
+process, the metal losing its carbon, it passes from hard to soft
+steel, thence to steely iron, and last of all to very soft iron; so
+that by interrupting the process at any stage, or continuing it to the
+end, almost any quality of iron and steel may be obtained. One of the
+most valuable forms of the metal is described by Mr. Bessemer as
+"semi-steel," being in hardness about midway between ordinary
+cast-steel and soft malleable iron. The Bessemer processes are now in
+full operation in England as well as abroad, both for converting crude
+into malleable iron, and for producing steel; and the results are
+expected to prove of the greatest practical utility in all cases where
+iron and steel are extensively employed.
+
+Yet, like every other invention, this of Mr. Bessemer had long been
+dreamt of, if not really made. We are informed in Warner's Tour
+through the Northern. Counties of England, published at Bath in 1801,
+that a Mr. Reed of Whitehaven had succeeded at that early period in
+making steel direct from the ore; and Mr. Mushet clearly alludes to the
+process in his "Papers on Iron and Steel." Nevertheless, Mr. Bessemer
+is entitled to the merit of working out the idea, and bringing the
+process to perfection, by his great skill and indomitable perseverance.
+In the Heath process, carburet of manganese is employed to aid the
+conversion of iron into steel, while it also confers on the metal the
+property of welding and working more soundly under the hammer--a fact
+discovered by Mr. Heath while residing in India. Mr. Mushet's process
+is of a similar character. Another inventor, Major Uchatius, an
+Austrian engineer, granulates crude iron while in a molten state by
+pouring it into water, and then subjecting it to the process of
+conversion. Some of the manufacturers still affect secrecy in their
+operations; but as one of the Sanderson firm--famous for the excellence
+of their steel--remarked to a visitor when showing him over their
+works, "the great secret is to have the courage to be honest--a spirit
+to purchase the best material, and the means and disposition to do
+justice to it in the manufacture."
+
+It remains to be added, that much of the success of the Sheffield
+manufactures is attributable to the practical skill of the workmen, who
+have profited by the accumulated experience treasured up by their class
+through many generations. The results of the innumerable experiments
+conducted before their eyes have issued in a most valuable though
+unwritten code of practice, the details of which are known only to
+themselves. They are also a most laborious class; and Le Play says of
+them, when alluding to the fact of a single workman superintending the
+operations of three steel-casting furnaces--"I have found nowhere in
+Europe, except in England, workmen able for an entire day, without any
+interval of rest, to undergo such toilsome and exhausting labour as
+that performed by these Sheffield workmen."
+
+
+
+[1] AGRICOLA, De Re Metallica. Basle, 1621.
+
+[2] The Rev. JOSEPH HUNTER, History of Hallamshire.
+
+[3] MUSHET, Papers On Iron and Steel.
+
+[4] M. Le Play's two elaborate and admirable reports on the manufacture
+of steel, published in the Annales des Mines, vols. iii. and ix., 4th
+series, are unique of their kind, and have as yet no counterpart in
+English literature. They are respectively entitled 'Memoire sur la
+Fabrication de l'Acier en Yorkshire,' and 'Memoire sur le Fabrication
+et le Commerce des Fers a Acier dans le Nord de l'Europe.'
+
+[5] There are several clocks still in existence in the neighbourhood of
+Doncaster made by Benjamin Huntsman; and there is one in the possession
+of his grandson, with a pendulum made of cast-steel. The manufacture
+of a pendulum of such a material at that early date is certainly
+curious; its still perfect spring and elasticity showing the scrupulous
+care with which it had been made.
+
+[6] Annales des Mines, vols. iii. and ix., 4th Series.
+
+[7] The Useful Metals and their Alloys (p. 348), an excellent little
+work, in which the process of cast-steel making will be found fully
+described.
+
+[8] We are informed that a mirror is still preserved at Attercliffe,
+made by Huntsman in the days of his early experiments.
+
+[9] Annales des Mines, vol. ix., 4th Series, 266.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE INVENTIONS OF HENRY CORT.
+
+"I have always found it in mine own experience an easier matter to
+devise manie and profitable inventions, than to dispose of one of them
+to the good of the author himself."--Sir Hugh Platt, 1589.
+
+
+Henry Cort was born in 1740 at Lancaster, where his father carried on
+the trade of a builder and brickmaker. Nothing is known as to Henry's
+early history; but he seems to have raised himself by his own efforts
+to a respectable position. In 1765 we find him established in Surrey
+Street, Strand, carrying on the business of a navy agent, in which he
+is said to have realized considerable profits. It was while conducting
+this business that he became aware of the inferiority of British iron
+compared with that obtained from foreign countries. The English
+wrought iron was considered so bad that it was prohibited from all
+government supplies, while the cast iron was considered of too brittle
+a nature to be suited for general use.[1] Indeed the Russian
+government became so persuaded that the English nation could not carry
+on their manufactures without Russian iron, that in 1770 they ordered
+the price to be raised from 70 and 80 copecs per pood to 200 and 220
+copecs per pood.[2]
+
+Such being the case, Cort's attention became directed to the subject in
+connection with the supply of iron to the Navy, and he entered on a
+series of experiments with the object of improving the manufacture of
+English iron. What the particular experiments were, and by what steps
+he arrived at results of so much importance to the British iron trade,
+no one can now tell. All that is known is, that about the year 1775 he
+relinquished his business as a navy agent, and took a lease of certain
+premises at Fontley, near Fareham, at the north-western corner of
+Portsmouth Harbour, where he erected a forge and an iron mill. He was
+afterwards joined in partnership by Samuel Jellicoe (son of Adam
+Jellicoe, then Deputy-Paymaster of Seamen's Wages), which turned out,
+as will shortly appear, a most unfortunate connection for Cort.
+
+As in the case of other inventions, Cort took up the manufacture of
+iron at the point to which his predecessors had brought it, carrying it
+still further, and improving upon their processes. We may here briefly
+recite the steps by which the manufacture of bar-iron by means of
+pit-coal had up to this time been advanced. In 1747, Mr. Ford
+succeeded at Coalbrookdale in smelting iron ore with pit-coal, after
+which it was refined in the usual way by means of coke and charcoal.
+In 1762, Dr. Roebuck (hereafter to be referred to) took out a patent
+for melting the cast or pig iron in a hearth heated with pit-coal by
+the blast of bellows, and then working the iron until it was reduced to
+nature, or metallized, as it was termed; after which it was exposed to
+the action of a hollow pit-coal fire urged by a blast, until it was
+reduced to a loop and drawn out into bar-iron under a common
+forge-hammer. Then the brothers Cranege, in 1766, adopted the
+reverberatory or air furnace, in which they placed the pig or cast
+iron, and without blast or the addition of anything more than common
+raw pit-coal, converted the same into good malleable iron, which being
+taken red hot from the reverberatory furnace to the forge hammer, was
+drawn into bars according to the will of the workman. Peter Onions of
+Merthyr Tydvil, in 1783, carried the manufacture a stage further, as
+described by him in his patent of that year. Having charged his
+furnace ("bound with iron work and well annealed") with pig or fused
+cast iron from the smelting furnace, it was closed up and the doors
+were luted with sand. The fire was urged by a blast admitted
+underneath, apparently for the purpose of keeping up the combustion of
+the fuel on the grate. Thus Onions' furnace was of the nature of a
+puddling furnace, the fire of which was urged by a blast. The fire was
+to be kept up until the metal became less fluid, and "thickened into a
+kind of froth, which the workman, by opening the door, must turn and
+stir with a bar or other iron instrument, and then close the aperture
+again, applying the blast and fire until there was a ferment in the
+metal." The patent further describes that "as the workman stirs the
+metal," the scoriae will separate, "and the particles of iron will
+adhere, which particles the workman must collect or gather into a mass
+or lump." This mass or lump was then to be raised to a white heat, and
+forged into malleable iron at the forge-hammer.
+
+Such was the stage of advance reached in the manufacture of bar-iron,
+when Henry Cort published his patents in 1783 and 1784. In dispensing
+with a blast, he had been anticipated by the Craneges, and in the
+process of puddling by Onions; but he introduced so many improvements
+of an original character, with which he combined the inventions of his
+predecessors, as to establish quite a new era in the history of the
+iron manufacture, and, in the course of a few years, to raise it to the
+highest state of prosperity. As early as 1786, Lord Sheffield
+recognised the great national importance of Cort's improvements in the
+following words:--"If Mr. Cort's very ingenious and meritorious
+improvements in the art of making and working iron, the steam-engine of
+Boulton and Watt, and Lord Dundonald's discovery of making coke at half
+the present price, should all succeed, it is not asserting too much to
+say that the result will be more advantageous to Great Britain than the
+possession of the thirteen colonies (of America); for it will give the
+complete command of the iron trade to this country, with its vast
+advantages to navigation." It is scarcely necessary here to point out
+how completely the anticipations of Lord Sheffield have been fulfilled,
+sanguine though they might appear to be when uttered some seventy-six
+years ago.[3]
+
+
+
+
+We will endeavour as briefly as possible to point out the important
+character of Mr. Cort's improvements, as embodied in his two patents of
+1783 and 1784. In the first he states that, after "great study,
+labour, and expense, in trying a variety of experiments, and making
+many discoveries, he had invented and brought to perfection a peculiar
+method and process of preparing, welding, and working various sorts of
+iron, and of reducing the same into uses by machinery: a furnace, and
+other apparatus, adapted and applied to the said process." He first
+describes his method of making iron for "large uses," such as shanks,
+arms, rings, and palms of anchors, by the method of piling and
+faggoting, since become generally practised, by laying bars of iron of
+suitable lengths, forged on purpose, and tapering so as to be thinner
+at one end than the other, laid over one another in the manner of
+bricks in buildings, so that the ends should everywhere overlay each
+other. The faggots so prepared, to the amount of half a ton more or
+less, were then to be put into a common air or balling furnace, and
+brought to a welding heat, which was accomplished by his method in a
+much shorter time than in any hollow fire; and when the heat was
+perfect, the faggots were then brought under a forge-hammer of great
+size and weight, and welded into a solid mass. Mr. Cort alleges in the
+specification that iron for "larger uses" thus finished, is in all
+respect's possessed of the highest degree of perfection; and that the
+fire in the balling furnace is better suited, from its regularity and
+penetrating quality, to give the iron a perfect welding heat throughout
+its whole mass, without fusing in any part, than any fire blown by a
+blast. Another process employed by Mr. Cort for the purpose of
+cleansing the iron and producing a metal of purer grain, was that of
+working the faggots by passing them through rollers. "By this simple
+process," said he, "all the earthy particles are pressed out and the
+iron becomes at once free from dross, and what is usually called
+cinder, and is compressed into a fibrous and tough state." The
+objection has indeed been taken to the process of passing the iron
+through rollers, that the cinder is not so effectually got rid of as by
+passing it under a tilt hammer, and that much of it is squeezed into
+the bar and remains there, interrupting its fibre and impairing its
+strength.
+
+It does not appear that there was any novelty in the use of rollers by
+Cort; for in his first specification he speaks of them as already well
+known.[4] His great merit consisted in apprehending the value of
+certain processes, as tested by his own and others' experience, and
+combining and applying them in a more effective practical form than had
+ever been done before. This power of apprehending the best methods,
+and embodying the details in one complete whole, marks the practical,
+clear-sighted man, and in certain cases amounts almost to a genius.
+The merit of combining the inventions of others in such forms as that
+they shall work to advantage, is as great in its way as that of the man
+who strikes out the inventions themselves, but who, for want of tact
+and experience, cannot carry them into practical effect.
+
+It was the same with Cort's second patent, in which he described his
+method of manufacturing bar-iron from the ore or from cast-iron. All
+the several processes therein described had been practised before his
+time; his merit chiefly consisting in the skilful manner in which he
+combined and applied them. Thus, like the Craneges, he employed the
+reverberatory or air furnace, without blast, and, like Onions, he
+worked the fused metal with iron bars until it was brought into lumps,
+when it was removed and forged into malleable iron. Cort, however,
+carried the process further, and made it more effectual in all
+respects. His method may be thus briefly described: the bottom of the
+reverberatory furnace was hollow, so as to contain the fluid metal,
+introduced into it by ladles; the heat being kept up by pit-coal or
+other fuel. When the furnace was charged, the doors were closed until
+the metal was sufficiently fused, when the workman opened an aperture
+and worked or stirred about the metal with iron bars, when an
+ebullition took place, during the continuance of which a bluish flame
+was emitted, the carbon of the cast-iron was burned off, the metal
+separated from the slag, and the iron, becoming reduced to nature, was
+then collected into lumps or loops of sizes suited to their intended
+uses, when they were drawn out of the doors of the furnace. They were
+then stamped into plates, and piled or worked in an air furnace, heated
+to a white or welding heat, shingled under a forge hammer, and passed
+through the grooved rollers after the method described in the first
+patent.
+
+The processes described by Cort in his two patents have been followed
+by iron manufacturers, with various modifications, the results of
+enlarged experience, down to the present time. After the lapse of
+seventy-eight years, the language employed by Cort continues on the
+whole a faithful description of the processes still practised: the
+same methods of manufacturing bar from cast-iron, and of puddling,
+piling, welding, and working the bar-iron through grooved rollers--all
+are nearly identical with the methods of manufacture perfected by Henry
+Cort in 1784. It may be mentioned that the development of the powers
+of the steam-engine by Watt had an extraordinary effect upon the
+production of iron. It created a largely increased demand for the
+article for the purposes of the shafting and machinery which it was
+employed to drive; while at the same time it cleared pits of water
+which before were unworkable, and by being extensively applied to the
+blowing of iron-furnaces and the working of the rolling-mills, it thus
+gave a still further impetus to the manufacture of the metal. It would
+be beside our purpose to enter into any statistical detail on the
+subject; but it will be sufficient to state that the production of
+iron, which in the early part of last century amounted to little more
+than 12,000 tons, about the middle of the century to about 18,000 tons,
+and at the time of Cort's inventions to about 90,000 tons, was found,
+in 1820, to have increased to 400,000 tons; and now the total quantity
+produced is upwards of four millions of tons of pig-iron every year, or
+more than the entire production of all other European countries. There
+is little reason to doubt that this extraordinary development of the
+iron manufacture has been in a great measure due to the inventions of
+Henry Cort. It is said that at the present time there are not fewer
+than 8200 of Cort's furnaces in operation in Great Britain alone.[5]
+
+Practical men have regarded Cort's improvement of the process of
+rolling the iron as the most valuable of his inventions. A competent
+authority has spoken of Cort's grooved rollers as of "high
+philosophical interest, being scarcely less than the discovery of a new
+mechanical Power, in reversing the action of the wedge, by the
+application of force to four surfaces, so as to elongate a mass,
+instead of applying force to a mass to divide the four surfaces." One
+of the best authorities in the iron trade of last century, Mr.
+Alexander Raby of Llanelly, like many others, was at first entirely
+sceptical as to the value of Cort's invention; but he had no sooner
+witnessed the process than with manly candour he avowed his entire
+conversion to his views.
+
+We now return to the history of the chief author of this great branch
+of national industry. As might naturally be expected, the principal
+ironmasters, when they heard of Cort's success, and the rapidity and
+economy with which he manufactured and forged bar-iron, visited his
+foundry for the purpose of examining his process, and, if found
+expedient, of employing it at their own works. Among the first to try
+it were Richard Crawshay of Cyfartha, Samuel Homfray of Penydarran
+(both in South Wales), and William Reynolds of Coalbrookdale. Richard
+Crawshay was then (in 1787) forging only ten tons of bar-iron weekly
+under the hammer; and when he saw the superior processes invented by
+Cort he readily entered into a contract with him to work under his
+patents at ten shillings a ton royalty, In 1812 a letter from Mr.
+Crawshay to the Secretary of Lord Sheffield was read to the House of
+Commons, descriptive of his method of working iron, in which he said,
+"I took it from a Mr. Cort, who had a little mill at Fontley in
+Hampshire: I have thus acquainted you with my method, by which I am
+now making more than ten thousand tons of bar-iron per annum." Samuel
+Homfray was equally prompt in adopting the new process. He not only
+obtained from Cort plans of the puddling-furnaces and patterns of the
+rolls, but borrowed Cort's workmen to instruct his own in the necessary
+operations; and he soon found the method so superior to that invented
+by Onions that he entirely confined himself to manufacturing after
+Cort's patent. We also find Mr. Reynolds inviting Cort to conduct a
+trial of his process at Ketley, though it does not appear that it was
+adopted by the firm at that time.[6]
+
+The quality of the iron manufactured by the new process was found
+satisfactory; and the Admiralty having, by the persons appointed by
+them to test it in 1787, pronounced it to be superior to the best
+Oregrounds iron, the use of the latter was thenceforward discontinued,
+and Cort's iron only was directed to be used for the anchors and other
+ironwork in the ships of the Royal Navy. The merits of the invention
+seem to have been generally conceded, and numerous contracts for
+licences were entered into with Cort and his partner by the
+manufacturers of bar-iron throughout the country.[7] Cort himself made
+arrangements for carrying on the manufacture on a large scale, and with
+that object entered upon the possession of a wharf at Gosport,
+belonging to Adam Jellicoe, his partner's father, where he succeeded in
+obtaining considerable Government orders for iron made after his
+patents. To all ordinary eyes the inventor now appeared to be on the
+high road to fortune; but there was a fatal canker at the root of this
+seeming prosperity, and in a few years the fabric which he had so
+laboriously raised crumbled into ruins. On the death of Adam Jellicoe,
+the father of Cort's partner, in August, 1789,[8] defalcations were
+discovered in his public accounts to the extent of 39,676L, and his
+books and papers were immediately taken possession of by the
+Government. On examination it was found that the debts due to Jellicoe
+amounted to 89,657L, included in which was a sum of not less than
+54,853L. owing to him by the Cort partnership. In the public
+investigation which afterwards took place, it appeared that the capital
+possessed by Cort being insufficient to enable him to pursue his
+experiments, which were of a very expensive character, Adam Jellicoe
+had advanced money from time to time for the purpose, securing himself
+by a deed of agreement entitling him to one-half the stock and profits
+of all his contracts; and in further consideration of the capital
+advanced by Jellicoe beyond his equal share, Cort subsequently assigned
+to him all his patent rights as collateral security. As Jellicoe had
+the reputation of being a rich man, Cort had not the slightest
+suspicion of the source from which he obtained the advances made by him
+to the firm, nor has any connivance whatever on the part of Cort been
+suggested. At the same time it must be admitted that the connexion was
+not free from suspicion, and, to say the least, it was a singularly
+unfortunate one. It was found that among the moneys advanced by
+Jellicoe to Cort there was a sum of 27,500L. entrusted to him for the
+payment of seamen's and officers' wages. How his embarrassments had
+tempted him to make use of the public funds for the purpose of carrying
+on his speculations, appears from his own admissions. In a memorandum
+dated the 11th November, 1782, found in his strong box after his death,
+he set forth that he had always had much more than his proper balance
+in hand, until his engagement, about two years before, with Mr. Cort,
+"which by degrees has so reduced me, and employed so much more of my
+money than I expected, that I have been obliged to turn most of my Navy
+bills into cash, and at the same time, to my great concern, am very
+deficient in my balance. This gives me great uneasiness, nor shall I
+live or die in peace till the whole is restored." He had, however,
+made the first false step, after which the downhill career of
+dishonesty is rapid. His desperate attempts to set himself right only
+involved him the deeper; his conscious breach of trust caused him a
+degree of daily torment which he could not bear; and the discovery of
+his defalcations, which was made only a few days before his death,
+doubtless hastened his end.
+
+The Government acted with promptitude, as they were bound to do in such
+a case. The body of Jellicoe was worth nothing to them, but they could
+secure the property in which he had fraudulently invested the public
+moneys intrusted to him. With this object the them Paymaster of the
+Navy proceeded to make an affidavit in the Exchequer that Henry Cort
+was indebted to His Majesty in the sum of 27,500L. and upwards, in
+respect of moneys belonging to the public treasury, which "Adam
+Jellicoe had at different times lent and advanced to the said Henry
+Cort, from whom the same now remains justly due and owing; and the
+deponent saith he verily believes that the said Henry Cort is much
+decayed in his credit and in very embarrassed circumstances; and
+therefore the deponent verily believes that the aforesaid debt so due
+and owing to His Majesty is in great danger of being lost if some more
+speedy means be not taken for the recovery than by the ordinary process
+of the Court." Extraordinary measures were therefore adopted. The
+assignments of Cort's patents, which had been made to Jellicoe in
+consideration of his advances, were taken possession of; but Samuel
+Jellicoe, the son of the defaulter, singular to say, was put in
+possession of the properties at Fontley and Gosport, and continued to
+enjoy them, to Cort's exclusion, for a period of fourteen years. It
+does not however appear that any patent right was ever levied by the
+assignees, and the result of the proceeding was that the whole benefit
+of Cort's inventions was thus made over to the ironmasters and to the
+public. Had the estate been properly handled, and the patent rights
+due under the contracts made by the ironmasters with Cort been duly
+levied, there is little reason to doubt that the whole of the debt
+owing to the Government would have been paid in the course of a few
+years. "When we consider," says Mr. Webster, "how very simple was the
+process of demanding of the contracting ironmasters the patent due
+(which for the year 1789 amounted to 15,000L., in 1790 to 15,000L., and
+in 1791 to 25,000L.), and which demand might have been enforced by the
+same legal process used to ruin the inventor, it is not difficult to
+surmise the motive for abstaining." The case, however, was not so
+simple as Mr. Webster puts it; for there was such a contingency as that
+of the ironmasters combining to dispute the patent right, and there is
+every reason to believe that they were prepared to adopt that course.[9]
+
+Although the Cort patents expired in 1796 and 1798 respectively, they
+continued the subject of public discussion for some time after, more
+particularly in connection with the defalcations of the deceased Adam
+Jellicoe. It does not appear that more than 2654L. was realised by the
+Government from the Cort estate towards the loss sustained by the
+public, as a balance of 24,846L. was still found standing to the debit
+of Jellicoe in 1800, when the deficiencies in the naval account's
+became matter of public inquiry. A few years later, in 1805, the
+subject was again revived in a remarkable manner. In that year, the
+Whigs, Perceiving the bodily decay of Mr. Pitt, and being too eager to
+wait for his removal by death, began their famous series of attacks
+upon his administration. Fearing to tackle the popular statesman
+himself, they inverted the ordinary tactics of an opposition, and fell
+foul of Dundas, Lord Melville, then Treasurer of the Navy, who had
+successfully carried the country through the great naval war with
+revolutionary France. They scrupled not to tax him with gross
+peculation, and exhibited articles of impeachment against him, which
+became the subject of elaborate investigation, the result of which is
+matter of history. In those articles, no reference whatever was made
+to Lord Melville's supposed complicity with Jellicoe; nor, on the trial
+that followed, was any reference made to the defalcations of that
+official. But when Mr. Whitbread, on the 8th of April, 1805, spoke to
+the "Resolutions" in the Commons for impeaching the Treasurer of the
+Navy, he thought proper to intimate that he "had a strong suspicion
+that Jellicoe was in the same partnership with Mark Sprott, Alexander
+Trotter, and Lord Melville. He had been suffered to remain a public
+debtor for a whole year after he was known to be in arrears upwards of
+24,000L. During next year 11,000L. more had accrued. It would not
+have been fair to have turned too short on an old companion. It would
+perhaps, too, have been dangerous, since unpleasant discoveries might
+have met the public eye. It looked very much as if, mutually conscious
+of criminality, they had agreed to be silent, and keep their own
+secrets."
+
+In making these offensive observations Whitbread was manifestly
+actuated by political enmity. They were utterly unwarrantable. In the
+first place, Melville had been formally acquitted of Jellicoe's
+deficiency by a writ of Privy Seal, dated 31st May, 1800; and secondly,
+the committee appointed in that very year (1805) to reinvestigate the
+naval accounts, had again exonerated him, but intimated that they were
+of opinion there was remissness on his part in allowing Jellicoe to
+remain in his office after the discovery of his defalcations.
+
+the report made by the commissioners to the Houses of Parliament in
+1805,[10] the value of Corts patents was estimated at only 100L.
+Referring to the schedule of Jellicoe's alleged assets, they say "Many
+of the debts are marked as bad; and we apprehend that the debt from Mr.
+Henry Cort, not so marked, of 54,000L. and upwards, is of that
+description." As for poor bankrupt Henry Cort, these discussions
+availed nothing. On the death of Jellicoe, he left his iron works,
+feeling himself a ruined man. He made many appeals to the Government
+of the day for restoral of his patents, and offered to find security
+for payment of the debt due by his firm to the Crown, but in vain. In
+1794, an appeal was made to Mr. Pitt by a number of influential members
+of Parliament, on behalf of the inventor and his destitute family of
+twelve children, when a pension of 200L. a-year was granted him. This
+Mr. Cort enjoyed until the year 1800, when he died, broken in health
+and spirit, in his sixtieth year. He was buried in Hampstead
+Churchyard, where a stone marking the date of his death is still to be
+seen. A few years since it was illegible, but it has recently been
+restored by his surviving son.
+
+Though Cort thus died in comparative poverty, he laid the foundations
+of many gigantic fortunes. He may be said to have been in a great
+measure the author of our modern iron aristocracy, who still
+manufacture after the processes which he invented or perfected, but for
+which they never paid him a shilling of royalty. These men of gigantic
+fortunes have owed much--we might almost say everything--to the ruined
+projector of "the little mill at Fontley." Their wealth has enriched
+many families of the older aristocracy, and has been the foundation of
+several modern peerages. Yet Henry Cort, the rock from which they were
+hewn, is already all but forgotten; and his surviving children, now
+aged and infirm, are dependent for their support upon the slender
+pittance wrung by repeated entreaty and expostulation from the state.
+
+The career of Richard Crawshay, the first of the great ironmasters who
+had the sense to appreciate and adopt the methods of manufacturing iron
+invented by Henry Cort, is a not unfitting commentary on the sad
+history we have thus briefly described. It shows how, as respects mere
+money-making, shrewdness is more potent than invention, and business
+faculty than manufacturing skill. Richard Crawshay was born at
+Normanton near Leeds, the son of a small Yorkshire farmer. When a
+youth, he worked on his father's farm, and looked forward to occupying
+the same condition in life; but a difference with his father unsettled
+his mind, and at the age of fifteen he determined to leave his home,
+and seek his fortune elsewhere. Like most unsettled and enterprising
+lads, he first made for London, riding to town on a pony of his own,
+which, with the clothes on his back, formed his entire fortune. It
+took him a fortnight to make the journey, in consequence of the badness
+of the roads. Arrived in London, he sold his pony for fifteen pounds,
+and the money kept him until he succeeded in finding employment. He
+was so fortunate as to be taken upon trial by a Mr. Bicklewith, who
+kept an ironmonger's shop in York Yard, Upper Thames Street; and his
+first duty there was to clean out the office, put the stools and desks
+in order for the other clerks, run errands, and act as porter when
+occasion required. Young Crawshay was very attentive, industrious, and
+shrewd; and became known in the office as "The Yorkshire Boy." Chiefly
+because of his "cuteness," his master appointed him to the department
+of selling flat irons. The London washerwomen of that day were very
+sharp and not very honest, and it used to be said of them that where
+they bought one flat iron they generally contrived to steal two. Mr.
+Bicklewith thought he could not do better than set the Yorkshireman to
+watch the washerwomen, and, by way of inducement to him to be vigilant,
+he gave young Crawshay an interest in that branch of the business,
+which was soon found to prosper under his charge. After a few more
+years, Mr. Bicklewith retired, and left to Crawshay the cast-iron
+business in York Yard. This he still further increased, There was not
+at that time much enterprise in the iron trade, but Crawshay
+endeavoured to connect himself with what there was of it. The price of
+iron was then very high, and the best sorts were still imported from
+abroad; a good deal of the foreign iron and steel being still landed at
+the Steelyard on the Thames, in the immediate neighbourhood of
+Crawshay's ironmongery store.
+
+It seems to have occurred to some London capitalists that money was
+then to be made in the iron trade, and that South Wales was a good
+field for an experiment. The soil there was known to be full of coal
+and ironstone, and several small iron works had for some time been
+carried on, which were supposed to be doing well. Merthyr Tydvil was
+one of the places at which operations had been begun, but the place
+being situated in a hill district, of difficult access, and the
+manufacture being still in a very imperfect state, the progress made
+was for some time very slow. Land containing coal and iron was deemed
+of very little value, as maybe inferred from the fact that in the year
+1765, Mr. Anthony Bacon, a man of much foresight, took a lease from
+Lord Talbot, for 99 years, of the minerals under forty square miles of
+country surrounding the then insignificant hamlet of Merthyr Tydvil, at
+the trifling rental of 200L. a-year. There he erected iron works, and
+supplied the Government with considerable quantities of cannon and iron
+for different purposes; and having earned a competency, he retired from
+business in 1782, subletting his mineral tract in four divisions--the
+Dowlais, the Penydarran, the Cyfartha, and the Plymouth Works, north,
+east, west, and south, of Merthyr Tydvil.
+
+Mr. Richard Crawshay became the lessee of what Mr. Mushet has called
+"the Cyfartha flitch of the great Bacon domain." There he proceeded to
+carry on the works established by Mr. Bacon with increased spirit; his
+son William, whom he left in charge of the ironmongery store in London,
+supplying him with capital to put into the iron works as fast as he
+could earn it by the retail trade. In 1787, we find Richard Crawshay
+manufacturing with difficulty ten tons of bar-iron weekly, and it was
+of a very inferior character,[11]--the means not having yet been
+devised at Cyfartha for malleableizing the pit-coal cast-iron with
+economy or good effect. Yet Crawshay found a ready market for all the
+iron he could make, and he is said to have counted the gains of the
+forge-hammer close by his house at the rate of a penny a stroke. In
+course of time he found it necessary to erect new furnaces, and, having
+adopted the processes invented by Henry Cort, he was thereby enabled
+greatly to increase the production of his forges, until in 1812 we find
+him stating to a committee of the House of Commons that he was making
+ten thousand tons of bar-iron yearly, or an average produce of two
+hundred tons a week. But this quantity, great though it was, has since
+been largely increased, the total produce of the Crawshay furnaces of
+Cyfartha, Ynysfach, and Kirwan, being upwards of 50,000 tons of
+bar-iron yearly.
+
+The distance of Merthyr from Cardiff, the nearest port, being
+considerable, and the cost of carriage being very great by reason of
+the badness of the roads, Mr. Crawshay set himself to overcome this
+great impediment to the prosperity of the Merthyr Tydvil district; and,
+in conjunction with Mr. Homfray of the Penydarran Works, he planned and
+constructed the canal[12] to Cardiff, the opening of which, in 1795,
+gave an immense impetus to the iron trade of the neighbourhood.
+Numerous other extensive iron works became established there, until
+Merthyr Tydvil attained the reputation of being at once the richest and
+the dirtiest district in all Britain. Mr. Crawshay became known in the
+west of England as the "Iron King," and was quoted as the highest
+authority in all questions relating to the trade. Mr. George Crawshay,
+recently describing the founder of the family at a social meeting at
+Newcastle, said,--"In these days a name like ours is lost in the
+infinity of great manufacturing firms which exist through out the land;
+but in those early times the man who opened out the iron district of
+Wales stood upon an eminence seen by all the world. It is preserved in
+the traditions of the family that when the 'Iron King' used to drive
+from home in his coach-and-four into Wales, all the country turned out
+to see him, and quite a commotion took place when he passed through
+Bristol on his way to the works. My great grandfather was succeeded by
+his son, and by his grandson; the Crawshays have followed one another
+for four generations in the iron trade in Wales, and there they still
+stand at the head of the trade." The occasion on which these words
+were uttered was at a Christmas party, given to the men, about 1300 in
+number, employed at the iron works of Messrs. Hawks, Crawshay, and Co.,
+at Newcastle-upon-Tyne. These works were founded in 1754 by William
+Hawks, a blacksmith, whose principal trade consisted in making
+claw-hammers for joiners. He became a thriving man, and eventually a
+large manufacturer of bar-iron. Partners joined him, and in the course
+of the changes wrought by time, one of the Crawshays, in 1842, became a
+principal partner in the firm.
+
+Illustrations of a like kind might be multiplied to any extent, showing
+the growth in our own time of an iron aristocracy of great wealth and
+influence, the result mainly of the successful working of the
+inventions of the unfortunate and unrequited Henry Cort. He has been
+the very Tubal Cain of England--one of the principal founders of our
+iron age. To him we mainly owe the abundance of wrought-iron for
+machinery, for steam-engines, and for railways, at one-third the price
+we were before accustomed to pay to the foreigner. We have by his
+invention, not only ceased to be dependent upon other nations for our
+supply of iron for tools, implements, and arms, but we have become the
+greatest exporters of iron, producing more than all other European
+countries combined. In the opinion of Mr. Fairbairn of Manchester, the
+inventions of Henry Cort have already added six hundred millions
+sterling to the wealth of the kingdom, while they have given employment
+to some six hundred thousand working people during three generations.
+And while the great ironmasters, by freely availing themselves of his
+inventions, have been adding estate to estate, the only estate secured
+by Henry Cort was the little domain of six feet by two in which he lies
+interred in Hampstead Churchyard.
+
+
+
+[1] Life of Brunel, p. 60.
+
+[2] SCRIVENOR, History of the Iron Trade, 169.
+
+[3] Although the iron manufacture had gradually been increasing since
+the middle of the century, it was as yet comparatively insignificant in
+amount. Thus we find, from a statement by W. Wilkinson, dated Dec. 25,
+1791, contained in the memorandum-book of Wm. Reynolds of
+Coalbrookdale, that the produce in England and Scotland was then
+estimated to be
+
+ Coke Furnaces. Charcoal Furnaces.
+
+ In England ......73 producing 67,548 tons 20 producing 8500 tons
+ In Scotland......12 " 12,480 " 2 " 1000 "
+ ---- ------ -- ----
+ 85 " 80,028 " 22 " 9500 "
+
+
+At the same time the annual import of Oregrounds iron from Sweden
+amounted to about 20,000 tons, and of bars and slabs from Russia about
+50,000 tons, at an average cost of 35L. a ton!
+
+[4] "It is material to observe", says Mr. Webster, "that Cort, in this
+specification, speaks of the rollers, furnaces, and separate processes,
+as well known. There is no claim to any of them separately; the claim
+is to the reducing of the faggots of piled iron into bars, and the
+welding of such bars by rollers instead of by forge-hammers."--Memoir
+of Henry Cort, in Mechanic's Magazine, 15 July, 1859, by Thomas
+Webster, M.A., F.R.S.
+
+[5] Letter by Mr. Truran in Mechanic's Magazine.
+
+[6] In the memorandum-book of Wm. Reynolds appears the following entry
+on the subject:--
+
+"Copy of a paper given to H. Cort, Esq.
+
+"W. Reynolds saw H. C. in a trial which he made at Ketley, Dec. 17,
+1784, produce from the same pig both cold short and tough iron by a
+variation of the process used in reducing them from the state of
+cast-iron to that of malleable or bar-iron; and in point of yield his
+processes were quite equal to those at Pitchford, which did not exceed
+the proportion of 31 cwt. to the ton of bars. The experiment was made
+by stamping and potting the blooms or loops made in his furnace, which
+then produced a cold short iron; but when they were immediately
+shingled and drawn, the iron was of a black tough."
+
+The Coalbrookdale ironmasters are said to have been deterred from
+adopting the process because of what was considered an excessive waste
+of the metal--about 25 per cent,--though, with greater experience, this
+waste was very much diminished.
+
+[7] Mr. Webster, in the 'Case of Henry Cort,' published in the
+Mechanic's Magazine (2 Dec. 1859), states that "licences were taken at
+royalties estimated to yield 27,500L. to the owners of the patents."
+
+[8] In the 'Case of Henry Cort,' by Mr. Webster, above referred to
+(Mechanic's Magazine, 2 Dec. 1859), it is stated that Adam Jellicoe
+"committed suicide under the pressure of dread of exposure," but this
+does not appear to be confirmed by the accounts in the newspapers of
+the day. He died at his private dwelling-house, No. 14, Highbury
+Place, Islingtonn, on the 30th August, 1789, after a fortnight's
+illness.
+
+[9] This is confirmed by the report of a House of Commons Committee on
+the subject Mr. Davies Gilbert chairman, in which they say, "Your
+committee have not been able to satisfy themselves that either of the
+two inventions, one for subjecting cast-iron to an operation termed
+puddling during its conversion to malleable iron, and the other for
+passing it through fluted or grooved rollers, were so novel in their
+principle or their application as fairly to entitle the petitioners
+[Mr. Cort's survivors] to a parliamentary reward." It is, however,
+stated by Mr. Mushet that the evidence was not fairly taken by the
+committee--that they were overborne by the audacity of Mr. Samuel
+Homfray, one of the great Welsh ironmasters, whose statements were
+altogether at variance with known facts--and that it was under his
+influence that Mr. Gilbert drew up the fallacious report of the
+committee. The illustrious James Watt, writing to Dr. Black in 1784,
+as to the iron produced by Cort's process, said, "Though I cannot
+perfectly agree with you as to its goodness, yet there is much
+ingenuity in the idea of forming the bars in that manner, which is the
+only part of his process which has any pretensions to novelty.... Mr.
+Cort has, as you observe, been most illiberally treated by the trade:
+they are ignorant brutes; but he exposed himself to it by showing them
+the process before it was perfect, and seeing his ignorance of the
+common operations of making iron, laughed at and despised him; yet they
+will contrive by some dirty evasion to use his process, or such parts
+as they like, without acknowledging him in it. I shall be glad to be
+able to be of any use to him. Watts fellow-feeling was naturally
+excited in favour of the plundered inventor, he himself having all his
+life been exposed to the attacks of like piratical assailants.
+
+[10] Tenth Report of the Commissioners of Naval Inquiry. See also
+Report of Select Committee on the 10th Naval Report. May, 1805.
+
+[11] Mr. Mushet says of the early manufacture of iron at Merthyr Tydvil
+that "A modification of the charcoal refinery, a hollow fire, was
+worked with coke as a substitute for charcoal, but the bar-iron
+hammered from the produce was very inferior." The pit-coal cast-iron
+was nevertheless found of a superior quality for castings, being more
+fusible and more homogeneous than charcoal-iron. Hence it was well
+adapted for cannon, which was for some time the principal article of
+manufacture at the Welsh works.
+
+[12] It may be worthy of note that the first locomotive run upon a
+railroad was that constructed by Trevithick for Mr. Homfray in 1803,
+which was employed to bring down metal from the furnaces to the Old
+Forge. The engine was taken off the road because the tram-plates were
+found too weak to bear its weight without breaking.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SCOTCH IRON MANUFACTURE--DR. ROEBUCK DAVID MUSHET.
+
+"Were public benefactors to be allowed to pass away, like hewers of
+wood and drawers of water, without commemoration, genius and enterprise
+would be deprived of their most coveted distinction."--Sir Henry
+Englefield.
+
+
+The account given of Dr. Roebuck in a Cyclopedia of Biography, recently
+published in Glasgow, runs as follows:--"Roebuck, John, a physician and
+experimental chemist, born at Sheffield, 1718; died, after ruining
+himself by his projects, 1794." Such is the short shrift which the man
+receives who fails. Had Dr. Roebuck wholly succeeded in his projects,
+he would probably have been esteemed as among the greatest of
+Scotland's benefactors. Yet his life was not altogether a failure, as
+we think will sufficiently appear from the following brief account of
+his labours:--
+
+At the beginning of last century, John Roebuck's father carried on the
+manufacture of cutlery at Sheffield,[1] in the course of which he
+realized a competency. He intended his son to follow his own business,
+but the youth was irresistibly attracted to scientific pursuits, in
+which his father liberally encouraged him; and he was placed first
+under the care of Dr. Doddridge, at Northampton, and afterwards at the
+University of Edinburgh, where he applied himself to the study of
+medicine, and especially of chemistry, which was then attracting
+considerable attention at the principal seats of learning in Scotland.
+While residing at Edinburgh young Roebuck contracted many intimate
+friendships with men who afterwards became eminent in literature, such
+as Hume and Robertson the historians, and the circumstance is supposed
+to have contributed not a little to his partiality in favour of
+Scotland, and his afterwards selecting it as the field for his
+industrial operations.
+
+After graduating as a physician at Leyden, Roebuck returned to England,
+and settled at Birmingham in the year 1745 for the purpose of
+practising his profession. Birmingham was then a principal seat of the
+metal manufacture, and its mechanics were reputed to be among the most
+skilled in Britain. Dr. Roebuck's attention was early drawn to the
+scarcity and dearness of the material in which the mechanics worked,
+and he sought by experiment to devise some method of smelting iron
+otherwise than by means of charcoal. He had a laboratory fitted up in
+his house for the purpose of prosecuting his inquiries, and there he
+spent every minute that he could spare from his professional labours.
+It was thus that he invented the process of smelting iron by means of
+pit-coal which he afterwards embodied in the patent hereafter to be
+referred to. At the same time he invented new methods of refining gold
+and silver, and of employing them in the arts, which proved of great
+practical value to the Birmingham trades-men, who made extensive use of
+them in their various processes of manufacture.
+
+Dr. Roebuck's inquiries had an almost exclusively practical direction,
+and in pursuing them his main object was to render them subservient to
+the improvement of the industrial arts. Thus he sought to devise more
+economical methods of producing the various chemicals used in the
+Birmingham trade, such as ammonia, sublimate, and several of the acids;
+and his success was such as to induce him to erect a large laboratory
+for their manufacture, which was conducted with complete success by his
+friend Mr. Garbett. Among his inventions of this character, was the
+modern process of manufacturing vitriolic acid in leaden vessels in
+large quantities, instead of in glass vessels in small quantities as
+formerly practised. His success led him to consider the project of
+establishing a manufactory for the purpose of producing oil of vitriol
+on a large scale; and, having given up his practice as a physician, he
+resolved, with his partner Mr. Garbett, to establish the proposed works
+in the neighbourhood of Edinburgh. He removed to Scotland with that
+object, and began the manufacture of vitriol at Prestonpans in the year
+1749. The enterprise proved eminently lucrative, and, encouraged by
+his success, Roebuck proceeded to strike out new branches of
+manufacture. He started a pottery for making white and brown ware,
+which eventually became established, and the manufacture exists in the
+same neighbourhood to this day.
+
+The next enterprise in which he became engaged was one of still greater
+importance, though it proved eminently unfortunate in its results as
+concerned himself. While living at Prestonpans, he made the friendship
+of Mr. William Cadell, of Cockenzie, a gentleman who had for some time
+been earnestly intent on developing the industry of Scotland, then in a
+very backward condition. Mr. Cadell had tried, without success, to
+establish a manufactory of iron; and, though he had heretofore failed,
+he hoped that with the aid of Dr. Roebuck he might yet succeed. The
+Doctor listened to his suggestions with interest, and embraced the
+proposed enterprise with zeal. He immediately proceeded to organize a
+company, in which he was joined by a number of his friends and
+relatives. His next step was to select a site for the intended works,
+and make the necessary arrangements for beginning the manufacture of
+iron. After carefully examining the country on both sides of the
+Forth, he at length made choice of a site on the banks of the river
+Carron, in Stirlingshire, where there was an abundant supply of wafer,
+and an inexhaustible supply of iron, coal, and limestone in the
+immediate neighbourhood, and there Dr. Roebuck planted the first
+ironworks in Scotland.
+
+In order to carry them on with the best chances of success, he brought
+a large number of skilled workmen from England, who formed a nucleus of
+industry at Carron, where their example and improved methods of working
+served to train the native labourers in their art. At a subsequent
+period, Mr. Cadell, of Carronpark, also brought a number of skilled
+English nail-makers into Scotland, and settled them in the village of
+Camelon, where, by teaching others, the business has become handed down
+to the present day.
+
+The first furnace was blown at Carron on the first day of January,
+1760; and in the course of the same year the Carron Iron Works turned
+out 1500 tons of iron, then the whole annual produce of Scotland.
+Other furnaces were shortly after erected on improved plans, and the
+production steadily increased. Dr. Roebuck was indefatigable in his
+endeavours to improve the manufacture, and he was one of the first, as
+we have said, to revive the use of pit-coal in refining the ore, as
+appears from his patent of 1762. He there describes his new process as
+follows:--"I melt pig or any kind of cast-iron in a hearth heated with
+pit-coal by the blast of bellows, and work the metal until it is
+reduced to nature, which I take out of the fire and separate to pieces;
+then I take the metal thus reduced to nature and expose it to the
+action of a hollow pit-coal fire, heated by the blast of bellows, until
+it is reduced to a loop, which I draw out under a common forge hammer
+into bar-iron." This method of manufacture was followed with success,
+though for some time, as indeed to this day, the principal production
+of the Carron Works was castings, for which the peculiar quality of the
+Scotch iron admirably adapts it. The well-known Carronades,[2] or
+"Smashers," as they were named, were cast in large numbers at the
+Carron Works. To increase the power of his blowing apparatus, Dr.
+Roebuck called to his aid the celebrated Mr. Smeaton, the engineer, who
+contrived and erected for him at Carron the most perfect apparatus of
+the kind then in existence. It may also be added, that out of the
+Carron enterprise, in a great measure, sprang the Forth and Clyde
+Canal, the first artificial navigation in Scotland. The Carron
+Company, with a view to securing an improved communication with
+Glasgow, themselves surveyed a line, which was only given up in
+consequence of the determined opposition of the landowners; but the
+project was again revived through their means, and was eventually
+carried out after the designs of Smeaton and Brindley.
+
+While the Carron foundry was pursuing a career of safe prosperity, Dr.
+Roebuck's enterprise led him to embark in coal-mining, with the object
+of securing an improved supply of fuel for the iron works. He became
+the lessee of the Duke of Hamilton's extensive coal-mines at
+Boroughstoness, as well as of the salt-pans which were connected with
+them. The mansion of Kinneil went with the lease, and there Dr.
+Roebuck and his family took up their abode. Kinneil House was formerly
+a country seat of the Dukes of Hamilton, and is to this day a stately
+old mansion, reminding one of a French chateau. Its situation is of
+remarkable beauty, its windows overlooking the broad expanse of the
+Firth of Forth, and commanding an extensive view of the country along
+its northern shores. The place has become in a measure classical,
+Kinneil House having been inhabited, since Dr. Roebuck's time, by
+Dugald Stewart, who there wrote his Philosophical Essays.[3] When Dr.
+Roebuck began to sink for coal at the new mines, he found it necessary
+to erect pumping-machinery of the most powerful kind that could be
+contrived, in order to keep the mines clear of water. For this purpose
+the Newcomen engine, in its then state, was found insufficient; and
+when Dr. Roebuck's friend, Professor Black, of Edinburgh, informed him
+of a young man of his acquaintance, a mathematical instrument maker at
+Glasgow, having invented a steam-engine calculated to work with
+increased power, speed, and economy, compared with Newcomen's; Dr.
+Roebuck was much interested, and shortly after entered into a
+correspondence with James Watt, the mathematical instrument maker
+aforesaid on the subject. The Doctor urged that Watt, who, up to that
+time, had confined himself to models, should come over to Kinneil
+House, and proceed to erect a working; engine in one of the
+outbuildings. The English workmen whom he had brought; to the Carron
+works would, he justly thought, give Watt a better chance of success
+with his engine than if made by the clumsy whitesmiths and blacksmiths
+of Glasgow, quite unaccustomed as they were to first-class work; and he
+proposed himself to cast the cylinders at Carron previous to Watt's
+intended visit to him at Kinneil.
+
+Watt paid his promised visit in May, 1768, and Roebuck was by this time
+so much interested in the invention, that the subject of his becoming a
+partner with Watt, with the object of introducing the engine into
+general use, was seriously discussed. Watt had been labouring at his
+invention for several years, contending with many difficulties, but
+especially with the main difficulty of limited means. He had borrowed
+considerable sums of money from Dr. Black to enable him to prosecute
+his experiments, and he felt the debt to hang like a millstone round
+his neck. Watt was a sickly, fragile man, and a constant sufferer from
+violent headaches; besides he was by nature timid, desponding,
+painfully anxious, and easily cast down by failure. Indeed, he was
+more than once on the point of abandoning his invention in despair. On
+the other hand, Dr. Roebuck was accustomed to great enterprises, a bold
+and undaunted man, and disregardful of expense where he saw before him
+a reasonable prospect of success. His reputation as a practical
+chemist and philosopher, and his success as the founder of the
+Prestonpans Chemical Works and of the Carron Iron Works, justified the
+friends of Watt in thinking that he was of all men the best calculated
+to help him at this juncture, and hence they sought to bring about a
+more intimate connection between the two. The result was that Dr.
+Roebuck eventually became a partner to the extent of two-thirds of the
+invention, took upon him the debt owing by Watt to Dr. Black amounting
+to about 1200L., and undertook to find the requisite money to protect
+the invention by means of a patent. The necessary steps were taken
+accordingly and the patent right was secured by the beginning of 1769,
+though the perfecting of his model cost Watt much further anxiety and
+study.
+
+It was necessary for Watt occasionally to reside with Dr. Roebuck at
+Kinneil House while erecting his first engine there. It had been
+originally intended to erect it in the neighbouring town of
+Boroughstoness, but as there might be prying eyes there, and Watt
+wished to do his work in privacy, determined "not to puff," he at
+length fixed upon an outhouse still standing, close behind the mansion,
+by the burnside in the glen, where there was abundance of water and
+secure privacy. Watt's extreme diffidence was often the subject of
+remark at Dr. Roebuck's fireside. To the Doctor his anxiety seemed
+quite painful, and he was very much disposed to despond under
+apparently trivial difficulties. Roebuck's hopeful nature was his
+mainstay throughout. Watt himself was ready enough to admit this; for,
+writing to his friend Dr. Small, he once said, "I have met with many
+disappointments; and I must have sunk under the burthen of them if I
+had not been supported by the friendship of Dr. Roebuck."
+
+But more serious troubles were rapidly accumulating upon Dr. Roebuck
+himself; and it was he, and not Watt, that sank under the burthen. The
+progress of Watt's engine was but slow, and long before it could be
+applied to the pumping of Roebuck's mines, the difficulties of the
+undertaking on which he had entered overwhelmed him. The opening out
+of the principal coal involved a very heavy outlay, extending over many
+years, during which he sank not only his own but his wife's fortune,
+and--what distressed him most of all--large sums borrowed from his
+relatives and friends, which he was unable to repay. The consequence
+was, that he was eventually under the necessity of withdrawing his
+capital from the refining works at Birmingham, and the vitriol works at
+Prestonpans. At the same time, he transferred to Mr. Boulton of Soho
+his entire interest in Watt's steam-engine, the value of which, by the
+way, was thought so small that it was not even included among the
+assets; Roebuck's creditors not estimating it as worth one farthing.
+Watt sincerely deplored his partner's misfortunes, but could not help
+him. "He has been a most sincere and generous friend," said Watt, "and
+is a truly worthy man." And again, "My heart bleeds for him, but I can
+do nothing to help him: I have stuck by him till I have much hurt
+myself; I can do so no longer; my family calls for my care to provide
+for them." The later years of Dr. Roebuck's life were spent in
+comparative obscurity; and he died in 1794, in his 76th year.
+
+He lived to witness the success of the steam-engine, the opening up of
+the Boroughstoness coal,[4] and the rapid extension of the Scotch iron
+trade, though he shared in the prosperity of neither of those branches
+of industry. He had been working ahead of his age, and he suffered for
+it. He fell in the breach at the critical moment, and more fortunate
+men marched over his body into the fortress which his enterprise and
+valour had mainly contributed to win. Before his great undertaking of
+the Carron Works, Scotland was entirely dependent upon other countries
+for its supply of iron. In 1760, the first year of its operations, the
+whole produce was 1500 tons. In course of time other iron works were
+erected, at Clyde Cleugh, Muirkirk, and Devon--the managers and
+overseers of which, as well as the workmen, had mostly received their
+training and experience at Carron--until at length the iron trade of
+Scotland has assumed such a magnitude that its manufacturers are
+enabled to export to England and other countries upwards of 500,000
+tons a-year. How different this state of things from the time when
+raids were made across the Border for the purpose of obtaining a store
+of iron plunder to be carried back into Scotland!
+
+The extraordinary expansion of the Scotch iron trade of late years has
+been mainly due to the discovery by David Mushet of the Black Band
+ironstone in 1801, and the invention of the Hot Blast by James Beaumont
+Neilson in 1828. David Mushet was born at Dalkeith, near Edinburgh, in
+1772.[5] Like other members of his family he was brought up to
+metal-founding. At the age of nineteen he joined the staff of the
+Clyde Iron Works, near Glasgow, at a time when the Company had only two
+blast-furnaces at work. The office of accountant, which he held,
+precluded him from taking any part in the manufacturing operations of
+the concern. But being of a speculative and ingenious turn of mind,
+the remarkable conversions which iron underwent in the process of
+manufacture very shortly began to occupy his attention. The subject
+was much discussed by the young men about the works, and they
+frequently had occasion to refer to Foureroy's well-known book for the
+purpose of determining various questions of difference which arose
+among them in the course of their inquiries. The book was, however, in
+many respects indecisive and unsatisfactory; and, in 1793, when a
+reduction took place in the Company's staff, and David Mushet was left
+nearly the sole occupant of the office, he determined to study the
+subject for himself experimentally, and in the first place to acquire a
+thorough knowledge of assaying, as the true key to the whole art of
+iron-making.
+
+He first set up his crucible upon the bridge of the reverberatory
+furnace used for melting pig-iron, and filled it with a mixture
+carefully compounded according to the formula of the books; but,
+notwithstanding the shelter of a brick, placed before it to break the
+action of the flame, the crucible generally split in two, and not
+unfrequently melted and disappeared altogether. To obtain better
+results if possible, he next had recourse to the ordinary smith's fire,
+carrying on his experiments in the evenings after office-hours. He set
+his crucible upon the fire on a piece of fire brick, opposite the
+nozzle of the bellows; covering the whole with coke, and then exciting
+the flame by blowing. This mode of operating produced somewhat better
+results, but still neither the iron nor the cinder obtained resembled
+the pig or scoria of the blast-furnace, which it was his ambition to
+imitate. From the irregularity of the results, and the frequent
+failure of the crucibles, he came to the conclusion that either his
+furnace, or his mode of fluxing, was in fault, and he looked about him
+for a more convenient means of pursuing his experiments. A small
+square furnace had been erected in the works for the purpose of heating
+the rivets used for the repair of steam-engine boilers; the furnace had
+for its chimney a cast-iron pipe six or seven inches in diameter and
+nine feet long. After a few trials with it, he raised the heat to such
+an extent that the lower end of the pipe was melted off, without
+producing any very satisfactory results on the experimental crucible,
+and his operations were again brought to a standstill. A chimney of
+brick having been substituted for the cast-iron pipe, he was, however,
+enabled to proceed with his trials.
+
+He continued to pursue his experiments in assaying for about two years,
+during which he had been working entirely after the methods described
+in books; but, feeling the results still unsatisfactory, he determined
+to borrow no more from the books, but to work out a system of his own,
+which should ensure results similar to those produced at the
+blast-furnace. This he eventually succeeded in effecting by numerous
+experiments performed in the night; as his time was fully occupied by
+his office-duties during the day. At length these patient experiments
+bore their due fruits. David Mushet became the most skilled assayer at
+the works; and when a difficulty occurred in smelting a quantity of new
+ironstone which had been contracted for, the manager himself resorted
+to the bookkeeper for advice and information; and the skill and
+experience which he had gathered during his nightly labours, enabled
+him readily and satisfactorily to solve the difficulty and suggest a
+suitable remedy. His reward for this achievement was the permission,
+which was immediately granted him by the manager, to make use of his
+own assay-furnace, in which he thenceforward continued his
+investigations, at the same time that he instructed the manager's son
+in the art of assaying. This additional experience proved of great
+benefit to him; and he continued to prosecute his inquiries with much
+zeal, sometimes devoting entire nights to experiments in assaying,
+roasting and cementing iron-ores and ironstone, decarbonating cast-iron
+for steel and bar-iron, and various like operations. His general
+practice, however, at that time was, to retire between two and three
+o'clock in the morning, leaving directions with the engine-man to call
+him at half-past five, so as to be present in the office at six. But
+these praiseworthy experiments were brought to a sudden end, as thus
+described by himself:--
+
+"In the midst of my career of investigation," says he,[6] "and without
+a cause being assigned, I was stopped short. My furnaces, at the order
+of the manager, were pulled in pieces, and an edict was passed that
+they should never be erected again. Thus terminated my researches at
+the Clyde Iron Works. It happened at a time when I was interested--and
+I had been two years previously occupied--in an attempt to convert
+cast-iron into steel, without fusion, by a process of cementation,
+which had for its object the dispersion or absorption of the
+superfluous carbon contained in the cast-iron,--an object which at that
+time appeared to me of so great importance, that, with the consent of a
+friend, I erected an assay and cementing Furnace at the distance of
+about two miles from the Clyde Works. Thither I repaired at night, and
+sometimes at the breakfast and dinner hours during the day. This plan
+of operation was persevered in for the whole of one summer, but was
+found too uncertain and laborious to be continued. At the latter end
+of the year 1798 I left my chambers, and removed from the Clyde Works
+to the distance of about a mile, where I constructed several furnaces
+for assaying and cementing, capable of exciting a greater temperature
+than any to which I before had access; and thus for nearly two years I
+continued to carry on my investigations connected with iron and the
+alloys of the metals.
+
+"Though operating in a retired manner, and holding little communication
+with others, my views and opinions upon the RATIONALE of iron-making
+spread over the establishment. I was considered forward in affecting
+to see and explain matters in a different way from others who were much
+my seniors, and who were content to be satisfied with old methods of
+explanation, or with no explanation at all..... Notwithstanding these
+early reproaches, I have lived to see the nomenclature of my youth
+furnish a vocabulary of terms in the art of iron-making, which is used
+by many of the ironmasters of the present day with freedom and effect,
+in communicating with each other on the subject of their respective
+manufactures. Prejudices seldom outlive the generation to which they
+belong, when opposed by a more rational system of explanation. In this
+respect, Time (as my Lord Bacon says) is the greatest of all innovators.
+
+"In a similar manner, Time operated in my favour in respect to the
+Black Band Ironstone.[7] The discovery of this was made in 1801, when
+I was engaged in erecting for myself and partners the Calder Iron
+Works. Great prejudice was excited against me by the ironmasters and
+others of that day in presuming to class the WILD COALS of the country
+(as Black Band was called) with ironstone fit and proper for the blast
+furnace. Yet that discovery has elevated Scotland to a considerable
+rank among the iron-making nations of Europe, with resources still in
+store that may be considered inexhaustible. But such are the
+consolatory effects of Time, that the discoverer of 1801 is no longer
+considered the intrusive visionary of the laboratory, but the
+acknowledged benefactor of his country at large, and particularly of an
+extensive class of coal and mine proprietors and iron masters, who have
+derived, and are still deriving, great wealth from this important
+discovery; and who, in the spirit of grateful acknowledgment, have
+pronounced it worthy of a crown of gold, or a monumental record on the
+spot where the discovery was first made.
+
+"At an advanced period of life, such considerations are soothing and
+satisfactory. Many under similar circumstances have not, in their own
+lifetime, had that measure of justice awarded to them by their country
+to which they were equally entitled. I accept it, however, as a boon
+justly due to me, and as an equivalent in some degree for that
+laborious course of investigation which I had prescribed for myself,
+and which, in early life, was carried on under circumstances of
+personal exposure and inconvenience, which nothing but a frame of iron
+could have supported. They atone also, in part, for that
+disappointment sustained in early life by the speculative habits of one
+partner, and the constitutional nervousness of another, which
+eventually occasioned my separation from the Calder Iron Works, and
+lost me the possession of extensive tracts of Black Band iron-stone,
+which I had secured while the value of the discovery was known only to
+myself."
+
+Mr. Mushet published the results of his laborious investigations in a
+series of papers in the Philosophical Magazine,--afterwards reprinted
+in a collected form in 1840 under the title of "Papers on Iron and
+Steel." These papers are among the most valuable original
+contributions to the literature of the iron-manufacture that have yet
+been given to the world. They contain the germs of many inventions and
+discoveries in iron and steel, some of which were perfected by Mr.
+Mushet himself, while others were adopted and worked out by different
+experimenters. In 1798 some of the leading French chemists were
+endeavouring to prove by experiment that steel could be made by contact
+of the diamond with bar-iron in the crucible, the carbon of the diamond
+being liberated and entering into combination with the iron, forming
+steel. In the animated controversy which occurred on the subject, Mr.
+Mushet's name was brought into considerable notice; one of the subjects
+of his published experiments having been the conversion of bar-iron
+into steel in the crucible by contact with regulated proportions of
+charcoal. The experiments which he made in connection with this
+controversy, though in themselves unproductive of results, led to the
+important discovery by Mr. Mushet of the certain fusibility of
+malleable iron at a suitable temperature.
+
+Among the other important results of Mr. Mushet's lifelong labours, the
+following may be summarily mentioned: The preparation of steel from
+bar-iron by a direct process, combining the iron with carbon; the
+discovery of the beneficial effects of oxide of manganese on iron and
+steel; the use of oxides of iron in the puddling-furnace in various
+modes of appliance; the production of pig-iron from the blast-furnace,
+suitable for puddling, without the intervention of the refinery; and
+the application of the hot blast to anthracite coal in iron-smelting.
+For the process of combining iron with carbon for the production of
+steel, Mr. Mushet took out a patent in November, 1800; and many years
+after, when he had discovered the beneficial effects of oxide of
+manganese on steel, Mr. Josiah Heath founded upon it his celebrated
+patent for the making of cast-steel, which had the effect of raising
+the annual production of that metal in Sheffield from 3000 to 100,000
+tons. His application of the hot blast to anthracite coal, after a
+process invented by him and adopted by the Messrs. Hill of the Plymouth
+Iron Works, South Wales, had the effect of producing savings equal to
+about 20,000L. a year at those works; and yet, strange to say, Mr.
+Mushet himself never received any consideration for his invention.
+
+The discovery of Titanium by Mr. Mushet in the hearth of a
+blast-furnace in 1794 would now be regarded as a mere isolated fact,
+inasmuch as Titanium was not placed in the list of recognised metals
+until Dr. Wollaston, many years later, ascertained its qualities. But
+in connection with the fact, it may be mentioned that Mr. Mushet's
+youngest son, Robert, reasoning on the peculiar circumstances of the
+discovery in question, of which ample record is left, has founded upon
+it his Titanium process, which is expected by him eventually to
+supersede all other methods of manufacturing steel, and to reduce very
+materially the cost of its production.
+
+While he lived, Mr. Mushet was a leading authority on all matters
+connected with Iron and Steel, and he contributed largely to the
+scientific works of his time. Besides his papers in the Philosophical
+Journal, he wrote the article "Iron" for Napiers Supplement to the
+Encyclopaedia Britannica; and the articles "Blast Furnace" and "Blowing
+Machine" for Rees's Cyclopaedia. The two latter articles had a
+considerable influence on the opposition to the intended tax upon iron
+in 1807, and were frequently referred to in the discussions on the
+subject in Parliament. Mr. Mushet died in 1847.
+
+
+
+[1] Dr. Roebuck's grandson, John Arthur Roebuck, by a singular
+coincidence, at present represents Sheffield in the British Parliament.
+
+[2] The carronade was invented by General Robert Melville [Mr. Nasmyth
+says it was by Miller of Dalswinton], who proposed it for discharging
+68 lb, shot with low charges of powder, in order to produce the
+increased splintering or SMASHING effects which were known to result
+from such practice. The first piece of the kind was cast at the Carron
+Foundry, in 1779, and General Melville's family have now in their
+possession a small model of this gun, with the inscription:--"Gift of
+the Carron Company to Lieutenant-general Melville, inventor of the
+smashers and lesser carronades, for solid, ship, shell, and carcass
+shot, &c. First used against French ships in 1779."
+
+[3] Wilkie the painter once paid him a visit there while in Scotland
+studying the subject of his "Penny Wedding;" and Dugald Stewart found
+for him the old farm-house with the cradle-chimney, which he introduced
+in that picture. But Kinneil House has had its imaginary inhabitants
+as well as its real ones, the ghost of a Lady Lilburn, once an occupant
+of the place, still "haunting" some of the unoccupied chambers. Dugald
+Stewart told Wilkie one night, as he was going to bed, of the unearthly
+wailings which he himself had heard proceeding from the ancient
+apartments; but to him at least they had been explained by the door
+opening out upon the roof being blown in on gusty nights, when a
+jarring and creaking noise was heard all over the house. One advantage
+derived from the house being "haunted" was, that the garden was never
+broken into, and the winter apples and stores were at all times kept
+safe from depredation in the apartments of the Lady Lilburn.
+
+[4] Dr. Roebuck had been on the brink of great good fortune, but he did
+not know it. Mr. Ralph Moore, in his "Papers on the Blackband
+Ironstones" (Glasgow, 1861), observes:--"Strange to say, he was leaving
+behind him, almost as the roof of one of the seams of coal which he
+worked, a valuable blackband ironstone, upon which Kinneil Iron Works
+are now founded. The coal-field continued to be worked until the
+accidental discovery of the blackband about 1845. The old coal-pits
+are now used for working the ironstone."
+
+[5] The Mushets are an old Kincardine family; but they were almost
+extinguished by the plague in the reign of Charles the Second. Their
+numbers were then reduced to two; one of whom remained at Kincardine,
+and the other, a clergyman, the Rev. George Mushet, accompanied
+Montrose as chaplain. He is buried in Kincardine churchyard.
+
+[6] Papers on Iron and Steel. By David Mushet. London, 1840.
+
+[7] This valuable description of iron ore was discovered by Mr. Mushet,
+as he afterwards informs us (Papers on Iron and Steel, 121), in the
+year 1801, when crossing the river Calder, in the parish of Old
+Monkland. Having subjected a specimen which he found in the river-bed
+to the test of his crucible, he satisfied himself as to its properties,
+and proceeded to ascertain its geological position and relations. He
+shortly found that it belonged to the upper part of the coal-formation,
+and hence he designated it carboniferous ironstone. He prosecuted his
+researches, and found various rich beds of the mineral distributed
+throughout the western counties of Scotland. On analysis, it was found
+to contain a little over 50 per cent. of protoxide of iron. The coaly
+matter it contained was not its least valuable ingredient; for by the
+aid of the hot blast it was afterwards found practicable to smelt it
+almost without any addition of coal. Seams of black band have since
+been discovered and successfully worked in Edinburghshire,
+Staffordshire, and North Wales.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+INVENTION OF THE HOT BLAST--JAMES BEAUMONT NEILSON.
+
+"Whilst the exploits of the conqueror and the intrigues of the
+demagogue are faithfully preserved through a succession of ages, the
+persevering and unobtrusive efforts of genius, developing the best
+blessings of the Deity to man, are often consigned to oblivion."--David
+Mushet.
+
+
+The extraordinary value of the Black Band ironstone was not at first
+duly recognised, perhaps not even by Mr. Mushet himself. For several
+years after its discovery by him, its use was confined to the Calder
+Iron Works, where it was employed in mixture with other ironstones of
+the argillaceous class. It was afterwards partially used at the Clyde
+Iron Works, but nowhere else, a strong feeling of prejudice being
+entertained against it on the part of the iron trade generally. It was
+not until the year 1825 that the Monkland Company used it alone,
+without any other mixture than the necessary quantity of limestone for
+a flux. "The success of this Company," says Mr. Mushet, "soon gave
+rise to the Gartsherrie and Dundyvan furnaces, in the midst of which
+progress came the use of raw pit-coal and the Hot Blast--the latter one
+of the greatest discoveries in metallurgy of the present age, and,
+above every other process, admirably adapted for smelting the Blackband
+ironstone." From the introduction of this process the extraordinary
+development of the iron-manufacture of Scotland may be said to date;
+and we accordingly propose to devote the present chapter to an account
+of its meritorious inventor.
+
+James Beaumont Neilson was born at Shettleston, a roadside village
+about three miles eastward of Glasgow, on the 22nd of June, 1792. His
+parents belonged to the working class. His father's earnings during
+many laborious years of his life did not exceed sixteen shillings a
+week. He had been bred to the trade of a mill-wright, and was for some
+time in the employment of Dr. Roebuck as an engine-wright at his
+colliery near Boroughstoness. He was next employed in a like capacity
+by Mr. Beaumont, the mineral-manager of the collieries of Mrs.
+Cunningham of Lainshaw, near Irvine in Ayrshire; after which he was
+appointed engine-wright at Ayr, and subsequently at the Govan Coal
+Works near Glasgow, where he remained until his death. It was while
+working at the Irvine Works that he first became acquainted with his
+future wife, Marion Smith, the daughter of a Renfrewshire bleacher, a
+woman remarkable through life for her clever, managing, and industrious
+habits. She had the charge of Mrs. Cunningham's children for some time
+after the marriage of that lady to Mr. Beaumont, and it was in
+compliment to her former mistress and her husband that she named her
+youngest son James Beaumont after the latter.
+
+The boy's education was confined to the common elements of reading,
+writing, and arithmetic, which he partly acquired at the parish school
+of Strathbungo near Glasgow, and partly at the Chapel School, as it was
+called, in the Gorbals at Glasgow. He had finally left school before
+he was fourteen. Some time before he left, he had been partially set
+to work, and earned four shillings a week by employing a part of each
+day in driving a small condensing engine which his father had put up in
+a neighbouring quarry. After leaving school, he was employed for two
+years as a gig boy on one of the winding engines at the Govan colliery.
+His parents now considered him of fit age to be apprenticed to some
+special trade, and as Beaumont had much of his father's tastes for
+mechanical pursuits, it was determined to put him apprentice to a
+working engineer. His elder brother John was then acting as engineman
+at Oakbank near Glasgow, and Beaumont was apprenticed under him to
+learn the trade. John was a person of a studious and serious turn of
+mind, and had been strongly attracted to follow the example of the
+brothers Haldane, who were then exciting great interest by their
+preaching throughout the North; but his father set his face against his
+son's "preaching at the back o' dikes," as he called it; and so John
+quietly settled down to his work. The engine which the two brothers
+managed was a very small one, and the master and apprentice served for
+engineman and fireman. Here the youth worked for three years,
+employing his leisure hours in the evenings in remedying the defects of
+his early education, and endeavouring to acquire a knowledge of English
+grammar, drawing, and mathematics.
+
+On the expiry of his apprenticeship, Beaumont continued for a time to
+work under his brother as journeyman at a guinea a week; after which,
+in 1814, he entered the employment of William Taylor, coal-master at
+Irvine, and he was appointed engine-wright of the colliery at a salary
+of from 70L. to 80L. a year. One of the improvements which he
+introduced in the working of the colliery, while he held that office,
+was the laying down of an edge railway of cast-iron, in lengths of
+three feet, from the pit to the harbour of Irvine, a distance of three
+miles. At the age of 23 he married his first wife, Barbara
+Montgomerie, an Irvine lass, with a "tocher" of 250L. This little
+provision was all the more serviceable to him, as his master, Taylor,
+becoming unfortunate in business, he was suddenly thrown out of
+employment, and the little fortune enabled the newly-married pair to
+hold their heads above water till better days came round. They took a
+humble tenement, consisting of a room and a kitchen, in the Cowcaddens,
+Glasgow, where their first child was born.
+
+About this time a gas-work, the first in Glasgow, was projected, and
+the company having been formed, the directors advertised for a
+superintendent and foreman, to whom they offered a "liberal salary."
+Though Beaumont had never seen gaslight before, except at the
+illumination of his father's colliery office after the Peace of Amiens,
+which was accomplished in a very simple and original manner, without
+either condenser, purifier, or gas-holder, and though he knew nothing
+of the art of gas-making, he had the courage to apply for the
+situation. He was one of twenty candidates, and the fortunate one; and
+in August, 1817, we find him appointed foreman of the Glasgow Gasworks,
+for five years, at the salary of 90L. a year. Before the expiry of his
+term he was reappointed for six years more, at the advanced salary of
+200L., with the status of manager and engineer of the works. His
+salary was gradually increased to 400L. a year, with a free
+dwelling-house, until 1847, when, after a faithful service of thirty
+years, during which he had largely extended the central works, and
+erected branch works in Tradeston and Partick, he finally resigned the
+management.
+
+The situation of manager of the Glasgow Gas-works was in many respects
+well suited for the development of Mr. Neilson's peculiar abilities.
+In the first place it afforded him facilities for obtaining theoretical
+as well as practical knowledge in Chemical Science, of which he was a
+diligent student at the Andersonian University, as well as of Natural
+Philosophy and Mathematics in their higher branches. In the next place
+it gave free scope for his ingenuity in introducing improvements in the
+manufacture of gas, then in its infancy. He was the first to employ
+clay retorts; and he introduced sulphate of iron as a self-acting
+purifier, passing the gas through beds of charcoal to remove its oily
+and tarry elements. The swallow-tail or union jet was also his
+invention, and it has since come into general use.
+
+While managing the Gas-works, one of Mr. Neilson's labours of love was
+the establishment and direction by him of a Workmen's Institution for
+mutual improvement. Having been a workman himself, and experienced the
+disadvantages of an imperfect education in early life, as well as the
+benefits arising from improved culture in later years, he desired to
+impart some of these advantages to the workmen in his employment, who
+consisted chiefly of persons from remote parts of the Highlands or from
+Ireland. Most of them could not even read, and his principal
+difficulty consisted in persuading them that it was of any use to
+learn. For some time they resisted his persuasions to form a Workmen's
+Institution, with a view to the establishment of a library, classes,
+and lectures, urging as a sufficient plea for not joining it, that they
+could not read, and that books would be of no use to them. At last Mr.
+Neilson succeeded, though with considerable difficulty, in inducing
+fourteen of the workmen to adopt his plan. Each member was to
+contribute a small sum monthly, to be laid out in books, the Gas
+Company providing the members with a comfortable room in which they
+might meet to read and converse in the evenings instead of going to the
+alehouse. The members were afterwards allowed to take the books home
+to read, and the room was used for the purpose of conversation on the
+subjects of the books read by them, and occasionally for lectures
+delivered by the members themselves on geography, arithmetic,
+chemistry, and mechanics. Their numbers increased so that the room in
+which they met became insufficient for their accommodation, when the
+Gas Company provided them with a new and larger place of meeting,
+together with a laboratory and workshop. In the former they studied
+practical chemistry, and in the latter they studied practical
+mechanics, making for themselves an air pump and an electrifying
+machine, as well as preparing the various models used in the course of
+the lectures. The effects on the workmen were eminently beneficial,
+and the institution came to be cited as among the most valuable of its
+kind in the kingdom.[1]
+
+Mr. Neilson throughout watched carefully over its working, and exerted
+himself in all ways to promote its usefulness, in which he had the
+zealous co-operation of the leading workmen themselves, and the
+gratitude of all. On the opening of the new and enlarged rooms in
+1825, we find him delivering an admirable address, which was thought
+worthy of republication, together with the reply of George Sutherland,
+one of the workmen, in which Mr. Neilson's exertions as its founder and
+chief supporter were gratefully and forcibly expressed.[2]
+
+It was during the period of his connection with the Glasgow Gas-works
+that Mr. Neilson directed his attention to the smelting of iron. His
+views in regard to the subject were at first somewhat crude, as appears
+from a paper read by him before the Glasgow Philosophical Society early
+in 1825. It appears that in the course of the preceding year his
+attention had been called to the subject by an iron-maker, who asked
+him if he thought it possible to purify the air blown into the blast
+furnaces, in like manner as carburetted hydrogen gas was purified. The
+ironmaster supposed that it was the presence of sulphur in the air that
+caused blast-furnaces to work irregularly, and to make bad iron in the
+summer months. Mr. Neilson was of opinion that this was not the true
+cause, and he was rather disposed to think it attributable to the want
+of a due proportion of oxygen in summer, when the air was more
+rarefied, besides containing more aqueous vapour than in winter. He
+therefore thought the true remedy was in some way or other to throw in
+a greater proportion of oxygen; and he suggested that, in order to dry
+the air, it should be passed, on its way to the furnace, through two
+long tunnels containing calcined lime. But further inquiry served to
+correct his views, and eventually led him to the true theory of
+blasting.
+
+Shortly after, his attention was directed by Mr. James Ewing to a
+defect in one of the Muirkirk blast-furnaces, situated about half a
+mile distant from the blowing-engine, which was found not to work so
+well as others which were situated close to it. The circumstances of
+the case led Mr. Neilson to form the opinion that, as air increases in
+volume according to temperature, if he were to heat it by passing it
+through a red-hot vessel, its volume would be increased, according to
+the well-known law, and the blast might thus be enabled to do more duty
+in the distant furnace. He proceeded to make a series of experiments
+at the Gas-works, trying the effect of heated air on the illuminating
+power of gas, by bringing up a stream of it in a tube so as to surround
+the gas-burner. He found that by this means the combustion of the gas
+was rendered more intense, and its illuminating power greatly
+increased. He proceeded to try a similar experiment on a common
+smith's fire, by blowing the fire with heated air, and the effect was
+the same; the fire was much more brilliant, and accompanied by an
+unusually intense degree of heat.
+
+Having obtained such marked results by these small experiments, it
+naturally occurred to him that a similar increase in intensity of
+combustion and temperature would attend the application of the process
+to the blast-furnace on a large scale; but being only a gas-maker, he
+had the greatest difficulty in persuading any ironmaster to permit him
+to make the necessary experiment's with blast-furnaces actually at
+work. Besides, his theory was altogether at variance with the
+established practice, which was to supply air as cold as possible, the
+prevailing idea being that the coldness of the air in winter was the
+cause of the best iron being then produced. Acting on these views, the
+efforts of the ironmasters had always been directed to the cooling of
+the blast, and various expedients were devised for the purpose. Thus
+the regulator was painted white, as being the coolest colour; the air
+was passed over cold water, and in some cases the air pipes were even
+surrounded by ice, all with the object of keeping the blast cold.
+When, therefore, Mr. Neilson proposed entirely to reverse the process,
+and to employ hot instead of cold blast, the incredulity of the
+ironmasters may well be imagined. What! Neilson, a mere maker of gas,
+undertake to instruct practical men in the manufacture of iron! And to
+suppose that heated air can be used for the purpose! It was
+presumption in the extreme, or at best the mere visionary idea of a
+person altogether unacquainted with the subject!
+
+At length, however, Mr. Neilson succeeded in inducing Mr. Charles
+Macintosh of Crossbasket, and Mr. Colin Dunlop of the Clyde Iron Works,
+to allow him to make a trial of the hot air process. In the first
+imperfect attempts the air was heated to little more than 80 degrees
+Fahrenheit, yet the results were satisfactory, and the scoriae from the
+furnace evidently contained less iron. He was therefore desirous of
+trying his plan upon a more extensive scale, with the object, if
+possible, of thoroughly establishing the soundness of his principle.
+In this he was a good deal hampered even by those ironmasters who were
+his friends, and had promised him the requisite opportunities for
+making a fair trial of the new process. They strongly objected to his
+making the necessary alterations in the furnaces, and he seemed to be
+as far from a satisfactory experiment as ever. In one instance, where
+he had so far succeeded as to be allowed to heat the blast-main, he
+asked permission to introduce deflecting plates in the main or to put a
+bend in the pipe, so as to bring the blast more closely against the
+heated sides of the pipe, and also increase the area of heating
+surface, in order to raise the temperature to a higher point; but this
+was refused, and it was said that if even a bend were put in the pipe
+the furnace would stop working. These prejudices proved a serious
+difficulty in the way of our inventor, and several more years passed
+before he was allowed to put a bend in the blast-main. After many
+years of perseverance, he was, however, at length enabled to work out
+his plan into a definite shape at the Clyde Iron Works, and its
+practical value was at once admitted. At the meeting of the Mechanical
+Engineers' Society held in May, 1859, Mr. Neilson explained that his
+invention consisted solely in the principle of heating the blast
+between the engine and the furnace, and was not associated with any
+particular construction of the intermediate heating apparatus. This,
+he said, was the cause of its success; and in some respects it
+resembled the invention of his countryman, James Watt, who, in
+connection with the steam-engine, invented the plan of condensing the
+steam in a separate vessel, and was successful in maintaining his
+invention by not limiting it to any particular construction of the
+condenser. On the same occasion he took the opportunity of
+acknowledging the firmness with which the English ironmasters had stood
+by him when attempts were made to deprive him of the benefits of his
+invention; and to them he acknowledged he was mainly indebted for the
+successful issue of the severe contests he had to undergo. For there
+were, of course, certain of the ironmasters, both English and Scotch,
+supporters of the cause of free trade in others' inventions, who sought
+to resist the patent, after it had come into general use, and had been
+recognised as one of the most valuable improvements of modern times.[3]
+
+The patent was secured in 1828 for a term of fourteen years; but, as
+Mr. Neilson did not himself possess the requisite capital to enable him
+to perfect the invention, or to defend it if attacked, he found it
+necessary to invite other gentlemen, able to support him in these
+respects, to share its profits; retaining for himself only three-tenths
+of the whole. His partners were Mr. Charles Macintosh, Mr. Colin
+Dunlop, and Mr. John Wilson of Dundyvan. The charge made by them was
+only a shilling a ton for all iron produced by the new process; this
+low rate being fixed in order to ensure the introduction of the patent
+into general use, as well as to reduce to a minimum the temptations of
+the ironmasters to infringe it.
+
+The first trials of the process were made at the blast-furnaces of
+Clyde and Calder; from whence the use of the hot blast gradually
+extended to the other iron-mining districts. In the course of a few
+years every furnace in Scotland, with one exception (that at Carron),
+had adopted the improvement; while it was also employed in half the
+furnaces of England and Wales, and in many of the furnaces on the
+Continent and in America. In course of time, and with increasing
+experience, various improvements were introduced in the process, more
+particularly in the shape of the air-heating vessels; the last form
+adopted being that of a congeries of tubes, similar to the tubular
+arrangement in the boiler of the locomotive, by which the greatest
+extent of heating surface was provided for the thorough heating of the
+air. By these modifications the temperature of the air introduced into
+the furnace has been raised from 240 degrees to 600 degrees, or the
+temperature of melting lead. To protect the nozzle of the air-pipe as
+it entered the furnace against the action of the intense heat to which
+it was subjected, a spiral pipe for a stream of cold water constantly
+to play in has been introduced within the sides of the iron tuyere
+through which the nozzle passes; by which means the tuyere is kept
+comparatively cool, while the nozzle of the air-pipe is effectually
+protected.[4]
+
+This valuable invention did not escape the usual fate of successful
+patents, and it was on several occasions the subject of protracted
+litigation. The first action occurred in 1832; but the objectors
+shortly gave in, and renewed their licence. In 1839, when the process
+had become generally adopted throughout Scotland, and, indeed, was
+found absolutely essential for smelting the peculiar ores of that
+country--more especially Mushet's Black Band--a powerful combination
+was formed amongst the ironmasters to resist the patent. The
+litigation which ensued extended over five years, during which period
+some twenty actions were proceeding in Scotland, and several in
+England. Three juries sat upon the subject at different times, and on
+three occasions appeals were carried to the House of Lords. One jury
+trial occupied ten days, during which a hundred and two witnesses were
+examined; the law costs on both sides amounting, it is supposed, to at
+least 40,000L. The result was, that the novelty and merit of Mr.
+Neilson's invention were finally established, and he was secured in the
+enjoyment of the patent right.
+
+We are gratified to add, that, though Mr. Neilson had to part with
+two-thirds of the profits of the invention to secure the capital and
+influence necessary to bring it into general use, he realized
+sufficient to enable him to enjoy the evening of his life in peace and
+comfort. He retired from active business to an estate which he
+purchased in 1851 in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, where he is found
+ready to lend a hand in every good work--whether in agricultural
+improvement, railway extension, or the moral and social good of those
+about him. Mindful of the success of his Workmen's Institution at the
+Glasgow Gas-Works, he has, almost at his own door, erected a similar
+Institution for the use of the parish in which his property is
+situated, the beneficial effects of which have been very marked in the
+district. We may add that Mr. Neilson's merits have been recognised by
+many eminent bodies--by the Institution of Civil Engineers, the
+Chemical Society, and others--the last honour conferred on him being
+his election as a Member of the Royal Society in 1846.
+
+The invention of the hot blast, in conjunction with the discovery of
+the Black Band ironstone, has had an extra ordinary effect upon the
+development of the iron-manufacture of Scotland. The coals of that
+country are generally unfit for coking, and lose as much as 55 per
+cent. in the process. But by using the hot blast, the coal could be
+sent to the blast-furnace in its raw state, by which a large saving of
+fuel was effected.[5] Even coals of an inferior quality were by its
+means made available for the manufacture of iron. But one of the
+peculiar qualities of the Black Band ironstone is that in many cases it
+contains sufficient coaly matter for purposes of calcination, without
+any admixture of coal whatever. Before its discovery, all the iron
+manufactured in Scotland was made from clay-band; but the use of the
+latter has in a great measure been discontinued wherever a sufficient
+supply of Black Band can be obtained. And it is found to exist very
+extensively in most of the midland Scotch counties,--the coal and iron
+measures stretching in a broad belt from the Firth of Forth to the
+Irish Channel at the Firth of Clyde. At the time when the hot blast
+was invented, the fortunes of many of the older works were at a low
+ebb, and several of them had been discontinued; but they were speedily
+brought to life again wherever Black Band could be found. In 1829, the
+year after Neilson's patent was taken out, the total make of Scotland
+was 29,000 tons. As fresh discoveries of the mineral were made, in
+Ayrshire and Lanarkshire, new works were erected, until, in 1845, we
+find the production of Scotch pig-iron had increased to 475,000 tons.
+It has since increased to upwards of a million of tons,
+nineteen-twentieths of which are made from Black Band ironstone.[6]
+
+Employment has thus been given to vast numbers of our industrial
+population, and the wealth and resources of the Scotch iron districts
+have been increased to an extraordinary extent. During the last year
+there were 125 furnaces in blast throughout Scotland, each employing
+about 400 men in making an average of 200 tons a week; and the money
+distributed amongst the workmen may readily be computed from the fact
+that, under the most favourable circumstances, the cost of making iron
+in wages alone amounts to 36s. a-ton.[7]
+
+An immense additional value was given to all land in which the Black
+Band was found. Mr. Mushet mentions that in 1839 the proprietor of the
+Airdrie estate derived a royalty of 16,500L. from the mineral, which
+had not before its discovery yielded him one farthing. At the same
+time, many fortunes have been made by pushing and energetic men who
+have of late years entered upon this new branch of industry. Amongst
+these may be mentioned the Bairds of Gartsherrie, who vie with the
+Guests and Crawshays of South Wales, and have advanced themselves in
+the course of a very few years from the station of small farmers to
+that of great capitalists owning estates in many counties, holding the
+highest character commercial men, and ranking among the largest
+employers of labour in the kingdom.
+
+
+
+[1] Article by Dugald Bannatyne in Glasgow Mechanic's Magazine, No. 53,
+Dec. 1824.
+
+[2] Glasgow Mechanic's Magazine, vol. iii. p. 159.
+
+[3] Mr. Mushet described it as "a wonderful discovery," and one of the
+"most novel and beautiful improvements in his time." Professor Gregory
+of Aberdeen characterized it as "the greatest improvement with which he
+was acquainted." Mr. Jessop, an extensive English iron manufacturer,
+declared it to be "of as great advantage in the iron trade as
+Arkwright's machinery was in the cotton-spinning trade"; and Mr.
+Fairbairn, in his contribution on "Iron" in the Encyclopaedia
+Britannica, says that it "has effected an entire revolution in the iron
+industry of Great Britain, and forms the last era in the history of
+this material."
+
+[4] The invention of the tubular air-vessels and the water-tuyere
+belongs, we believe, to Mr. John Condie, sometime manager of the Blair
+Iron Works.
+
+[5] Mr. Mushet says, "The greatest produce in iron per furnace with the
+Black Band and cold blast never exceeded 60 tons a-week. The produce
+per furnace now averages 90 tons a-week. Ten tons of this I attribute
+to the use of raw pit-coal, and the other twenty tons to the use of hot
+blast." [Papers on Iron and Steel, 127.] The produce per furnace is
+now 200 tons a-week and upwards. The hot blast process was afterwards
+applied to the making of iron with the anthracite or stone coal of
+Wales; for which a patent was taken out by George Crane in 1836.
+Before the hot blast was introduced, anthracite coal would not act as
+fuel in the blast-furnace. When put in, it merely had the effect of
+putting the fire out. With the aid of the hot blast, however, it now
+proves to be a most valuable fuel in smelting.
+
+[6] It is stated in the North British Review for Nov. 1845, that "As in
+Scotland every furnace--with the exception of one at Carron--now uses
+the hot blast the saving on our present produce of 400,000 tons of
+pig-iron is 2,000,000 tons of coals, 200,000 tons of limestone, and
+#650,000 sterling per annum." But as the Scotch produce is now above a
+million tons of pig-iron a year, the above figures will have to be
+multiplied by 2 1/2 to give the present annual savings.
+
+[7] Papers read by Mr. Ralph Moore, Mining Engineer, Glasgow, before
+the Royal Scottish Society of Arts, Edin. 1861, pp. 13, 14.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MECHANICAL INVENTIONS AND INVENTORS.
+
+"L'invention nest-elle pas la poesie de la science? . . . Toutes les
+grandes decouvertes portent avec elles la trace ineffacable d'une
+pensee poetique. Il faut etre poete pour creer. Aussi, sommes-nous
+convaincus que si les puissantes machines, veritable source de la
+production et de l'industrie de nos jours, doivent recevoir des
+modifications radicales, ce sera a des hommes d'imagination, et non
+point a dea hommes purement speciaux, que l'on devra cette
+transformation."--E. M. BATAILLE, Traite des Machines a Vapeur.
+
+
+Tools have played a highly important part in the history of
+civilization. Without tools and the ability to use them, man were
+indeed but a "poor, bare, forked animal,"--worse clothed than the
+birds, worse housed than the beaver, worse fed than the jackal. "Weak
+in himself," says Carlyle, "and of small stature, he stands on a basis,
+at most for the flattest-soled, of some half square foot, insecurely
+enough; has to straddle out his legs, Jest the very wind supplant him.
+Feeblest of bipeds! Three quintals are a crushing load for him; the
+steer of the meadow tosses him aloft like a waste rag. Nevertheless he
+can use tools, can devise tools: with these the granite mountain melts
+into light dust before him; he kneads glowing iron as if it were soft
+paste; seas are his smooth highway, winds and fire his unvarying
+steeds. Nowhere do you find him without tools: without tools he is
+nothing; with tools he is all." His very first contrivances to support
+life were tools of the simplest and rudest construction; and his latest
+achievements in the substitution of machinery for the relief of the
+human hand and intellect are founded on the use of tools of a still
+higher order. Hence it is not without good reason that man has by some
+philosophers been defined as A TOOL-MAKING ANIMAL.
+
+Tools, like everything else, had small beginnings. With the primitive
+stone-hammer and chisel very little could be done. The felling of a
+tree would occupy a workman a month, unless helped by the destructive
+action of fire. Dwellings could not be built, the soil could not be
+tilled, clothes could not be fashioned and made, and the hewing out of
+a boat was so tedious a process that the wood must have been far gone
+in decay before it could be launched. It was a great step in advance
+to discover the art of working in metals, more especially in steel, one
+of the few metals capable of taking a sharp edge and keeping it. From
+the date of this discovery, working in wood and stone would be found
+comparatively easy; and the results must speedily have been felt not
+only in the improvement of man's daily food, but in his domestic and
+social condition. Clothing could then be made, the primitive forest
+could be cleared and tillage carried on; abundant fuel could be
+obtained, dwellings erected, ships built, temples reared; every
+improvement in tools marking a new step in the development of the human
+intellect, and a further stage in the progress of human civilization.
+
+The earliest tools were of the simplest possible character, consisting
+principally of modifications of the wedge; such as the knife, the
+shears (formed of two knives working on a joint), the chisel, and the
+axe. These, with the primitive hammer, formed the principal
+stock-in-trade of the early mechanics, who were handicraftsmen in the
+literal sense of the word. But the work which the early craftsmen in
+wood, stone, brass, and iron, contrived to execute, sufficed to show
+how much expertness in the handling of tools will serve to compensate
+for their mechanical imperfections. Workmen then sought rather to aid
+muscular strength than to supersede it, and mainly to facilitate the
+efforts of manual skill. Another tool became added to those mentioned
+above, which proved an additional source of power to the workman. We
+mean the Saw, which was considered of so much importance that its
+inventor was honoured with a place among the gods in the mythology of
+the Greeks. This invention is said to have been suggested by the
+arrangement of the teeth in the jaw of a serpent, used by Talus the
+nephew of Daedalus in dividing a piece of wood. From the
+representations of ancient tools found in the paintings at Herculaneum
+it appears that the frame-saw used by the ancients very nearly
+resembled that still in use; and we are informed that the tools
+employed in the carpenters' shops at Nazareth at this day are in most
+respects the same as those represented in the buried Roman city.
+Another very ancient tool referred to in the Bible and in Homer was the
+File, which was used to sharpen weapons and implements. Thus the
+Hebrews "had a file for the mattocks, and for the coulters, and for the
+forks, and for the axes, and to sharpen the goads." [1] When to these
+we add the adze, plane-irons, the anger, and the chisel, we sum up the
+tools principally relied on by the early mechanics for working in wood
+and iron.
+
+Such continued to be the chief tools in use down almost to our own day.
+The smith was at first the principal tool-maker; but special branches
+of trade were gradually established, devoted to tool-making. So long,
+however, as the workman relied mainly on his dexterity of hand, the
+amount of production was comparatively limited; for the number of
+skilled workmen was but small. The articles turned out by them, being
+the product of tedious manual labour, were too dear to come into common
+use, and were made almost exclusively for the richer classes of the
+community. It was not until machinery had been invented and become
+generally adopted that many of the ordinary articles of necessity and
+of comfort were produced in sufficient abundance and at such prices as
+enabled them to enter into the consumption of the great body of the
+people.
+
+But every improver of tools had a long and difficult battle to fight;
+for any improvement in their effective power was sure to touch the
+interests of some established craft. Especially was this the case with
+machines, which are but tools of a more complete though complicated
+kind than those above described.
+
+Take, for instance, the case of the Saw. The tedious drudgery of
+dividing timber by the old fashioned hand-saw is well known. To avoid
+it, some ingenious person suggested that a number of saws should be
+fixed to a frame in a mill, so contrived as to work with a
+reciprocating motion, upwards and downwards, or backwards and forwards,
+and that this frame so mounted should be yoked to the mill wheel, and
+the saws driven by the power of wind or water. The plan was tried,
+and, as may readily be imagined, the amount of effective work done by
+this machine-saw was immense, compared with the tedious process of
+sawing by hand.
+
+It will be observed, however, that the new method must have seriously
+interfered with the labour of the hand-sawyers; and it was but natural
+that they should regard the establishment of the saw-mills with
+suspicion and hostility. Hence a long period elapsed before the
+hand-sawyers would permit the new machinery to be set up and worked.
+The first saw-mill in England was erected by a Dutchman, near London,
+in 1663, but was shortly abandoned in consequence of the determined
+hostility of the workmen. More than a century passed before a second
+saw-mill was set up; when, in 1767, Mr. John Houghton, a London
+timber-merchant, by the desire and with the approbation of the Society
+of Arts, erected one at Limehouse, to be driven by wind. The work was
+directed by one James Stansfield, who had gone over to Holland for the
+purpose of learning the art of constructing and managing the sawing
+machinery. But the mill was no sooner erected than a mob assembled and
+razed it to the ground. The principal rioters having been punished,
+and the loss to the proprietor having been made good by the nation, a
+new mill was shortly after built, and it was suffered to work without
+further molestation.
+
+Improved methods of manufacture have usually had to encounter the same
+kind of opposition. Thus, when the Flemish weavers came over to
+England in the seventeenth century, bringing with them their skill and
+their industry, they excited great jealousy and hostility amongst the
+native workmen. Their competition as workmen was resented as an
+injury, but their improved machinery was regarded as a far greater
+source of mischief. In a memorial presented to the king in 1621 we
+find the London weavers complaining of the foreigners' competition, but
+especially that "they have made so bould of late as to devise engines
+for working of tape, lace, ribbin, and such like, wherein one man doth
+more among them than 7 Englishe men can doe; so as their cheap sale of
+commodities beggereth all our Englishe artificers of that trade, and
+enricheth them." [2]
+
+At a much more recent period new inventions have had to encounter
+serious rioting and machine-breaking fury. Kay of the fly-shuttle,
+Hargreaves of the spinning-jenny, and Arkwright of the spinning-frame,
+all had to fly from Lancashire, glad to escape with their lives.
+Indeed, says Mr. Bazley, "so jealous were the people, and also the
+legislature, of everything calculated to supersede men's labour, that
+when the Sankey Canal, six miles long, near Warrington, was authorized
+about the middle of last century, it was on the express condition that
+the boats plying on it should be drawn by men only!" [3] Even improved
+agricultural tools and machines have had the same opposition to
+encounter; and in our own time bands of rural labourers have gone from
+farm to farm breaking drill-ploughs, winnowing, threshing, and other
+machines, down even to the common drills,--not perceiving that if their
+policy had proved successful, and tools could have been effectually
+destroyed, the human race would at once have been reduced to their
+teeth and nails, and civilization summarily abolished.[4] It is, no
+doubt, natural that the ordinary class of workmen should regard with
+prejudice, if not with hostility, the introduction of machines
+calculated to place them at a disadvantage and to interfere with their
+usual employments; for to poor and not very far-seeing men the loss of
+daily bread is an appalling prospect. But invention does not stand
+still on that account. Human brains WILL work. Old tools are improved
+and new ones invented, superseding existing methods of production,
+though the weak and unskilled may occasionally be pushed aside or even
+trodden under foot. The consolation which remains is, that while the
+few suffer, society as a whole is vastly benefitted by the improved
+methods of production which are suggested, invented, and perfected by
+the experience of successive generations.
+
+The living race is the inheritor of the industry and skill of all past
+times; and the civilization we enjoy is but the sum of the useful
+effects of labour during the past centuries. Nihil per saltum. By
+slow and often painful steps Nature's secrets have been mastered. Not
+an effort has been made but has had its influence. For no human labour
+is altogether lost; some remnant of useful effect surviving for the
+benefit of the race, if not of the individual. Even attempts
+apparently useless have not really been so, but have served in some way
+to advance man to higher knowledge, skill, or discipline. "The loss of
+a position gained," says Professor Thomson, "is an event unknown in the
+history of man's struggle with the forces of inanimate nature." A
+single step won gives a firmer foothold for further effort. The man
+may die, but the race survives and continues the work,--to use the
+poet's simile, mounting on stepping-stones of dead selves to higher
+selves.
+
+Philarete Chasles, indeed, holds that it is the Human Race that is your
+true inventor: "As if to unite all generations," he says, "and to show
+that man can only act efficiently by association with others, it has
+been ordained that each inventor shall only interpret the first word of
+the problem he sets himself to solve, and that every great idea shall
+be the RESUME of the past at the same time that it is the germ of the
+future." And rarely does it happen that any discovery or invention of
+importance is made by one man alone. The threads of inquiry are taken
+up and traced, one labourer succeeding another, each tracing it a
+little further, often without apparent result. This goes on sometimes
+for centuries, until at length some man, greater perhaps than his
+fellows, seeking to fulfil the needs of his time, gathers the various
+threads together, treasures up the gain of past successes and failures,
+and uses them as the means for some solid achievement, Thus Newton
+discovered the law of gravitation, and thus James Watt invented the
+steam-engine. So also of the Locomotive, of which Robert Stephenson
+said, "It has not been the invention of any one man, but of a race of
+mechanical engineers." Or, as Joseph Bramah observed, in the preamble
+to his second Lock patent, "Among the number of patents granted there
+are comparatively few which can be called original so that it is
+difficult to say where the boundary of one ends and where that of
+another begins."
+
+The arts are indeed reared but slowly; and it was a wise observation of
+Lord Bacon that we are too apt to pass those ladders by which they have
+been reared, and reflect the whole merit on the last new performer.
+Thus, what is hailed as an original invention is often found to be but
+the result of a long succession of trials and experiments gradually
+following each other, which ought rather to be considered as a
+continuous series of achievements of the human mind than as the
+conquest of any single individual. It has sometimes taken centuries of
+experience to ascertain the value of a single fact in its various
+bearings. Like man himself, experience is feeble and apparently
+purposeless in its infancy, but acquires maturity and strength with
+age. Experience, however, is not limited to a lifetime, but is the
+stored-up wealth and power of our race. Even amidst the death of
+successive generations it is constantly advancing and accumulating,
+exhibiting at the same time the weakness and the power, the littleness
+and the greatness of our common humanity. And not only do we who live
+succeed to the actual results of our predecessors' labours,--to their
+works of learning and of art, their inventions and discoveries, their
+tools and machines, their roads, bridges, canals, and railways,--but to
+the inborn aptitudes of blood and brain which they bequeath to us, to
+that "educability," so to speak, which has been won for us by the
+labours of many generations, and forms our richest natural heritage.
+
+The beginning of most inventions is very remote. The first idea, born
+within some unknown brain, passes thence into others, and at last comes
+forth complete, after a parturition, it may be, of centuries. One
+starts the idea, another developes it, and so on progressively until at
+last it is elaborated and worked out in practice; but the first not
+less than the last is entitled to his share in the merit of the
+invention, were it only possible to measure and apportion it duly.
+Sometimes a great original mind strikes upon some new vein of hidden
+power, and gives a powerful impulse to the inventive faculties of man,
+which lasts through generations. More frequently, however, inventions
+are not entirely new, but modifications of contrivances previously
+known, though to a few, and not yet brought into practical use.
+Glancing back over the history of mechanism, we occasionally see an
+invention seemingly full born, when suddenly it drops out of sight, and
+we hear no more of it for centuries. It is taken up de novo by some
+inventor, stimulated by the needs of his time, and falling again upon
+the track, he recovers the old footmarks, follows them up, and
+completes the work.
+
+There is also such a thing as inventions being born before their
+time--the advanced mind of one generation projecting that which cannot
+be executed for want of the requisite means; but in due process of
+time, when mechanism has got abreast of the original idea, it is at
+length carried out; and thus it is that modern inventors are enabled to
+effect many objects which their predecessors had tried in vain to
+accomplish. As Louis Napoleon has said, "Inventions born before their
+time must remain useless until the level of common intellects rises to
+comprehend them." For this reason, misfortune is often the lot of the
+inventor before his time, though glory and profit may belong to his
+successors. Hence the gift of inventing not unfrequently involves a
+yoke of sorrow. Many of the greatest inventors have lived neglected
+and died unrequited, before their merits could be recognised and
+estimated. Even if they succeed, they often raise up hosts of enemies
+in the persons whose methods they propose to supersede. Envy, malice,
+and detraction meet them in all their forms; they are assailed by
+combinations of rich and unscrupulous persons to wrest from them the
+profits of their ingenuity; and last and worst of all, the successful
+inventor often finds his claims to originality decried, and himself
+branded as a copyist and a pirate.
+
+Among the inventions born out of time, and before the world could make
+adequate use of them, we can only find space to allude to a few, though
+they are so many that one is almost disposed to accept the words of
+Chaucer as true, that "There is nothing new but what has once been
+old;" or, as another writer puts it, "There is nothing new but what has
+before been known and forgotten;" or, in the words of Solomon, "The
+thing that hath been is that which shall be, and there is no new thing
+under the sun." One of the most important of these is the use of
+Steam, which was well known to the ancients; but though it was used to
+grind drugs, to turn a spit, and to excite the wonder and fear of the
+credulous, a long time elapsed before it became employed as a useful
+motive-power. The inquiries and experiments on the subject extended
+through many ages. Friar Bacon, who flourished in the thirteenth
+century, seems fully to have anticipated, in the following remarkable
+passage, nearly all that steam could accomplish, as well as the
+hydraulic engine and the diving-bell, though the flying machine yet
+remains to be invented:--
+
+"I will now," says the Friar, "mention some of the wonderful works of
+art and nature in which there is nothing of magic, and which magic
+could not perform. Instruments may be made by which the largest ships,
+with only one man guiding them, will be carried with greater velocity
+than if they were full of sailors. Chariots may be constructed that
+will move with incredible rapidity, without the help of animals.
+Instruments of flying may be formed, in which a man, sitting at his
+ease and meditating on any subject, may beat the air with his
+artificial wings, after the manner of birds. A small instrument may be
+made to raise or depress the greatest weights. An instrument may be
+fabricated by which one man may draw a thousand men to him by force and
+against their will; as also machines which will enable men to walk at
+the bottom of seas or rivers without danger." It is possible that Friar
+Bacon derived his knowledge of the powers which he thus described from
+the traditions handed down of former inventions which had been
+neglected and allowed to fall into oblivion; for before the invention
+of printing, which enabled the results of investigation and experience
+to be treasured up in books, there was great risk of the inventions of
+one age being lost to the succeeding generations. Yet Disraeli the
+elder is of opinion that the Romans had invented printing without being
+aware of it; or perhaps the senate dreaded the inconveniences attending
+its use, and did not care to deprive a large body of scribes of their
+employment. They even used stereotypes, or immovable printing-types,
+to stamp impressions on their pottery, specimens of which still exist.
+In China the art of printing is of great antiquity. Lithography was
+well known in Germany, by the very name which it still bears, nearly
+three hundred years before Senefelder reinvented it; and specimens of
+the ancient art are yet to be seen in the Royal Museum at Munich.[5]
+
+Steam-locomotion by sea and land, had long been dreamt of and
+attempted. Blasco de Garay made his experiment in the harbour of
+Barcelona as early as 1543; Denis Papin made a similar attempt at
+Cassel in 1707; but it was not until Watt had solved the problem of the
+steam-engine that the idea of the steam-boat could be developed in
+practice, which was done by Miller of Dalswinton in 1788. Sages and
+poets have frequently foreshadowed inventions of great social moment.
+Thus Dr. Darwin's anticipation of the locomotive, in his Botanic
+Garden, published in 1791, before any locomotive had been invented,
+might almost be regarded as prophetic:
+
+ Soon shall thy arm, unconquered Steam! afar
+ Drag the slow barge, and drive the rapid car.
+
+Denis Papin first threw out the idea of atmospheric locomotion; and
+Gauthey, another Frenchman, in 1782 projected a method of conveying
+parcels and merchandise by subterraneous tubes,[6] after the method
+recently patented and brought into operation by the London Pneumatic
+Despatch Company. The balloon was an ancient Italian invention,
+revived by Mongolfier long after the original had been forgotten. Even
+the reaping machine is an old invention revived. Thus Barnabe Googe,
+the translator of a book from the German entitled 'The whole Arte and
+Trade of Husbandrie,' published in 1577, in the reign of Elizabeth,
+speaks of the reaping-machine as a worn-out invention--a thing "which
+was woont to be used in France. The device was a lowe kinde of carre
+with a couple of wheeles, and the frunt armed with sharpe syckles,
+whiche, forced by the beaste through the corne, did cut down al before
+it. This tricke," says Googe, "might be used in levell and champion
+countreys; but with us it wolde make but ill-favoured woorke." [7] The
+Thames Tunnel was thought an entirely new manifestation of engineering
+genius; but the tunnel under the Euphrates at ancient Babylon, and that
+under the wide mouth of the harbour at Marseilles (a much more
+difficult work), show that the ancients were beforehand with us in the
+art of tunnelling. Macadamized roads are as old as the Roman empire;
+and suspension bridges, though comparatively new in Europe, have been
+known in China for centuries.
+
+There is every reason to believe--indeed it seems clear that the Romans
+knew of gunpowder, though they only used it for purposes of fireworks;
+while the secret of the destructive Greek fire has been lost
+altogether. When gunpowder came to be used for purposes of war,
+invention busied itself upon instruments of destruction. When recently
+examining the Museum of the Arsenal at Venice, we were surprised to
+find numerous weapons of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
+embodying the most recent English improvements in arms, such as
+revolving pistols, rifled muskets, and breech-loading cannon. The
+latter, embodying Sir William Armstrong's modern idea, though in a rude
+form, had been fished up from the bottom of the Adriatic, where the
+ship armed with them had been sunk hundreds of years ago. Even
+Perkins's steam-gun was an old invention revived by Leonardo da Vinci
+and by him attributed to Archimedes.[8] The Congreve rocket is said to
+have an Eastern origin, Sir William Congreve having observed its
+destructive effects when employed by the forces under Tippoo Saib in
+the Mahratta war, on which he adopted and improved the missile, and
+brought out the invention as his own.
+
+Coal-gas was regularly used by the Chinese for lighting purposes long
+before it was known amongst us. Hydropathy was generally practised by
+the Romans, who established baths wherever they went. Even chloroform
+is no new thing. The use of ether as an anaesthetic was known to
+Albertus Magnus, who flourished in the thirteenth century; and in his
+works he gives a recipe for its preparation. In 1681 Denis Papin
+published his Traite des Operations sans Douleur, showing that he had
+discovered methods of deadening pain. But the use of anaesthetics is
+much older than Albertus Magnus or Papin; for the ancients had their
+nepenthe and mandragora; the Chinese their mayo, and the Egyptians
+their hachisch (both preparations of Cannabis Indica), the effects of
+which in a great measure resemble those of chloroform. What is perhaps
+still more surprising is the circumstance that one of the most elegant
+of recent inventions, that of sun-painting by the daguerreotype, was in
+the fifteenth century known to Leonardo da Vinci,[9] whose skill as an
+architect and engraver, and whose accomplishments as a chemist and
+natural philosopher, have been almost entirely overshadowed by his
+genius as a painter.[10] The idea, thus early born, lay in oblivion
+until 1760, when the daguerreotype was again clearly indicated in a
+book published in Paris, written by a certain Tiphanie de la Roche,
+under the anagrammatic title of Giphantie. Still later, at the
+beginning of the present century, we find Thomas Wedgwood, Sir Humphry
+Davy, and James Watt, making experiments on the action of light upon
+nitrate of silver; and only within the last few months a silvered
+copper-plate has been found amongst the old household lumber of Matthew
+Boulton (Watt's partner), having on it a representation of the old
+premises at Soho, apparently taken by some such process.[11]
+
+In like manner the invention of the electric telegraph, supposed to be
+exclusively modern, was clearly indicated by Schwenter in his
+Delasements Physico-Mathematiques, published in 1636; and he there
+pointed out how two individuals could communicate with each other by
+means of the magnetic needle. A century later, in 1746, Le Monnier
+exhibited a series of experiments in the Royal Gardens at Paris,
+showing how electricity could be transmitted through iron wire 950
+fathoms in length; and in 1753 we find one Charles Marshall publishing
+a remarkable description of the electric telegraph in the Scots
+Magazine, under the title of 'An expeditions Method of conveying
+Intelligence.' Again, in 1760, we find George Louis Lesage, professor
+of mathematics at Geneva, promulgating his invention of an electric
+telegraph, which he eventually completed and set to work in 1774. This
+instrument was composed of twenty-four metallic wires, separate from
+each other and enclosed in a non-conducting substance. Each wire ended
+in a stalk mounted with a little ball of elder-wood suspended by a silk
+thread. When a stream of electricity, no matter how slight., was sent
+through the wire, the elder-ball at the opposite end was repelled, such
+movement designating some letter of the alphabet. A few years later we
+find Arthur Young, in his Travels in France, describing a similar
+machine invented by a M. Lomond of Paris, the action of which he also
+describes.[12] In these and similar cases, though the idea was born
+and the model of the invention was actually made, it still waited the
+advent of the scientific mechanical inventor who should bring it to
+perfection, and embody it in a practical working form.
+
+Some of the most valuable inventions have descended to us without the
+names of their authors having been preserved. We are the inheritors of
+an immense legacy of the results of labour and ingenuity, but we know
+not the names of our benefactors. Who invented the watch as a measurer
+of time? Who invented the fast and loose pulley? Who invented the
+eccentric? Who, asks a mechanical inquirer,[13] "invented the method of
+cutting screws with stocks and dies? Whoever he might be, he was
+certainly a great benefactor of his species. Yet (adds the writer) his
+name is not known, though the invention has been so recent." This is
+not, however, the case with most modern inventions, the greater number
+of which are more or less disputed. Who was entitled to the merit of
+inventing printing has never yet been determined. Weber and Senefelder
+both laid claim to the invention of lithography, though it was merely
+an old German art revived. Even the invention of the penny-postage
+system by Sir Rowland Hill is disputed; Dr. Gray of the British Museum
+claiming to be its inventor, and a French writer alleging it to be an
+old French invention.[14] The invention of the steamboat has been
+claimed on behalf of Blasco de Garay, a Spaniard, Papin, a Frenchman,
+Jonathan Hulls, an Englishman, and Patrick Miller of Dalswinton, a
+Scotchman. The invention of the spinning machine has been variously
+attributed to Paul, Wyatt, Hargreaves, Higley, and Arkwright. The
+invention of the balance-spring was claimed by Huyghens, a Dutchman,
+Hautefeuille, a Frenchman, and Hooke, an Englishman. There is scarcely
+a point of detail in the locomotive but is the subject of dispute.
+Thus the invention of the blast-pipe is claimed for Trevithick, George
+Stephenson, Goldsworthy Gurney, and Timothy Hackworth; that of the
+tubular boiler by Seguin, Stevens, Booth, and W. H. James; that of
+the link-motion by John Gray, Hugh Williams, and Robert Stephenson.
+
+Indeed many inventions appear to be coincident. A number of minds are
+working at the same time in the same track, with the object of
+supplying some want generally felt; and, guided by the same experience,
+they not unfrequently arrive at like results. It has sometimes
+happened that the inventors have been separated by great distances, so
+that piracy on the part of either was impossible. Thus Hadley and
+Godfrey almost simultaneously invented the quadrant, the one in London,
+the other in Philadelphia; and the process of electrotyping was
+invented at the same time by Mr. Spencer, a working chemist at
+Liverpool, and by Professor Jacobi at St. Petersburg. The safety-lamp
+was a coincident invention, made about the same time by Sir Humphry
+Davy and George Stephenson; and perhaps a still more remarkable
+instance of a coincident discovery was that of the planet Neptune by
+Leverrier at Paris, and by Adams at Cambridge.
+
+It is always difficult to apportion the due share of merit which
+belongs to mechanical inventors, who are accustomed to work upon each
+other's hints and suggestions, as well as by their own experience.
+Some idea of this difficulty may be formed from the fact that, in the
+course of our investigations as to the origin of the planing
+machine--one of the most useful of modern tools--we have found that it
+has been claimed on behalf of six inventors--Fox of Derby, Roberts of
+Manchester, Matthew Murray of Leeds, Spring of Aberdeen, Clement and
+George Rennie of London; and there may be other claimants of whom we
+have not yet heard. But most mechanical inventions are of a very
+composite character, and are led up to by the labour and the study of a
+long succession of workers. Thus Savary and Newcomen led up to Watt;
+Cugnot, Murdock, and Trevithick to the Stephensons; and Maudslay to
+Clement, Roberts, Nasmyth, Whitworth, and many more mechanical
+inventors. There is scarcely a process in the arts but has in like
+manner engaged mind after mind in bringing it to perfection. "There is
+nothing," says Mr. Hawkshaw, "really worth having that man has
+obtained, that has not been the result of a combined and gradual
+process of investigation. A gifted individual comes across some old
+footmark, stumbles on a chain of previous research and inquiry. He
+meets, for instance, with a machine, the result of much previous
+labour; he modifies it, pulls it to pieces, constructs and reconstructs
+it, and by further trial and experiment he arrives at the long
+sought-for result." [15]
+
+But the making of the invention is not the sole difficulty. It is one
+thing to invent, said Sir Marc Brunel, and another thing to make the
+invention work. Thus when Watt, after long labour and study, had
+brought his invention to completion, he encountered an obstacle which
+has stood in the way of other inventors, and for a time prevented the
+introduction of their improvements, if not led to their being laid
+aside and abandoned. This was the circumstance that the machine
+projected was so much in advance of the mechanical capability of the
+age that it was with the greatest difficulty it could be executed.
+When labouring upon his invention at Glasgow, Watt was baffled and
+thrown into despair by the clumsiness and incompetency of his workmen.
+Writing to Dr. Roebuck on one occasion, he said, "You ask what is the
+principal hindrance in erecting engines? It is always the smith-work."
+His first cylinder was made by a whitesmith, of hammered iron soldered
+together, but having used quicksilver to keep the cylinder air-tight,
+it dropped through the inequalities into the interior, and "played the
+devil with the solder." Yet, inefficient though the whitesmith was,
+Watt could ill spare him, and we find him writing to Dr. Roebuck almost
+in despair, saying, "My old white-iron man is dead!" feeling his loss
+to be almost irreparable. His next cylinder was cast and bored at
+Carron, but it was so untrue that it proved next to useless. The
+piston could not be kept steam tight, notwithstanding the various
+expedients which were adopted of stuffing it with paper, cork, putty,
+pasteboard, and old hat. Even after Watt had removed to Birmingham,
+and he had the assistance of Boulton's best workmen, Smeaton expressed
+the opinion, when he saw the engine at work, that notwithstanding the
+excellence of the invention, it could never be brought into general use
+because of the difficulty of getting its various parts manufactured
+with sufficient precision. For a long time we find Watt, in his
+letters, complaining to his partner of the failure of his engines
+through "villainous bad workmanship." Sometimes the cylinders, when
+cast, were found to be more than an eighth of an inch wider at one end
+than the other; and under such circumstances it was impossible the
+engine could act with precision. Yet better work could not be had.
+First-rate workmen in machinery did not as yet exist; they were only in
+process of education. Nearly everything had to be done by hand. The
+tools used were of a very imperfect kind. A few ill-constructed
+lathes, with some drills and boring-machines of a rude sort,
+constituted the principal furniture of the workshop. Years after, when
+Brunel invented his block-machines, considerable time elapsed before he
+could find competent mechanics to construct them, and even after they
+had been constructed he had equal difficulty in finding competent hands
+to work them.[16]
+
+Watt endeavoured to remedy the defect by keeping certain sets of
+workmen to special classes of work, allowing them to do nothing else.
+Fathers were induced to bring up their sons at the same bench with
+themselves, and initiate them in the dexterity which they had acquired
+by experience; and at Soho it was not unusual for the same precise line
+of work to be followed by members of the same family for three
+generations. In this way as great a degree of accuracy of a mechanical
+kind was arrived at was practicable under the circumstances. But
+notwithstanding all this care, accuracy of fitting could not be secured
+so long as the manufacture of steam-engines was conducted mainly by
+hand. There was usually a considerable waste of steam, which the
+expedients of chewed paper and greased hat packed outside the piston
+were insufficient to remedy; and it was not until the invention of
+automatic machine-tools by the mechanical engineers about to be
+mentioned, that the manufacture of the steam-engine became a matter of
+comparative ease and certainty. Watt was compelled to rest satisfied
+with imperfect results, arising from imperfect workmanship. Thus,
+writing to Dr. Small respecting a cylinder 18 inches in diameter, he
+said, "at the worst place the long diameter exceeded the short by only
+three-eighths of an inch." How different from the state of things at
+this day, when a cylinder five feet wide will be rejected as a piece of
+imperfect workmanship if it be found to vary in any part more than the
+80th part of an inch in diameter!
+
+Not fifty years since it was a matter of the utmost difficulty to set
+an engine to work, and sometimes of equal difficulty to keep it going.
+Though fitted by competent workmen, it often would not go at all. Then
+the foreman of the factory at which it was made was sent for, and he
+would almost live beside the engine for a month or more; and after
+easing her here and screwing her up there, putting in a new part and
+altering an old one, packing the piston and tightening the valves, the
+machine would at length begot to work.[17] Now the case is altogether
+different. The perfection of modern machine-tools is such that the
+utmost possible precision is secured, and the mechanical engineer can
+calculate on a degree of exactitude that does not admit of a deviation
+beyond the thousandth part of an inch. When the powerful oscillating
+engines of the 'Warrior' were put on board that ship, the parts,
+consisting of some five thousand separate pieces, were brought from the
+different workshops of the Messrs. Penn and Sons, where they had been
+made by workmen who knew not the places they were to occupy, and fitted
+together with such precision that so soon as the steam was raised and
+let into the cylinders, the immense machine began as if to breathe and
+move like a living creature, stretching its huge arms like a new-born
+giant, and then, after practising its strength a little and proving its
+soundness in body and limb, it started off with the power of above a
+thousand horses to try its strength in breasting the billows of the
+North Sea.
+
+Such are among the triumphs of modern mechanical engineering, due in a
+great measure to the perfection of the tools by means of which all
+works in metal are now fashioned. These tools are themselves among the
+most striking results of the mechanical invention of the day. They are
+automata of the most perfect kind, rendering the engine and
+machine-maker in a great measure independent of inferior workmen. For
+the machine tools have no unsteady hand, are not careless nor clumsy,
+do not work by rule of thumb, and cannot make mistakes. They will
+repeat their operations a thousand times without tiring, or varying one
+hair's breadth in their action; and will turn out, without complaining,
+any quantity of work, all of like accuracy and finish. Exercising as
+they do so remarkable an influence on the development of modern
+industry, we now propose, so far as the materials at our disposal will
+admit, to give an account of their principal inventors, beginning with
+the school of Bramah.
+
+
+
+[1] 1 Samuel, ch. xiii. v. 21.
+
+[2] State Papers, Dom. 1621, Vol. 88, No. 112.
+
+[3] Lectures on the Results of the Great Exhibition of 1851, 2nd
+Series, 117.
+
+[4] Dr. Kirwan, late President of the Royal Irish Academy, who had
+travelled much on the continent of Europe, used to relate, when
+speaking of the difficulty of introducing improvements in the arts and
+manufactures, and of the prejudices entertained for old practices,
+that, in Normandy, the farmers had been so long accustomed to the use
+of plough's whose shares were made entirely of WOOD that they could not
+be prevailed on to make trial of those with IRON; that they considered
+them to be an idle and useless innovation on the long-established
+practices of their ancestors; and that they carried these prejudices so
+far as to force the government to issue an edict on the subject. And
+even to the last they were so obstinate in their attachment to
+ploughshares of wood that a tumultuous opposition was made to the
+enforcement of the edict, which for a short time threatened a rebellion
+in the province.--PARKES, Chemical Essays, 4th Ed. 473.
+
+[5] EDOUARD FOURNIER, Vieux-Neuf, i. 339.
+
+[6] Memoires de l' Academie des Sciences, 6 Feb. 1826.
+
+[7] Farmer's Magazine, 1817, No. ixxi. 291.
+
+[8] Vieux-Neuf, i. 228; Inventa Nova-Antiqua, 742.
+
+[9] Vieux-Neuf, i. 19. See also Inventa Nova-Antiqua, 803.
+
+[10] Mr. Hallam, in his Introduction to the History of Europe,
+pronounces the following remarkable eulogium on this extraordinary
+genius:--"If any doubt could be harboured, not only as to the right of
+Leonardo da Vinci to stand as 'the first name of the fifteenth century,
+which is beyond all doubt, but as to his originality in so many
+discoveries, which probably no one man, especially in such
+circumstances, has ever made, it must be on an hypothesis not very
+untenable, that some parts of physical science had already attained a
+height which mere books do not record." "Unpublished MSS. by Leonardo
+contain discoveries and anticipations of discoveries," says Mr. Hallam,
+"within the compass of a few pages, so as to strike us with something
+like the awe of preternatural knowledge."
+
+[11] The plate is now to be seen at the Museum of Patents at South
+Kensington. In the account which has been published of the above
+discovery it is stated that "an old man of ninety (recently dead or
+still alive) recollected, or recollects, that Watt and others used to
+take portraits of people in a dark (?) room; and there is a letter
+extant of Sir William Beechey, begging the Lunar Society to desist from
+these experiments, as, were the process to succeed, it would ruin
+portrait-painting."
+
+[12] "16th Oct. 1787. In the evening to M. Lomond, a very ingenious
+and inventive mechanic, who has made an improvement of the jenny for
+spinning cotton. Common machines are said to make too hard a thread
+for certain fabrics, but this forms it loose and spongy. In
+electricity he has made a remarkable discovery: you write two or three
+words on a paper; he takes it with him into a room, and turns a machine
+inclosed in a cylindrical case, at the top of which is an electrometer,
+a small fine pith ball; a wire connects with a similar cylinder and
+electrometer in a distant apartment; and his wife, by remarking the
+corresponding motions of the ball, writes down the words they indicate;
+from which it appears that he has formed an alphabet of motions. As
+the length of the wire makes no difference in the effect, a
+correspondence might be carried on at any distance: within and without
+a besieged town, for instance; or for a purpose much more worthy, and a
+thousand times more harmless, between two lovers prohibited or
+prevented from any better connexion. Whatever the use may be, the
+invention is beautiful."--Arthur Young's Travels in France in 1787-8-9.
+London, 1792, 4to. ed. p. 65.
+
+[13] Mechanic's Magazine, 4th Feb. 1859.
+
+[14] A writer in the Monde says:--"The invention of postage-stamps is
+far from being so modern as is generally supposed. A postal regulation
+in France of the year 1653, which has recently come to light, gives
+notice of the creation of pre-paid tickets to be used for Paris instead
+of money payments. These tickets were to be dated and attached to the
+letter or wrapped round it, in such a manner that the postman could
+remove and retain them on delivering the missive. These franks were to
+be sold by the porters of the convents, prisons, colleges, and other
+public institutions, at the price of one sou."
+
+[15] Inaugural Address delivered before the Institution of Civil
+Engineers, 14th Jan. 1862.
+
+[16] BEAMISH'S Memoir of Sir I. M. Brunel, 79, 80.
+
+[17] There was the same clumsiness in all kinds of mill-work before the
+introduction of machine-tools. We have heard of a piece of machinery
+of the old school, the wheels of which, when set to work, made such a
+clatter that the owner feared the engine would fall to pieces. The
+foreman who set it agoing, after working at it until he was almost in
+despair, at last gave it up, saving, "I think we had better leave the
+cogs to settle their differences with one another: they will grind
+themselves right in time!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+JOSEPH BRAMAH.
+
+"The great Inventor is one who has walked forth upon the industrial
+world, not from universities, but from hovels; not as clad in silks and
+decked with honours, but as clad in fustian and grimed with soot and
+oil."--ISAAC TAYLOR, Ultimate Civilization.
+
+
+The inventive faculty is so strong in some men that it may be said to
+amount to a passion, and cannot be restrained. The saying that the
+poet is born, not made, applies with equal force to the inventor, who,
+though indebted like the other to culture and improved opportunities,
+nevertheless invents and goes on inventing mainly to gratify his own
+instinct. The inventor, however, is not a creator like the poet, but
+chiefly a finder-out. His power consists in a great measure in quick
+perception and accurate observation, and in seeing and foreseeing the
+effects of certain mechanical combinations. He must possess the gift
+of insight, as well as of manual dexterity, combined with the
+indispensable qualities of patience and perseverance,--for though
+baffled, as he often is, he must be ready to rise up again unconquered
+even in the moment of defeat. This is the stuff of which the greatest
+inventors have been made. The subject of the following memoir may not
+be entitled to take rank as a first-class inventor, though he was a
+most prolific one; but, as the founder of a school from which proceeded
+some of the most distinguished mechanics of our time, he is entitled to
+a prominent place in this series of memoirs.
+
+Joseph Bramah was born in 1748 at the village of Stainborough, near
+Barnsley in Yorkshire, where his father rented a small farm under Lord
+Strafford. Joseph was the eldest of five children, and was early
+destined to follow the plough. After receiving a small amount of
+education at the village school, he was set to work upon the farm.
+From an early period he showed signs of constructive skill. When a
+mere boy, he occupied his leisure hours in making musical instruments,
+and he succeeded in executing some creditable pieces of work with very
+imperfect tools. A violin, which he made out of a solid block of wood,
+was long preserved as a curiosity. He was so fortunate as to make a
+friend of the village blacksmith, whose smithy he was in the practice
+of frequenting. The smith was an ingenious workman, and, having taken
+a liking for the boy, he made sundry tools for him out of old files and
+razor blades; and with these his fiddle and other pieces of work were
+mainly executed.
+
+Joseph might have remained a ploughman for life, but for an accident
+which happened to his right ankle at the age of 16, which unfitted him
+for farm-work. While confined at home disabled he spent his time in
+carving and making things in wood; and then it occurred to him that,
+though he could not now be a ploughman, he might be a mechanic. When
+sufficiently recovered, he was accordingly put apprentice to one
+Allott, the village carpenter, under whom he soon became an expert
+workman. He could make ploughs, window-frames, or fiddles, with equal
+dexterity. He also made violoncellos, and was so fortunate as to sell
+one of his making for three guineas, which is still reckoned a good
+instrument. He doubtless felt within him the promptings of ambition,
+such as every good workman feels, and at all events entertained the
+desire of rising in his trade. When his time was out, he accordingly
+resolved to seek work in London, whither he made the journey on foot.
+He soon found work at a cabinet-maker's, and remained with him for some
+time, after which he set up business in a very small way on his own
+account. An accident which happened to him in the course of his daily
+work, again proved his helper, by affording him a degree of leisure
+which he at once proceeded to turn to some useful account. Part of his
+business consisted in putting up water-closets, after a method invented
+or improved by a Mr. Allen; but the article was still very imperfect;
+and Bramah had long resolved that if he could only secure some leisure
+for the purpose, he would contrive something that should supersede it
+altogether. A severe fall which occurred to him in the course of his
+business, and laid him up, though very much against his will, now
+afforded him the leisure which he desired, and he proceeded to make his
+proposed invention. He took out a patent for it in 1778, describing
+himself in the specification as "of Cross Court, Carnaby Market [Golden
+Square], Middlesex, Cabinet Maker." He afterwards removed to a shop in
+Denmark Street, St. Giles's, and while there he made a further
+improvement in his invention by the addition of a water cock, which he
+patented in 1783. The merits of the machine were generally recognised,
+and before long it came into extensive use, continuing to be employed,
+with but few alterations, until the present day. His circumstances
+improving with the increased use of his invention, Bramah proceeded to
+undertake the manufacture of the pumps, pipes, &c., required for its
+construction; and, remembering his friend the Yorkshire blacksmith, who
+had made his first tools for him out of the old files and razor-blades,
+he sent for him to London to take charge of his blacksmith's
+department, in which he proved a most useful assistant. As usual, the
+patent was attacked by pirates so soon as it became productive, and
+Bramah was under the necessity, on more than one occasion, of defending
+his property in the invention, in which he was completely successful.
+
+We next find Bramah turning his attention to the invention of a lock
+that should surpass all others then known. The locks then in use were
+of a very imperfect character, easily picked by dexterous thieves,
+against whom they afforded little protection. Yet locks are a very
+ancient invention, though, as in many other cases, the art of making
+them seems in a great measure to have become lost, and accordingly had
+to be found out anew. Thus the tumbler lock--which consists in the use
+of moveable impediments acted on by the proper key only, as
+contradistinguished from the ordinary ward locks, where the impediments
+are fixed--appears to have been well known to the ancient Egyptians,
+the representation of such a lock being found sculptured among the
+bas-reliefs which decorate the great temple at Karnak. This kind of
+lock was revived, or at least greatly improved, by a Mr. Barron in
+1774, and it was shortly after this time that Bramah directed his
+attention to the subject. After much study and many experiments, he
+contrived a lock more simple, more serviceable, as well as more secure,
+than Barron's, as is proved by the fact that it has stood the test of
+nearly eighty years' experience,[1] and still holds its ground. For a
+long time, indeed, Bramah's lock was regarded as absolutely inviolable,
+and it remained unpicked for sixty-seven years until Hobbs the American
+mastered it in 1851. A notice had long been exhibited in Bramah's
+shop-window in Piccadilly, offering 200L. to any one who should succeed
+in picking the patent lock. Many tried, and all failed, until Hobbs
+succeeded, after sixteen days' manipulation of it with various
+elaborate instruments. But the difficulty with which the lock was
+picked showed that, for all ordinary purposes, it might be pronounced
+impregnable.
+
+The new locks were machines of the most delicate kind, the action of
+which depended in a great measure upon the precision with which the
+springs, sliders, levers, barrels, and other parts were finished. The
+merits of the invention being generally admitted, there was a
+considerable demand for the locks, and the necessity thus arose for
+inventing a series of original machine-tools to enable them to be
+manufactured in sufficient quantities to meet the demand. It is
+probable, indeed, that, but for the contrivance of such tools, the lock
+could never have come in to general use, as the skill of hand-workmen,
+no matter how experienced, could not have been relied upon for turning
+out the article with that degree of accuracy and finish in all the
+parts which was indispensable for its proper action. In conducting the
+manufacture throughout, Bramah was greatly assisted by Henry Maudslay,
+his foreman, to whom he was in no small degree indebted for the
+contrivance of those tool-machines which enabled him to carry on the
+business of lock-making with advantage and profit.
+
+Bramah's indefatigable spirit of invention was only stimulated to fresh
+efforts by the success of his lock; and in the course of a few years we
+find him entering upon a more important and original line of action
+than he had yet ventured on. His patent of 1785 shows the direction of
+his studies. Watt had invented his steam-engine, which was coming into
+general use; and the creation of motive-power in various other forms
+became a favourite subject of inquiry with inventors. Bramah's first
+invention with this object was his Hydrostatic Machine, founded on the
+doctrine of the equilibrium of pressure in fluids, as exhibited in the
+well known 'hydrostatic paradox.' In his patent of 1785, in which he no
+longer describes himself as Cabinet maker, but 'Engine maker' of
+Piccadilly, he indicated many inventions, though none of them came into
+practical use,--such as a Hydrostatical Machine and Boiler, and the
+application of the power produced by them to the drawing of carriages,
+and the propelling of ships by a paddle-wheel fixed in the stern of the
+vessel, of which drawings are annexed to the specification; but it was
+not until 1795 that he patented his Hydrostatic or Hydraulic Press.
+
+Though the principle on which the Hydraulic Press is founded had long
+been known, and formed the subject of much curious speculation, it
+remained unproductive of results until a comparatively recent period,
+when the idea occurred of applying it to mechanical purposes. A
+machine of the kind was indeed proposed by Pascal, the eminent
+philosopher, in 1664, but more than a century elapsed before the
+difficulties in the way of its construction were satisfactorily
+overcome. Bramah's machine consists of a large and massive cylinder,
+in which there works an accurately-fitted solid piston or plunger. A
+forcing-pump of very small bore communicates with the bottom of the
+cylinder, and by the action of the pump-handle or lever, exceeding
+small quantities of water are forced in succession beneath the piston
+in the large cylinder, thus gradually raising it up, and compressing
+bodies whose bulk or volume it is intended to reduce. Hence it is most
+commonly used as a packing-press, being superior to every other
+contrivance of the kind that has yet been invented; and though
+exercising a prodigious force, it is so easily managed that a boy can
+work it. The machine has been employed on many extraordinary occasions
+in preference to other methods of applying power. Thus Robert
+Stephenson used it to hoist the gigantic tubes of the Britannia Bridge
+into their bed,[2] and Brunel to launch the Great Eastern steamship
+from her cradles. It has also been used to cut bars of iron, to draw
+the piles driven in forming coffer dams, and to wrench up trees by the
+roots, all of which feats it accomplishes with comparative ease.
+
+The principal difficulty experienced in constructing the hydraulic
+press before the time of Bramah arose from the tremendous pressure
+exercised by the pump, which forced the water through between the solid
+piston and the side of the cylinder in which it worked in such
+quantities as to render the press useless for practical purposes.
+Bramah himself was at first completely baffled by this difficulty. It
+will be observed that the problem was to secure a joint sufficiently
+free to let the piston slide up through it, and at the same time so
+water-tight as to withstand the internal force of the pump. These two
+conditions seemed so conflicting that Bramah was almost at his wit's
+end, and for a time despaired of being able to bring the machine to a
+state of practical efficiency. None but those who have occupied
+themselves in the laborious and often profitless task of helping the
+world to new and useful machines can have any idea of the tantalizing
+anxiety which arises from the apparently petty stumbling-blocks which
+for awhile impede the realization of a great idea in mechanical
+invention. Such was the case with the water-tight arrangement in the
+hydraulic press. In his early experiments, Bramah tried the expedient
+of the ordinary stuffing-box for the purpose of securing the required
+water tightness' That is, a coil of hemp on leather washers was placed
+in a recess, so as to fit tightly round the moving ram or piston, and
+it was further held in its place by means of a compressing collar
+forced hard down by strong screws. The defect of this arrangement was,
+that, even supposing the packing could be made sufficiently tight to
+resist the passage of the water urged by the tremendous pressure from
+beneath, such was the grip which the compressed material took of the
+ram of the press, that it could not be got to return down after the
+water pressure had been removed.
+
+In this dilemma, Bramah's ever-ready workman, Henry Maudslay, came to
+his rescue. The happy idea occurred to him of employing the pressure
+of the water itself to give the requisite water-tightness to the
+collar. It was a flash of common-sense genius--beautiful through its
+very simplicity. The result was Maudslay's self-tightening collar, the
+action of which a few words of description will render easily
+intelligible. A collar of sound leather, the convex side upwards and
+the concave downwards, was fitted into the recess turned out in the
+neck of the press-cylinder, at the place formerly used as a
+stuffing-box. Immediately on the high pressure water being turned on,
+it forced its way into the leathern concavity and 'flapped out' the
+bent edges of the collar; and, in so doing, caused the leather to apply
+itself to the surface of the rising ram with a degree of closeness and
+tightness so as to seal up the joint the closer exactly in proportion
+to the pressure of the water in its tendency to escape. On the other
+hand, the moment the pressure was let off and the ram desired to
+return, the collar collapsed and the ram slid gently down, perfectly
+free and yet perfectly water-tight. Thus, the former tendency of the
+water to escape by the side of the piston was by this most simple and
+elegant self-adjusting contrivance made instrumental to the perfectly
+efficient action of the machine; and from the moment of its invention
+the hydraulic press took its place as one of the grandest agents for
+exercising power in a concentrated and tranquil form.
+
+Bramah continued his useful labours as an inventor for many years. His
+study of the principles of hydraulics, in the course of his invention
+of the press, enabled him to introduce many valuable improvements in
+pumping-machinery. By varying the form of the piston and cylinder he
+was enabled to obtain a rotary motion,[3] which he advantageously
+applied to many purposes. Thus he adopted it in the well known
+fire-engine, the use of which has almost become universal. Another
+popular machine of his is the beer-pump, patented in 1797, by which the
+publican is enabled to raise from the casks in the cellar beneath, the
+various liquors sold by him over the counter. He also took out several
+patents for the improvement of the steam-engine, in which, however,
+Watt left little room for other inventors; and hence Bramah seems to
+have entertained a grudge against Watt, which broke out fiercely in the
+evidence given by him in the case of Boulton and Watt versus Hornblower
+and Maberly, tried in December 1796. On that occasion his temper seems
+to have got the better of his judgment, and he was cut short by the
+judge in the attempt which he then made to submit the contents of the
+pamphlet subsequently published by him in the form of a letter to the
+judge before whom the case was tried.[4] In that pamphlet he argued
+that Watt's specification had no definite meaning; that it was
+inconsistent and absurd, and could not possibly be understood; that the
+proposal to work steam-engines on the principle of condensation was
+entirely fallacious; that Watt's method of packing the piston was
+"monstrous stupidity;" that the engines of Newcomen (since entirely
+superseded) were infinitely superior, in all respects, to those of
+Watt;--conclusions which, we need scarcely say, have been refuted by
+the experience of nearly a century.
+
+On the expiry of Boulton and Watt's patent, Bramah introduced several
+valuable improvements in the details of the condensing engine, which
+had by that time become an established power,--the most important of
+which was his "four-way cock," which he so arranged as to revolve
+continuously instead of alternately, thus insuring greater precision
+with considerably less wear of parts. In the same patent by which he
+secured this invention in 1801, he also proposed sundry improvements in
+the boilers, as well as modifications in various parts of the engine,
+with the object of effecting greater simplicity and directness of
+action.
+
+In his patent of 1802, we find Bramah making another great stride in
+mechanical invention, in his tools "for producing straight, smooth, and
+parallel surfaces on wood and other materials requiring truth, in a
+manner much more expeditious and perfect than can be performed by the
+use of axes, saws, planes, and other cutting instruments used by hand
+in the ordinary way." The specification describes the object of the
+invention to be the saving of manual labour, the reduction in the cost
+of production, and the superior character of the work executed. The
+tools were fixed on frames driven by machinery, some moving in a rotary
+direction round an upright shaft, some with the shaft horizontal like
+an ordinary wood-turning lathe, while in others the tools were fixed on
+frames sliding in stationary grooves. A wood-planing machine[5] was
+constructed on the principle of this invention at Woolwich Arsenal,
+where it still continues in efficient use. The axis of the principal
+shaft was supported on a piston in a vessel of oil, which considerably
+diminished the friction, and it was so contrived as to be accurately
+regulated by means of a small forcing-pump. Although the machinery
+described in the patent was first applied to working on wood, it was
+equally applicable to working on metals; and in his own shops at
+Pimlico Bramah employed a machine with revolving cutters to plane
+metallic surfaces for his patent locks and other articles. He also
+introduced a method of turning spherical surfaces, either convex or
+concave, by a tool moveable on an axis perpendicular to that of the
+lathe; and of cutting out concentric shells by fixing in a similar
+manner a curved tool of nearly the same form as that employed by common
+turners for making bowls. "In fact," says Mr. Mallet, "Bramah not only
+anticipated, but carried out upon a tolerably large scale in his own
+works--for the construction of the patent hydraulic press, the
+water-closet, and his locks--a surprisingly large proportion of our
+modern tools." [6] His remarkable predilection in favour of the use of
+hydraulic arrangements is displayed in his specification of the
+surface-planing machinery, which includes a method of running pivots
+entirely on a fluid, and raising and depressing them at pleasure by
+means of a small forcing-pump and stop-cock,--though we are not aware
+that any practical use has ever been made of this part of the invention.
+
+Bramah's inventive genius displayed itself alike in small things as in
+great--in a tap wherewith to draw a glass of beer, and in a hydraulic
+machine capable of tearing up a tree by the roots. His powers of
+contrivance seemed inexhaustible, and were exercised on the most
+various subjects. When any difficulty occurred which mechanical
+ingenuity was calculated to remove, recourse was usually had to Bramah,
+and he was rarely found at a loss for a contrivance to overcome it.
+Thus, when applied to by the Bank of England in 1806, to construct a
+machine for more accurately and expeditiously printing the numbers and
+date lines on Bank notes, he at once proceeded to invent the requisite
+model, which he completed in the course of a month. He subsequently
+brought it to great perfection the figures in numerical succession
+being changed by the action of the machine itself,--and it still
+continues in regular use. Its employment in the Bank of England alone
+saved the labour of a hundred clerks; but its chief value consisted in
+its greater accuracy, the perfect legibility of the figures printed by
+it, and the greatly improved check which it afforded.
+
+We next find him occupying himself with inventions connected with the
+manufacture of pens and paper. His little pen-making machine for
+readily making quill pens long continued in use, until driven out by
+the invention of the steel pen; but his patent for making paper by
+machinery, though ingenious, like everything he did, does not seem to
+have been adopted, the inventions of Fourdrinier and Donkin in this
+direction having shortly superseded all others. Among his other minor
+inventions may be mentioned his improved method of constructing and
+sledging carriage-wheels, and his improved method of laying
+water-pipes. In his specification of the last-mentioned invention, he
+included the application of water-power to the driving of machinery of
+every description, and for hoisting and lowering goods in docks and
+warehouses,--since carried out in practice, though in a different
+manner, by Sir William Armstrong.[7] In this, as in many other
+matters, Bramah shot ahead of the mechanical necessities of his time;
+and hence many of his patents (of which he held at one time more than
+twenty) proved altogether profitless. His last patent, taken out in
+1814, was for the application of Roman cement to timber for the purpose
+of preventing dry rot.
+
+Besides his various mechanical pursuits, Bramah also followed to a
+certain extent the profession of a civil engineer, though his more
+urgent engagements rendered it necessary for him to refuse many
+advantageous offers of employment in this line. He was, however, led
+to carry out the new water-works at Norwich, between the years 1790 and
+1793, in consequence of his having been called upon to give evidence in
+a dispute between the corporation of that city and the lessees, in the
+course of which he propounded plans which, it was alleged, could not be
+carried out. To prove that they could be carried out, and that his
+evidence was correct, he undertook the new works, and executed them
+with complete success; besides demonstrating in a spirited publication
+elicited by the controversy, the insufficiency and incongruity of the
+plans which had been submitted by the rival engineer.
+
+For some time prior to his death Bramah had been employed in the
+erection of several large machines in his works at Pimlico for sawing
+stone and timber, to which he applied his hydraulic power with great
+success. New methods of building bridges and canal-locks, with a
+variety of other matters, were in an embryo state in his mind, but he
+did not live to complete them. He was occupied in superintending the
+action of his hydrostatic press at Holt Forest, in Hants--where upwards
+of 300 trees of the largest dimensions were in a very short time torn
+up by the roots,--when he caught a severe cold, which settled upon his
+lungs, and his life was suddenly brought to a close on the 9th of
+December, 1814, in his 66th year.
+
+His friend, Dr. Cullen Brown,[8] has said of him, that Bramah was a man
+of excellent moral character, temperate in his habits, of a pious turn
+of mind,[9] and so cheerful in temperament, that he was the life of
+every company into which he entered. To much facility of expression he
+added the most perfect independence of opinion; he was a benevolent and
+affectionate man; neat and methodical in his habits, and knew well how
+to temper liberality with economy. Greatly to his honour, he often
+kept his workmen employed, solely for their sake, when stagnation of
+trade prevented him disposing of the products of their labour. As a
+manufacturer he was distinguished for his promptitude and probity, and
+he was celebrated for the exquisite finish which he gave to all his
+productions. In this excellence of workmanship, which he was the first
+to introduce, he continued while he lived to be unrivalled.
+
+Bramah was deservedly honoured and admired as the first mechanical
+genius of his time, and as the founder of the art of tool-making in its
+highest branches. From his shops at Pimlico came Henry Maudslay,
+Joseph Clement, and many more first-class mechanics, who carried the
+mechanical arts to still higher perfection, and gave an impulse to
+mechanical engineering, the effects of which are still felt in every
+branch of industry.
+
+The parish to which Bramah belonged was naturally proud of the
+distinction he had achieved in the world, and commemorated his life and
+career by a marble tablet erected by subscription to his memory, in the
+parish church of Silkstone. In the churchyard are found the tombstones
+of Joseph's father, brother, and other members of the family; and we
+are informed that their descendants still occupy the farm at
+Stainborough on which the great mechanician was born.
+
+
+
+[1] The lock invented by Bramah was patented in 1784. Mr. Bramah
+himself fully set forth the specific merits of the invention in his
+Dissertation on the Construction of Locks. In a second patent, taken
+out by him in 1798, he amended his first with the object of preventing
+the counterfeiting of keys, and suspending the office of the lock until
+the key was again in the possession of the owner. This he effected by
+enabling the owner so to alter the sliders as to render the lock
+inaccessible to such key if applied by any other person but himself, or
+until the sliders had been rearranged so as to admit of its proper
+action. We may mention in passing that the security of Bramah's locks
+depends on the doctrine of combinations, or multiplication of numbers
+into each other, which is known to increase in the most rapid
+proportion. Thus, a lock of five slides admits of 3,000 variations,
+while one of eight will have no less than 1,935,360 changes; in other
+words, that number of attempts at making a key, or at picking it, may
+be made before it can be opened.
+
+[2] The weight raised by a single press at the Britannia Bridge was
+1144 tons.
+
+[3] Dr. Thomas Young, in his article on Bramah in the Encyclopaedia
+Britannica, describes the "rotative principle" as consisting in making
+the part which acts immediately on the water in the form of a slider,
+"sweeping round a cylindrical cavity, and kept in its place by means of
+an eccentric groove; a contrivance which was probably Bramah's own
+invention, but which had been before described, in a form nearly
+similar, by Ramelli, Canalleri, Amontons, Prince Rupert, and Dr. Hooke.
+
+[4] A Letter to the Right Hon. Sir James Eyre, Lord Chief Justice of
+the Common Pleas, on the subject of the cause Boulton and Watt v.
+Hornblower and Maberly, for Infringement on Mr. Watt's Patent for an
+Improvement of the Steam Engine. By Joseph Bramah, Engineer. London,
+1797.
+
+[5] Sir Samuel Bentham and Marc Isambard Brunel subsequently
+distinguished themselves by the invention of wood-working machinery,
+full accounts of which will be found in the Memoirs of the former by
+Lady Bentham, and in the Life of the latter by Mr. Beamish.
+
+[6] "Record of the International Exhibition, 1862." Practical
+Mechanic's Journal, 293.
+
+[7] In this, as in other methods of employing power, the moderns had
+been anticipated by the ancients; and though hydraulic machinery is a
+comparatively recent invention in England, it had long been in use
+abroad. Thus we find in Dr. Bright's Travels in Lower Hungary a full
+description of the powerful hydraulic machinery invented by M. Holl,
+Chief Engineer of the Imperial Mines, which had been in use since the
+year 1749, in pumping water from a depth of 1800 feet, from the silver
+and gold mines of Schemnitz and Kremnitz. A head of water was
+collected by forming a reservoir along the mountain side, from which it
+was conducted through water-tight cast-iron pipes erected
+perpendicularly in the mine-shaft. About forty-five fathoms down, the
+water descending through the pipe was forced by the weight of the
+column above it into the bottom of a perpendicular cylinder, in which
+it raised a water-tight piston. When forced up to a given point a
+self-acting stop-cock shut off the pressure of the descending column,
+while a self-acting valve enabled the water contained in the cylinder
+to be discharged, on which the piston again descended, and the process
+was repeated like the successive strokes of a steam-engine. Pump-rods
+were attached to this hydraulic apparatus, which were carried to the
+bottom of the shaft, and each worked a pump at different levels,
+raising the water stage by stage to the level of the main adit. The
+pumps of these three several stages each raised 1790 cubic feet of
+water from a depth of 600 feet in the hour. The regular working of the
+machinery was aided by the employment of a balance-beam connected by a
+chain with the head of the large piston and pump-rods; and the whole of
+these powerful machines by means of three of which as much as 789,840
+gallons of water were pumped out of the mines every 24 hours--were set
+in operation and regulated merely by the turning of a stopcock. It
+will be observed that the arrangement thus briefly described was
+equally applicable to the working of machinery of all kinds, cranes,
+&c., as well as pumps; and it will be noted that, notwithstanding the
+ingenuity of Bramah, Armstrong, and other eminent English mechanics,
+the Austrian engineer Holl was thus decidedly beforehand with them in
+the practical application of the principles of hydrostatics.
+
+[8] Dr. Brown published a brief memoir of his friend in the New Monthly
+Magazine for April, 1815, which has been the foundation of all the
+notices of Bramah's life that have heretofore appeared.
+
+[9] Notwithstanding his well-known religious character, Bramah seems to
+have fallen under the grievous displeasure of William Huntington, S.S.
+(Sinner Saved), described by Macaulay in his youth as "a worthless ugly
+lad of the name of Hunter," and in his manhood as "that remarkable
+impostor" (Essays, 1 vol. ed. 529). It seems that Huntington sought
+the professional services of Bramah when re-edifying his chapel in
+1793; and at the conclusion of the work, the engineer generously sent
+the preacher a cheque for 8L. towards defraying the necessary expenses.
+Whether the sum was less than Huntington expected, or from whatever
+cause, the S.S. contemptuously flung back the gift, as proceeding from
+an Arian whose religion was "unsavoury," at the same time hurling at
+the giver a number of texts conveying epithets of an offensive
+character. Bramah replied to the farrago of nonsense, which he
+characterised as "unmannerly, absurd, and illiterate that it must have
+been composed when the writer was intoxicated, mad, or under the
+influence of Lucifer," and he threatened that unless Huntington
+apologised for his gratuitous insults, he (Bramah) would assuredly
+expose him. The mechanician nevertheless proceeded gravely to explain
+and defend his "profession of faith," which was altogether unnecessary.
+On this Huntington returned to the charge, and directed against the
+mechanic a fresh volley of Scripture texts and phraseology, not without
+humour, if profanity be allowable in controversy, as where he says,
+"Poor man! he makes a good patent lock, but cuts a sad figure with the
+keys of the Kingdom of Heaven!" "What Mr. Bramah is," says S.S., "In
+respect to his character or conduct in life, as a man, a tradesman, a
+neighbour, a gentleman, a husband, friend, master, or subject, I know
+not. In all these characters he may shine as a comet for aught I know;
+but he appears to me to be as far from any resemblance to a poor
+penitent or broken-hearted sinner as Jannes, Jambres, or Alexander the
+coppersmith!" Bramah rejoined by threatening to publish his
+assailant's letters, but Huntington anticipated him in A Feeble Dispute
+with a Wise and Learned Man, 8vo. London, 1793, in which, whether
+justly or not, Huntington makes Bramah appear to murder the king's
+English in the most barbarous manner.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+HENRY MAUDSLAY.
+
+"The successful construction of all machinery depends on the perfection
+of the tools employed; and whoever is a master in the arts of
+tool-making possesses the key to the construction of all machines.....
+The contrivance and construction of tools must therefore ever stand at
+the head of the industrial arts."--C. BABBAGE, Exposition of 1851.
+
+
+Henry Maudslay was born at Woolwich towards the end of last century, in
+a house standing in the court at the back of the Salutation Inn, the
+entrance to which is nearly opposite the Arsenal gates. His father was
+a native of Lancashire, descended from an old family of the same name,
+the head of which resided at Mawdsley Hall near Ormskirk at the
+beginning of the seventeenth century. The family were afterwards
+scattered, and several of its members became workmen. William
+Maudslay, the father of Henry, belonged to the neighbourhood of Bolton,
+where he was brought up to the trade of a joiner. His principal
+employment, while working at his trade in Lancashire, consisted in
+making the wood framing of cotton machinery, in the construction of
+which cast-iron had not yet been introduced. Having got into some
+trouble in his neighbourhood, through some alleged LIAISON, William
+enlisted in the Royal Artillery, and the corps to which he belonged was
+shortly after sent out to the West Indies. He was several times
+engaged in battle, and in his last action he was hit by a musket-bullet
+in the throat. The soldier's stock which he wore had a piece cut out
+of it by the ball, the direction of which was diverted, and though
+severely wounded, his life was saved. He brought home the stock and
+preserved it as a relic, afterwards leaving it to his son. Long after,
+the son would point to the stock, hung up against his wall, and say
+"But for that bit of leather there would have been no Henry Maudslay."
+The wounded artilleryman was invalided and sent home to Woolwich, the
+headquarters of his corps, where he was shortly after discharged.
+Being a handy workman, he sought and obtained employment at the
+Arsenal. He was afterwards appointed a storekeeper in the Dockyard.
+It was during the former stage of William Maudslay's employment at
+Woolwich, that the subject of this memoir was born in the house in the
+court above mentioned, on the 22nd of August, 1771.
+
+The boy was early set to work. When twelve years old he was employed
+as a "powder-monkey," in making and filling cartridges. After two
+years, he was passed on to the carpenter's shop where his father
+worked, and there he became acquainted with tools and the art of
+working in wood and iron. From the first, the latter seems to have had
+by far the greatest charms for him. The blacksmiths' shop was close to
+the carpenters', and Harry seized every opportunity that offered of
+plying the hammer, the file, and the chisel, in preference to the saw
+and the plane. Many a cuff did the foreman of carpenters give him for
+absenting himself from his proper shop and stealing off to the smithy.
+His propensity was indeed so strong that, at the end of a year, it was
+thought better, as he was a handy, clever boy, to yield to his earnest
+desire to be placed in the smithy, and he was removed thither
+accordingly in his fifteenth year.
+
+His heart being now in his work, he made rapid progress, and soon
+became an expert smith and metal worker. He displayed his skill
+especially in forging light ironwork; and a favourite job of his was
+the making of "Trivets" out of the solid, which only the "dab hands" of
+the shop could do, but which he threw off with great rapidity in first
+rate style. These "Trivets" were made out of Spanish iron bolts--rare
+stuff, which, though exceedingly tough, forged like wax under the
+hammer. Even at the close of his life, when he had acquired eminent
+distinction as an inventor, and was a large employer of skilled labour,
+he looked back with pride to the forging of his early days in Woolwich
+Arsenal. He used to describe with much gusto, how the old experienced
+hands, with whom he was a great favourite, would crowd about him when
+forging his "Trivets," some of which may to this day be in use among
+Woolwich housewives for supporting the toast-plate before the bright
+fire against tea time. This was, however, entirely contraband work,
+done "on the sly," and strictly prohibited by the superintending
+officer, who used kindly to signal his approach by blowing his nose in
+a peculiar manner, so that all forbidden jobs might be put out of the
+way by the time he entered the shop.
+
+We have referred to Maudslay's early dexterity in trivet-making--a
+circumstance trifling enough in itself--for the purpose of illustrating
+the progress which he had made in a branch of his art of the greatest
+importance in tool and machine making. Nothing pleased him more in his
+after life than to be set to work upon an unusual piece of forging, and
+to overcome, as none could do so cleverly as he, the difficulties which
+it presented. The pride of art was as strong in him as it must have
+been in the mediaeval smiths, who turned out those beautiful pieces of
+workmanship still regarded as the pride of our cathedrals and old
+mansions. In Maudslay's case, his dexterity as a smith was eventually
+directed to machinery, rather than ornamental work; though, had the
+latter been his line of labour, we do not doubt that he would have
+reached the highest distinction.
+
+The manual skill which our young blacksmith had acquired was such as to
+give him considerable reputation in his craft, and he was spoken of
+even in the London shops as one of the most dexterous hands in the
+trade. It was this circumstance that shortly after led to his removal
+from the smithy in Woolwich Arsenal to a sphere more suitable for the
+development of his mechanical ability.
+
+We have already stated in the preceding memoir, that Joseph Bramah took
+out the first patent for his lock in 1784, and a second for its
+improvement several years later; but notwithstanding the acknowledged
+superiority of the new lock over all others, Bramah experienced the
+greatest difficulty in getting it manufactured with sufficient
+precision, and at such a price as to render it an article of extensive
+commerce. This arose from the generally inferior character of the
+workmanship of that day, as well as the clumsiness and uncertainty of
+the tools then in use. Bramah found that even the best manual
+dexterity was not to be trusted, and yet it seemed to be his only
+resource; for machine-tools of a superior kind had not yet been
+invented. In this dilemma he determined to consult an ingenious old
+German artisan, then working with William Moodie, a general blacksmith
+in Whitechapel. This German was reckoned one of the most ingenious
+workmen in London at the time. Bramah had several long interviews with
+him, with the object of endeavouring to solve the difficult problem of
+how to secure precise workmanship in lock-making. But they could not
+solve it; they saw that without better tools the difficulty was
+insuperable; and then Bramah began to fear that his lock would remain a
+mere mechanical curiosity, and be prevented from coming into general
+use.
+
+He was indeed sorely puzzled what next to do, when one of the hammermen
+in Moodie's shop ventured to suggest that there was a young man in the
+Woolwich Arsenal smithy, named Maudslay, who was so ingenious in such
+matters that "nothing bet him," and he recommended that Mr. Bramah
+should have a talk with him upon the subject of his difficulty.
+Maudslay was at once sent for to Bramah's workshop, and appeared before
+the lock-maker, a tall, strong, comely young fellow, then only eighteen
+years old. Bramah was almost ashamed to lay his case before such a
+mere youth; but necessity constrained him to try all methods of
+accomplishing his object, and Maudslay's suggestions in reply to his
+statement of the case were so modest, so sensible, and as the result
+proved, so practical, that the master was constrained to admit that the
+lad before him had an old head though set on young shoulders. Bramah
+decided to adopt the youth's suggestions, made him a present on the
+spot, and offered to give him a job if he was willing to come and work
+in a town shop. Maudslay gladly accepted the offer, and in due time
+appeared before Bramah to enter upon his duties.
+
+As Maudslay had served no regular apprenticeship, and was of a very
+youthful appearance, the foreman of the shop had considerable doubts as
+to his ability to take rank alongside his experienced hands. But
+Maudslay soon set his master's and the foreman's mind at rest.
+Pointing to a worn-out vice-bench, he said to Bramah, "Perhaps if I can
+make that as good as new by six o'clock to-night, it will satisfy your
+foreman that I am entitled to rank as a tradesman and take my place
+among your men, even though I have not served a seven years'
+apprenticeship." There was so much self-reliant ability in the
+proposal, which was moreover so reasonable, that it was at once acceded
+to. Off went Maudslay's coat, up went his shirt sleeves, and to work
+he set with a will upon the old bench. The vice-jaws were re-steeled
+"in no time," filed up, re-cut, all the parts cleaned and made trim,
+and set into form again. By six o'clock, the old vice was screwed up
+to its place, its jaws were hardened and "let down" to proper temper,
+and the old bench was made to look so smart and neat that it threw all
+the neighbouring benches into the shade! Bramah and his foreman came
+round to see it, while the men of the shop looked admiringly on. It
+was examined and pronounced "a first-rate job." This diploma piece of
+work secured Maudslay's footing, and next Monday morning he came on as
+one of the regular hands.
+
+He soon took rank in the shop as a first-class workman. Loving his
+art, he aimed at excellence in it, and succeeded. For it must be
+understood that the handicraftsman whose heart is in his calling, feels
+as much honest pride in turning out a piece of thoroughly good
+workmanship, as the sculptor or the painter does in executing a statue
+or a picture. In course of time, the most difficult and delicate jobs
+came to be entrusted to Maudslay; and nothing gave him greater pleasure
+than to be set to work upon an entirely new piece of machinery. And
+thus he rose, naturally and steadily, from hand to head work. For his
+manual dexterity was the least of his gifts. He possessed an intuitive
+power of mechanical analysis and synthesis. He had a quick eye to
+perceive the arrangements requisite to effect given purposes; and
+whenever a difficulty arose, his inventive mind set to work to overcome
+it.
+
+His fellow-workmen were not slow to recognise his many admirable
+qualities, of hand, mind, and heart; and he became not only the
+favourite, but the hero of the shop. Perhaps he owed something to his
+fine personal appearance. Hence on gala-days, when the men turned out
+in procession, "Harry" was usually selected to march at their head and
+carry the flag. His conduct as a son, also, was as admirable as his
+qualities as a workman. His father dying shortly after Maudslay
+entered Bramah's concern, he was accustomed to walk down to Woolwich
+every Saturday night, and hand over to his mother, for whom he had the
+tenderest regard, a considerable share of his week's wages, and this he
+continued to do as long as she lived.
+
+Notwithstanding his youth, he was raised from one post to another,
+until he was appointed, by unanimous consent, the head foreman of the
+works; and was recognised by all who had occasion to do business there
+as "Bramah's right-hand man." He not only won the heart of his master,
+but--what proved of far greater importance to him--he also won the
+heart of his master's pretty housemaid, Sarah Tindel by name, whom he
+married, and she went hand-in-hand with him through life, an admirable
+"help meet," in every way worthy of the noble character of the great
+mechanic. Maudslay was found especially useful by his master in
+devising the tools for making his patent locks; and many were the
+beautiful contrivances which he invented for the purpose of ensuring
+their more accurate and speedy manufacture, with a minimum degree of
+labour, and without the need of any large amount of manual dexterity on
+the part of the workman. The lock was so delicate a machine, that the
+identity of the several parts of which it was composed was found to be
+an absolute necessity. Mere handicraft, however skilled, could not
+secure the requisite precision of workmanship; nor could the parts be
+turned out in sufficient quantity to meet any large demand. It was
+therefore requisite to devise machine-tools which should not blunder,
+nor turn out imperfect work;--machines, in short, which should be in a
+great measure independent of the want of dexterity of individual
+workmen, but which should unerringly labour in their prescribed track,
+and do the work set them, even in the minutest details, after the
+methods designed by their inventor. In this department Maudslay was
+eminently successful, and to his laborious ingenuity, as first
+displayed in Bramah's workshops, and afterwards in his own
+establishment, we unquestionably owe much of the power and accuracy of
+our present self-acting machines.
+
+Bramah himself was not backward in admitting that to Henry Maudslay's
+practical skill in contriving the machines for manufacturing his locks
+on a large scale, the success of his invention was in a great degree
+attributable. In further proof of his manual dexterity, it may be
+mentioned that he constructed with his own hands the identical padlock
+which so severely tested the powers of Mr. Hobbs in 1851. And when it
+is considered that the lock had been made for more than half a century,
+and did not embody any of the modern improvements, it will perhaps be
+regarded not only as creditable to the principles on which it was
+constructed, but to the workmanship of its maker, that it should so
+long have withstood the various mechanical dexterity to which it was
+exposed.
+
+Besides the invention of improved machine-tools for the manufacture of
+locks, Maudslay was of further service to Bramah in applying the
+expedient to his famous Hydraulic Press, without which it would
+probably have remained an impracticable though a highly ingenious
+machine. As in other instances of great inventions, the practical
+success of the whole is often found to depend upon the action of some
+apparently trifling detail. This was especially the case with the
+hydraulic press; to which Maudslay added the essential feature of the
+self-tightening collar, above described in the memoir of Bramah. Mr.
+James Nasmyth is our authority for ascribing this invention to
+Maudslay, who was certainly quite competent to have made it; and it is
+a matter of fact that Bramah's specification of the press says nothing
+of the hollow collar,[1] on which its efficient action mainly depends.
+Mr. Nasmyth says--"Maudslay himself told me, or led me to believe, that
+it was he who invented the self-tightening collar for the hydraulic
+press, without which it would never have been a serviceable machine.
+As the self-tightening collar is to the hydraulic press, so is the
+steamblast to the locomotive. It is the one thing needful that has
+made it effective in practice. If Maudslay was the inventor of the
+collar, that one contrivance ought to immortalize him. He used to tell
+me of it with great gusto, and I have no reason to doubt the
+correctness of his statement." Whoever really struck out the idea of
+the collar, displayed the instinct of the true inventor, who invariably
+seeks to accomplish his object by the adoption of the simplest possible
+means.
+
+During the time that Maudslay held the important office of manager of
+Bramah's works, his highest wages were not more than thirty shillings
+a-week. He himself thought that he was worth more to his master--as
+indeed he was,--and he felt somewhat mortified that he should have to
+make an application for an advance; but the increasing expenses of his
+family compelled him in a measure to do so. His application was
+refused in such a manner as greatly to hurt his sensitive feelings; and
+the result was that he threw up his situation, and determined to begin
+working on his own account.
+
+His first start in business was in the year 1797, in a small workshop
+and smithy situated in Wells Street, Oxford Street. It was in an awful
+state of dirt and dilapidation when he became its tenant. He entered
+the place on a Friday, but by the Saturday evening, with the help of
+his excellent wife, he had the shop thoroughly cleaned, whitewashed,
+and put in readiness for beginning work on the next Monday morning. He
+had then the pleasure of hearing the roar of his own forge-fire, and
+the cheering ring of the hammer on his own anvil; and great was the
+pride he felt in standing for the first time within his own smithy and
+executing orders for customers on his own account. His first customer
+was an artist, who gave him an order to execute the iron work of a
+large easel, embodying some new arrangements; and the work was
+punctually done to his employer's satisfaction. Other orders followed,
+and he soon became fully employed. His fame as a first-rate workman
+was almost as great as that of his former master; and many who had been
+accustomed to do business with him at Pimlico followed him to Wells
+Street. Long years after, the thought of these early days of
+self-dependence and hard work used to set him in a glow, and he would
+dilate to his intimate friends up on his early struggles and his first
+successes, which were much more highly prized by him than those of his
+maturer years.
+
+With a true love of his craft, Maudslay continued to apply himself, as
+he had done whilst working as Bramah's foreman, to the best methods of
+ensuring accuracy and finish of work, so as in a measure to be
+independent of the carelessness or want of dexterity of the workman.
+With this object he aimed at the contrivance of improved machine-tools,
+which should be as much self-acting and self-regulating as possible;
+and it was while pursuing this study that he wrought out the important
+mechanical invention with which his name is usually identified--that of
+the Slide Rest. It continued to be his special delight, when engaged
+in the execution of any piece of work in which he took a personal
+interest, to introduce a system of identity of parts, and to adapt for
+the purpose some one or other of the mechanical contrivances with which
+his fertile brain was always teeming. Thus it was from his desire to
+leave nothing to the chance of mere individual dexterity of hand that
+he introduced the slide rest in the lathe, and rendered it one of the
+most important of machine-tools. The first device of this kind was
+contrived by him for Bramah, in whose shops it continued in practical
+use long after he had begun business for himself. "I have seen the
+slide rest," says Mr. James Nasmyth, "the first that Henry Maudslay
+made, in use at Messrs. Bramah's workshops, and in it were all those
+arrangements which are to be found in the most modern slide rest of our
+own day,[2] all of which are the legitimate offspring of Maudslay's
+original rest. If this tool be yet extant, it ought to be preserved
+with the greatest care, for it was the beginning of those mechanical
+triumphs which give to the days in which we live so much of their
+distinguishing character."
+
+A very few words of explanation will serve to illustrate the importance
+of Maudslay's invention. Every person is familiar with the uses of the
+common turning-lathe. It is a favourite machine with amateur
+mechanics, and its employment is indispensable for the execution of all
+kinds of rounded work in wood and metal. Perhaps there is no
+contrivance by which the skill of the handicraftsman has been more
+effectually aided than by this machine. Its origin is lost in the
+shades of antiquity. Its most ancient form was probably the potter's
+wheel, from which it advanced, by successive improvements, to its
+present highly improved form. It was found that, by whatever means a
+substance capable of being cut could be made to revolve with a circular
+motion round a fixed right line as a centre, a cutting tool applied to
+its surface would remove the inequalities so that any part of such
+surface should be equidistant from that centre. Such is the
+fundamental idea of the ordinary turning-lathe. The ingenuity and
+experience of mechanics working such an instrument enabled them to add
+many improvements to it; until the skilful artisan at length produced
+not merely circular turning of the most beautiful and accurate
+description, but exquisite figure-work, and complicated geometrical
+designs, depending upon the cycloidal and eccentric movements which
+were from time to time added to the machine.
+
+The artisans of the Middle Ages were very skilful in the use of the
+lathe, and turned out much beautiful screen and stall work, still to be
+seen in our cathedrals, as well as twisted and swash-work for the
+balusters of staircases and other ornamental purposes. English
+mechanics seem early to have distinguished themselves as improvers of
+the lathe; and in Moxon's 'Treatise on Turning,' published in 1680, we
+find Mr. Thomas Oldfield, at the sign of the Flower-de-Luce, near the
+Savoy in the Strand, named as an excellent maker of oval-engines and
+swash-engines, showing that such machines were then in some demand.
+The French writer Plumier[3] also mentions an ingenious modification of
+the lathe by means of which any kind of reticulated form could be given
+to the work; and, from it's being employed to ornament the handles of
+knives, it was called by him the "Machine a manche de Couteau
+d'Angleterre." But the French artisans were at that time much better
+skilled than the English in the use of tools, and it is most probable
+that we owe to the Flemish and French Protestant workmen who flocked
+into England in such large numbers during the religious persecutions of
+the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the improvement, if not the
+introduction, of the art of turning, as well as many other arts
+hereafter to be referred to. It is certain that at the period to which
+we refer numerous treatises were published in France on the art of
+turning, some of them of a most elaborate character. Such were the
+works of De la Hire,[4] who described how every kind of polygon might
+be made by the lathe; De la Condamine,[5] who showed how a lathe could
+turn all sorts of irregular figures by means of tracers; and of Grand
+Jean, Morin,[6] Plumier, Bergeron, and many other writers.
+
+The work of Plumier is especially elaborate, entering into the
+construction of the lathe in its various parts, the making of the tools
+and cutters, and the different motions to be given to the machine by
+means of wheels, eccentrics, and other expedients, amongst which may be
+mentioned one very much resembling the slide rest and planing-machine
+combined.[7] From this work it appears that turning had long been a
+favourite pursuit in France with amateurs of all ranks, who spared no
+expense in the contrivance and perfection of elaborate machinery for
+the production of complex figures.[8] There was at that time a great
+passion for automata in France, which gave rise to many highly
+ingenious devices, such as Camus's miniature carriage (made for Louis
+XIV. when a child), Degennes' mechanical peacock, Vancanson's duck, and
+Maillardet's conjuror. It had the effect of introducing among the
+higher order of artists habits of nice and accurate workmanship in
+executing delicate pieces of machinery; and the same combination of
+mechanical powers which made the steel spider crawl, the duck quack, or
+waved the tiny rod of the magician, contributed in future years to
+purposes of higher import,--the wheels and pinions, which in these
+automata almost eluded the human senses by their minuteness,
+reappearing in modern times in the stupendous mechanism of our
+self-acting lathes, spinning-mules, and steam-engines.
+
+"In our own country," says Professor Willis, "the literature of this
+subject is so defective that it is very difficult to discover what
+progress we were making during the seventeenth and eighteenth
+centuries." [9] We believe the fact to be, that the progress made in
+England down to the end of last century had been very small indeed, and
+that the lathe had experienced little or no improvement until Maudslay
+took it in hand. Nothing seems to have been known of the slide rest
+until he re-invented it and applied it to the production of machinery
+of a far more elaborate character than had ever before been
+contemplated as possible. Professor Willis says that Bramah's, in
+other words Maudslay's, slide rest of 1794 is so different from that
+described in the French 'Encyclopedie in 1772, that the two could not
+have had a common origin. We are therefore led to the conclusion that
+Maudslay's invention was entirely independent of all that had gone
+before, and that he contrived it for the special purpose of overcoming
+the difficulties which he himself experienced in turning out duplicate
+parts in large numbers. At all events, he was so early and zealous a
+promoter of its use, that we think he may, in the eyes of all practical
+mechanics, stand as the parent of its introduction to the workshops of
+England.
+
+It is unquestionable that at the time when Maudslay began the
+improvement of machine-tools, the methods of working in wood and metals
+were exceedingly imperfect. Mr. William Fairbairn has stated that when
+he first became acquainted with mechanical engineering, about sixty
+years ago, there were no self-acting tools; everything was executed by
+hand. There were neither planing, slotting, nor shaping machines; and
+the whole stock of an engineering or machine establishment might be
+summed up in a few ill-constructed lathes, and a few drills and boring
+machines of rude construction.[10] Our mechanics were equally backward
+in contrivances for working in wood. Thus, when Sir Samuel Bentham
+made a tour through the manufacturing districts of England in 1791, he
+was surprised to find how little had been done to substitute the
+invariable accuracy of machinery for the uncertain dexterity of the
+human hand. Steam-power was as yet only employed in driving
+spinning-machines, rolling metals, pumping water, and such like
+purposes. In the working of wood no machinery had been introduced
+beyond the common turning-lathe and some saws, and a few boring tools
+used in making blocks for the navy. Even saws worked by inanimate
+force for slitting timber, though in extensive use in foreign
+countries, were nowhere to be found in Great Britain.[11] As
+everything depended on the dexterity of hand and correctness of eye of
+the workmen, the work turned out was of very unequal merit, besides
+being exceedingly costly. Even in the construction of comparatively
+simple machines, the expense was so great as to present a formidable
+obstacle to their introduction and extensive use; and but for the
+invention of machine-making tools, the use of the steam-engine in the
+various forms in which it is now applied for the production of power
+could never have become general.
+
+In turning a piece of work on the old-fashioned lathe, the workman
+applied and guided his tool by means of muscular strength. The work
+was made to revolve, and the turner, holding the cutting tool firmly
+upon the long, straight, guiding edge of the rest, along which he
+carried it, and pressing its point firmly against the article to be
+turned, was thus enabled to reduce its surface to the required size and
+shape. Some dexterous turners were able, with practice and
+carefulness, to execute very clever pieces of work by this simple
+means. But when the article to be turned was of considerable size, and
+especially when it was of metal, the expenditure of muscular strength
+was so great that the workman soon became exhausted. The slightest
+variation in the pressure of the tool led to an irregularity of
+surface; and with the utmost care on the workman's part, he could not
+avoid occasionally cutting a little too deep, in consequence of which
+he must necessarily go over the surface again, to reduce the whole to
+the level of that accidentally cut too deep; and thus possibly the job
+would be altogether spoiled by the diameter of the article under
+operation being made too small for its intended purpose.
+
+The introduction of the slide rest furnished a complete remedy for this
+source of imperfection. The principle of the invention consists in
+constructing and fitting the rest so that, instead of being screwed
+down to one place, and the tool in the hands of the workman travelling
+over it, the rest shall itself hold the cutting tool firmly fixed in
+it, and slide along the surface of the bench in a direction exactly
+parallel with the axis of the work. Before its invention various
+methods had been tried with the object of enabling the work to be
+turned true independent of the dexterity of the workman. Thus, a
+square steel cutter used to be firmly fixed in a bed, along which it
+was wedged from point to point of the work, and tolerable accuracy was
+in this way secured. But the slide rest was much more easily managed,
+and the result was much more satisfactory. All that the workman had to
+do, after the tool was firmly fitted into the rest, was merely to turn
+a screw-handle, and thus advance the cutter along the face of the work
+as required, with an expenditure of strength so slight as scarcely to
+be appreciable. And even this labour has now been got rid of; for, by
+an arrangement of the gearing, the slide itself has been made
+self-acting, and advances with the revolution of the work in the lathe,
+which thus supplies the place of the workman's hand. The accuracy of
+the turning done by this beautiful yet simple arrangement is as
+mechanically perfect as work can be. The pair of steel fingers which
+hold the cutting tool firmly in their grasp never tire, and it moves
+along the metal to be cut with an accuracy and precision which the
+human hand, however skilled, could never equal.
+
+The effects of the introduction of the slide rest were very shortly
+felt in all departments of mechanism. Though it had to encounter some
+of the ridicule with which new methods of working are usually received,
+and for a time was spoken of in derision as "Maudslay's Go-cart,"--its
+practical advantages were so decided that it gradually made its way,
+and became an established tool in all the best mechanical workshops.
+It was found alike capable of executing the most delicate and the most
+ponderous pieces of machinery; and as slide-lathes could be
+manufactured to any extent, machinery, steam-engines, and all kinds of
+metal work could now be turned out in a quantity and at a price that,
+but for its use, could never have been practicable. In course of time
+various modifications of the machine were introduced--such as the
+planing machine, the wheel-cutting machine, and other beautiful tools
+on the slide-rest principle,--the result of which has been that
+extraordinary development of mechanical production and power which is
+so characteristic a feature of the age we live in.
+
+"It is not, indeed, saying at all too much to state," says Mr.
+Nasmyth,[12] a most competent judge in such a matter, "that its
+influence in improving and extending the use of machinery has been as
+great as that produced by the improvement of the steam-engine in
+respect to perfecting manufactures and extending commerce, inasmuch as
+without the aid of the vast accession to our power of producing perfect
+mechanism which it at once supplied, we could never have worked out
+into practical and profitable forms the conceptions of those master
+minds who, during the last half century, have so successfully pioneered
+the way for mankind. The steam-engine itself, which supplies us with
+such unbounded power, owes its present perfection to this most
+admirable means of giving to metallic objects the most precise and
+perfect geometrical forms. How could we, for instance, have good
+steam-engines if we had not the means of boring out a true cylinder, or
+turning a true piston-rod, or planing a valve face? It is this alone
+which has furnished us with the means of carrying into practice the
+accumulated result's of scientific investigation on mechanical
+subjects. It would be blamable indeed," continues Mr. Nasmyth, "after
+having endeavoured to set forth the vast advantages which have been
+conferred on the mechanical world, and therefore on mankind generally,
+by the invention and introduction of the Slide Rest, were I to suppress
+the name of that admirable individual to whom we are indebted for this
+powerful agent towards the attainment of mechanical perfection. I
+allude to Henry Maudslay, whose useful life was enthusiastically
+devoted to the grand object of improving our means of producing perfect
+workmanship and machinery: to him we are certainly indebted for the
+slide rest, and, consequently, to say the least, we are indirectly so
+for the vast benefits which have resulted from the introduction of so
+powerful an agent in perfecting our machinery and mechanism generally.
+The indefatigable care which he took in inculcating and diffusing among
+his workmen, and mechanical men generally, sound ideas of practical
+knowledge and refined views of construction, have rendered and ever
+will continue to render his name identified with all that is noble in
+the ambition of a lover of mechanical perfection."
+
+One of the first uses to which Mr. Maudslay applied the improved slide
+rest, which he perfected shortly after beginning business in Margaret
+Street, Cavendish Square, was in executing the requisite tools and
+machinery required by Mr. (afterwards Sir Marc Isambard) Brunel for
+manufacturing ships' blocks. The career of Brunel was of a more
+romantic character than falls to the ordinary lot of mechanical
+engineers. His father was a small farmer and postmaster, at the
+village of Hacqueville, in Normandy, where Marc Isambard was born in
+1769. He was early intended for a priest, and educated accordingly.
+But he was much fonder of the carpenter's shop than of the school; and
+coaxing, entreaty, and punishment alike failed in making a hopeful
+scholar of him. He drew faces and plans until his father was almost in
+despair. Sent to school at Rouen, his chief pleasure was in watching
+the ships along the quays; and one day his curiosity was excited by the
+sight of some large iron castings just landed. What were they? How had
+they been made? Where did they come from? His eager inquiries were soon
+answered. They were parts of an engine intended for the great Paris
+water-works; the engine was to pump water by the power of steam; and
+the castings had been made in England, and had just been landed from an
+English ship. "England!" exclaimed the boy, "ah! when I am a man I
+will go see the country where such grand machines are made!" On one
+occasion, seeing a new tool in a cutler's window, he coveted it so much
+that he pawned his hat to possess it. This was not the right road to
+the priesthood; and his father soon saw that it was of no use urging
+him further: but the boy's instinct proved truer than the father's
+judgment.
+
+It was eventually determined that he should qualify himself to enter
+the royal navy, and at seventeen he was nominated to serve in a
+corvette as "volontaire d'honneur." His ship was paid off in 1792, and
+he was at Paris during the trial of the King. With the incautiousness
+of youth he openly avowed his royalist opinions in the cafe which he
+frequented. On the very day that Louis was condemned to death, Brunel
+had an angry altercation with some ultra-republicans, after which he
+called to his dog, "Viens, citoyen!" Scowling looks were turned upon
+him, and he deemed it expedient to take the first opportunity of
+escaping from the house, which he did by a back-door, and made the best
+of his way to Hacqueville. From thence he went to Rouen, and succeeded
+in finding a passage on board an American ship, in which he sailed for
+New York, having first pledged his affections to an English girl,
+Sophia Kingdom, whom he had accidentally met at the house of Mr.
+Carpentier, the American consul at Rouen.
+
+Arrived in America, he succeeded in finding employment as assistant
+surveyor of a tract of land along the Black River, near Lake Ontario.
+In the intervals of his labours he made occasional visits to New York,
+and it was there that the first idea of his block-machinery occurred to
+him. He carried his idea back with him into the woods, where it often
+mingled with his thoughts of Sophia Kingdom, by this time safe in
+England after passing through the horrors of a French prison. "My
+first thought of the block-machinery," he once said, "was at a dinner
+party at Major-General Hamilton's, in New York; my second under an
+American tree, when, one day that I was carving letters on its bark,
+the turn of one of them reminded me of it, and I thought, 'Ah! my
+block! so it must be.' And what do you think were the letters I was
+cutting? Of course none other than S. K." Brunel subsequently
+obtained some employment as an architect in New York, and promulgated
+various plans for improving the navigation of the principal rivers.
+Among the designs of his which were carried out, was that of the Park
+Theatre at New York, and a cannon foundry, in which he introduced
+improvements in casting and boring big guns. But being badly paid for
+his work, and a powerful attraction drawing him constantly towards
+England, he determined to take final leave of America, which he did in
+1799, and landed at Falmouth in the following March. There he again
+met Miss Kingdom, who had remained faithful to him during his six long
+years of exile, and the pair were shortly after united for life.
+
+Brunel was a prolific inventor. During his residence in America, he
+had planned many contrivances in his mind, which he now proceeded to
+work out. The first was a duplicate writing and drawing machine, which
+he patented. The next was a machine for twisting cotton thread and
+forming it into balls; but omitting to protect it by a patent, he
+derived no benefit from the invention, though it shortly came into very
+general use. He then invented a machine for trimmings and borders for
+muslins, lawns, and cambrics,--of the nature of a sewing machine. His
+famous block-machinery formed the subject of his next patent.
+
+It may be explained that the making of the blocks employed in the
+rigging of ships for raising and lowering the sails, masts, and yards,
+was then a highly important branch of manufacture. Some idea may be
+formed of the number used in the Royal Navy alone, from the fact that a
+74-gun ship required to be provided with no fewer than 1400 blocks of
+various sizes. The sheaved blocks used for the running rigging
+consisted of the shell, the sheaves, which revolved within the shell,
+and the pins which fastened them together. The fabrication of these
+articles, though apparently simple, was in reality attended with much
+difficulty. Every part had to be fashioned with great accuracy and
+precision to ensure the easy working of the block when put together, as
+any hitch in the raising or lowering of the sails might, on certain
+emergencies, occasion a serious disaster. Indeed, it became clear that
+mere hand-work was not to be relied on in the manufacture of these
+articles, and efforts were early made to produce them by means of
+machinery of the most perfect kind that could be devised. In 1781, Mr.
+Taylor, of Southampton, set up a large establishment on the river
+Itchen for their manufacture; and on the expiry of his contract, the
+Government determined to establish works of their own in Portsmouth
+Dockyard, for the purpose at the same time of securing greater economy,
+and of being independent of individual makers in the supply of an
+article of such importance in the equipment of ships.
+
+Sir Samuel Bentham, who then filled the office of Inspector-General of
+Naval Works, was a highly ingenious person, and had for some years been
+applying his mind to the invention of improved machinery for working in
+wood. He had succeeded in introducing into the royal dockyards
+sawing-machines and planing-machines of a superior kind, as well as
+block-making machines. Thus the specification of one of his patents,
+taken out in 1793, clearly describes a machine for shaping the shells
+of the blocks, in a manner similar to that afterwards specified by
+Brunel. Bentham had even proceeded with the erection of a building in
+Portsmouth Dockyard for the manufacture of the blocks after his method,
+the necessary steam-engine being already provided; but with a singular
+degree of candour and generosity, on Brunel's method being submitted to
+him, Sir Samuel at once acknowledged its superiority to his own, and
+promised to recommend its adoption by the authorities in his department.
+
+The circumstance of Mrs. Brunel's brother being Under-Secretary to the
+Navy Board at the time, probably led Brunel in the first instance to
+offer his invention to the Admiralty. A great deal, however, remained
+to be done before he could bring his ideas of the block-machinery into
+a definite shape; for there is usually a wide interval between the
+first conception of an intricate machine and its practical realization.
+Though Brunel had a good knowledge of mechanics, and was able to master
+the intricacies of any machine, he laboured under the disadvantage of
+not being a practical mechanic and it is probable that but for the help
+of someone possessed of this important qualification, his invention,
+ingenious and important though it was, would have borne no practical
+fruits. It was at this juncture that he was so fortunate as to be
+introduced to Henry Maudslay, the inventor of the sliderest.
+
+It happened that a M. de Bacquancourt, one of the French emigres, of
+whom there were then so many in London, was accustomed almost daily to
+pass Maudslay's little shop in Wells-street, and being himself an
+amateur turner, he curiously inspected the articles from time to time
+exhibited in the window of the young mechanic. One day a more than
+ordinarily nice piece of screw-cutting made its appearance, on which he
+entered the shop to make inquiries as to the method by which it had
+been executed. He had a long conversation with Maudslay, with whom he
+was greatly pleased; and he was afterwards accustomed to look in upon
+him occasionally to see what new work was going on. Bacquancourt was
+also on intimate terms with Brunel, who communicated to him the
+difficulty he had experienced in finding a mechanic of sufficient
+dexterity to execute his design of the block-making machinery. It
+immediately occurred to the former that Henry Maudslay was the very man
+to execute work of the elaborate character proposed, and he described
+to Brunel the new and beautiful tools which Maudslay had contrived for
+the purpose of ensuring accuracy and finish. Brunel at once determined
+to call upon Maudslay, and it was arranged that Bacquancourt should
+introduce him, which he did, and after the interview which took place
+Brunel promised to call again with the drawings of his proposed model.
+
+A few days passed, and Brunel called with the first drawing, done by
+himself; for he was a capital draughtsman, and used to speak of drawing
+as the "alphabet of the engineer." The drawing only showed a little
+bit of the intended machine, and Brunel did not yet think it advisable
+to communicate to Maudslay the precise object he had in view; for
+inventors are usually very chary of explaining their schemes to others,
+for fear of being anticipated. Again Brunel appeared at Maudslay's
+shop with a further drawing, still not explaining his design; but at
+the third visit, immediately on looking at the fresh drawings he had
+brought, Maudslay exclaimed, "Ah! now I see what you are thinking of;
+you want machinery for making blocks." At this Brunel became more
+communicative, and explained his designs to the mechanic, who fully
+entered into his views, and went on from that time forward striving to
+his utmost to work out the inventor's conceptions and embody them in a
+practical machine.
+
+While still occupied on the models, which were begun in 1800, Maudslay
+removed his shop from Wells-street, where he was assisted by a single
+journeyman, to Margaret-street, Cavendish-square, where he had greater
+room for carrying on his trade, and was also enabled to increase the
+number of his hands. The working models were ready for inspection by
+Sir Samuel Bentham and the Lords of the Admiralty in 1801, and having
+been fully approved by them, Brunel was authorized to proceed with the
+execution of the requisite machinery for the manufacture of the ship's
+blocks required for the Royal Navy. The whole of this machinery was
+executed by Henry Maudslay; it occupied him very fully for nearly six
+years, so that the manufacture of blocks by the new process was not
+begun until September, 1808.
+
+We despair of being able to give any adequate description in words of
+the intricate arrangements and mode of action of the block-making
+machinery. Let any one attempt to describe the much more simple and
+familiar process by which a shoemaker makes a pair of shoes, and he
+will find how inadequate mere words are to describe any mechanical
+operation.[13] Suffice it to say, that the machinery was of the most
+beautiful manufacture and finish, and even at this day will bear
+comparison with the most perfect machines which can be turned out with
+all the improved appliances of modern tools. The framing was of
+cast-iron, while the parts exposed to violent and rapid action were all
+of the best hardened steel. In turning out the various parts, Maudslay
+found his slide rest of indispensable value. Indeed, without this
+contrivance, it is doubtful whether machinery of so delicate and
+intricate a character could possibly have been executed. There was not
+one, but many machines in the series, each devoted to a special
+operation in the formation of a block. Thus there were various
+sawing-machines,--the Straight Cross-Cutting Saw, the Circular
+Cross-Cutting Saw, the Reciprocating Ripping-saw, and the Circular
+Ripping-Saw. Then there were the Boring Machines, and the Mortising
+Machine, of beautiful construction, for cutting the sheave-holes,
+furnished with numerous chisels, each making from 110 to 150 strokes a
+minute, and cutting at every stroke a chip as thick as pasteboard with
+the utmost precision. In addition to these were the Corner-Saw for
+cutting off the corners of the block, the Shaping Machine for
+accurately forming the outside surfaces, the Scoring Engine for cutting
+the groove round the longest diameter of the block for the reception of
+the rope, and various other machines for drilling, riveting, and
+finishing the blocks, besides those for making the sheaves.
+
+The total number of machines employed in the various operations of
+making a ship's block by the new method was forty-four; and after being
+regularly employed in Portsmouth Dockyard for upwards of fifty years,
+they are still as perfect in their action as on the day they were
+erected. They constitute one of the most ingenious and complete
+collections of tools ever invented for making articles in wood, being
+capable of performing most of the practical operations of carpentry
+with the utmost accuracy and finish. The machines are worked by a
+steam-engine of 32-horse power, which is also used for various other
+dockyard purposes. Under the new system of block-making it was found
+that the articles were better made, supplied with much greater
+rapidity, and executed at a greatly reduced cost. Only ten men, with
+the new machinery, could perform the work which before had required a
+hundred and ten men to execute, and not fewer than 160,000 blocks of
+various kinds and sizes could be turned out in a year, worth not less
+than 541,000L.[14]
+
+The satisfactory execution of the block-machinery brought Maudslay a
+large accession of fame and business; and the premises in Margaret
+Street proving much too limited for his requirements, he again resolved
+to shift his quarters. He found a piece of ground suitable for his
+purpose in Westminster Road, Lambeth. Little more than a century since
+it formed part of a Marsh, the name of which is still retained in the
+adjoining street; its principal productions being bulrushes and
+willows, which were haunted in certain seasons by snipe and waterfowl.
+An enterprising riding-master had erected some premises on a part of
+the marsh, which he used for a riding-school; but the speculation not
+answering, they were sold, and Henry Maudslay became the proprietor.
+Hither he removed his machinery from Margaret Street in 1810, adding
+fresh plant from time to time as it was required; and with the aid of
+his late excellent partner he built up the far-famed establishment of
+Maudslay, Field, and Co. There he went on improving his old tools and
+inventing new ones, as the necessity for them arose, until the original
+slide-lathes used for making the block-machinery became thrown into the
+shade by the comparatively gigantic machine-tools of the modern school.
+Yet the original lathes are still to be found in the collection of the
+firm in Westminster Road, and continue to do their daily quota of work
+with the same precision as they did when turned out of the hands of
+their inventor and maker some sixty years ago.
+
+It is unnecessary that we should describe in any great detail the
+further career of Henry Maudslay. The rest of his life was full of
+useful and profitable work to others as well as to himself. His
+business embraced the making of flour and saw mills, mint machinery,
+and steam-engines of all kinds. Before he left Margaret Street, in
+1807, he took out a patent for improvements in the steam-engine, by
+which he much simplified its parts, and secured greater directness of
+action. His new engine was called the Pyramidal, because of its form,
+and was the first move towards what are now called Direct-acting
+Engines, in which the lateral movement of the piston is communicated by
+connecting-rods to the rotatory movement of the crank-shaft. Mr.
+Nasmyth says of it, that "on account of its great simplicity and
+GET-AT-ABILITY of parts, its compactness and self-contained steadiness,
+this engine has been the parent of a vast progeny, all more or less
+marked by the distinguishing features of the original design, which is
+still in as high favour as ever." Mr. Maudslay also directed his
+attention in like manner to the improvement of the marine engine, which
+he made so simple and effective as to become in a great measure the
+type of its class; and it has held its ground almost unchanged for
+nearly thirty years. The 'Regent,' which was the first steamboat that
+plied between London and Margate, was fitted with engines by Maudslay
+in 1816; and it proved the forerunner of a vast number of marine
+engines, the manufacture of which soon became one of the most important
+branches of mechanical engineering.
+
+Another of Mr. Maudslay's inventions was his machine for punching
+boiler-plates, by which the production of ironwork of many kinds was
+greatly facilitated. This improvement originated in the contract which
+he held for some years for supplying the Royal Navy with iron plates
+for ships' tanks. The operations of shearing and punching had before
+been very imperfectly done by hand, with great expenditure of labour.
+To improve the style of the work and lessen the labour, Maudslay
+invented the machine now in general use, by which the holes punched in
+the iron plate are exactly equidistant, and the subsequent operation of
+riveting is greatly facilitated. One of the results of the improved
+method was the great saving which was at once effected in the cost of
+preparing the plates to receive the rivets, the price of which was
+reduced from seven shillings per tank to ninepence. He continued to
+devote himself to the last to the improvement of the lathe,--in his
+opinion the master-machine, the life and soul of engine-turning, of
+which the planing, screw-cutting, and other machines in common use, are
+but modifications. In one of the early lathes which he contrived and
+made, the mandrill was nine inches in diameter; it was driven by
+wheel-gearing like a crane motion, and adapted to different speeds.
+Some of his friends, on first looking at it, said he was going "too
+fast;" but he lived to see work projected on so large a scale as to
+prove that his conceptions were just, and that he had merely
+anticipated by a few years the mechanical progress of his time. His
+large removable bar-lathe was a highly important tool of the same kind.
+It was used to turn surfaces many feet in diameter. While it could be
+used for boring wheels, or the side-rods of marine engines, it could
+turn a roller or cylinder twice or three times the diameter of its own
+centres from the ground-level, and indeed could drive round work of any
+diameter that would clear the roof of the shop. This was therefore an
+almost universal tool, capable of very extensive uses. Indeed much of
+the work now executed by means of special tools, such as the planing or
+slotting machine, was then done in the lathe, which was used as a
+cutter-shaping machine, fitted with various appliances according to the
+work.
+
+Maudslay's love of accuracy also led him from an early period to study
+the subject of improved screw-cutting. The importance of this
+department of mechanism can scarcely be overrated, the solidity and
+permanency of most mechanical structures mainly depending on the
+employment of the screw, at the same time that the parts can be readily
+separated for renewal or repair. Any one can form an idea of the
+importance of the screw as an element in mechanical construction by
+examining say a steam-engine, and counting the number of screws
+employed in holding it together. Previous to the time at which the
+subject occupied the attention of our mechanic, the tools used for
+making screws were of the most rude and inexact kind. The screws were
+for the most part cut by hand: the small by filing, the larger by
+chipping and filing. In consequence of the great difficulty of making
+them, as few were used as possible; and cotters, cotterils, or
+forelocks, were employed instead. Screws, however, were to a certain
+extent indispensable; and each manufacturing establishment made them
+after their own fashion. There was an utter want of uniformity. No
+system was observed as to "pitch," i.e. the number of threads to the
+inch, nor was any rule followed as to the form of those threads. Every
+bolt and nut was sort of specialty in itself, and neither owed nor
+admitted of any community with its neighbours. To such an extent was
+this irregularity carried, that all bolts and their corresponding nuts
+had to be marked as belonging to each other; and any mixing of them
+together led to endless trouble, hopeless confusion, and enormous
+expense. Indeed none but those who lived in the comparatively early
+days of machine-manufacture can form an adequate idea of the annoyance
+occasioned by the want of system in this branch of detail, or duly
+appreciate the services rendered by Maudslay to mechanical engineering
+by the practical measures which he was among the first to introduce for
+its remedy. In his system of screw-cutting machinery, his taps and
+dies, and screw-tackle generally, he laid the foundations of all that
+has since been done in this essential branch of machine-construction,
+in which he was so ably followed up by several of the eminent mechanics
+brought up in his school, and more especially by Joseph Clement and
+Joseph Whitworth. One of his earliest self-acting screw lathes, moved
+by a guide-screw and wheels after the plan followed by the latter
+engineer, cut screws of large diameter and of any required pitch. As
+an illustration of its completeness and accuracy, we may mention that
+by its means a screw five feet in length, and two inches in diameter,
+was cut with fifty threads to the inch; the nut to fit on to it being
+twelve inches long, and containing six hundred threads. This screw was
+principally used for dividing scales for astronomical purposes; and by
+its means divisions were produced so minute that they could not be
+detected without the aid of a magnifier. The screw, which was sent for
+exhibition to the Society of Arts, is still carefully preserved amongst
+the specimens of Maudslay's handicraft at the Lambeth Works, and is a
+piece of delicate work which every skilled mechanic will thoroughly
+appreciate. Yet the tool by which this fine piece of turning was
+produced was not an exceptional tool, but was daily employed in the
+ordinary work of the manufactory.
+
+Like every good workman who takes pride in his craft, he kept his tools
+in first-rate order, clean, and tidily arranged, so that he could lay
+his hand upon the thing he wanted at once, without loss of time. They
+are still preserved in the state in which he left them, and strikingly
+illustrate his love of order, "nattiness," and dexterity. Mr. Nasmyth
+says of him that you could see the man's character in whatever work he
+turned out; and as the connoisseur in art will exclaim at sight of a
+picture, "That is Turner," or "That is Stansfield," detecting the hand
+of the master in it, so the experienced mechanician, at sight of one of
+his machines or engines, will be equally ready to exclaim, "That is
+Maudslay;" for the characteristic style of the master-mind is as clear
+to the experienced eye in the case of the finished machine as the
+touches of the artist's pencil are in the case of the finished picture.
+Every mechanical contrivance that became the subject of his study came
+forth from his hand and mind rearranged, simplified, and made new, with
+the impress of his individuality stamped upon it. He at once stripped
+the subject of all unnecessary complications; for he possessed a
+wonderful faculty of KNOWING WHAT TO DO WITHOUT--the result of his
+clearness of insight into mechanical adaptations, and the accurate and
+well-defined notions he had formed of the precise object to be
+accomplished. "Every member or separate machine in the system of
+block-machinery," says Mr. Nasmyth, "is full of Maudslay's presence;
+and in that machinery, as constructed by him, is to be found the parent
+of every engineering tool by the aid of which we are now achieving such
+great things in mechanical construction. To the tools of which
+Maudslay furnished the prototypes are we mainly indebted for the
+perfection of our textile machinery, our locomotives, our marine
+engines, and the various implements of art, of agriculture, and of war.
+If any one who can enter into the details of this subject will be at
+the pains to analyse, if I may so term it, the machinery of our modern
+engineering workshops, he will find in all of them the strongly-marked
+features of Maudslay's parent machine, the slide rest and slide
+system--whether it be a planing machine, a slotting machine, a
+slide-lathe, or any other of the wonderful tools which are now enabling
+us to accomplish so much in mechanism."
+
+One of the things in which Mr. Maudslay took just pride was in the
+excellence of his work. In designing and executing it, his main object
+was to do it in the best possible style and finish, altogether
+irrespective of the probable pecuniary results. This he regarded in
+the light of a duty he could not and would not evade, independent of
+its being a good investment for securing a future reputation; and the
+character which he thus obtained, although at times purchased at great
+cost, eventually justified the soundness of his views. As the eminent
+Mr. Penn, the head of the great engineering firm, is accustomed to say,
+"I cannot afford to turn out second-rate work," so Mr. Maudslay found
+both character and profit in striving after the highest excellence in
+his productions. He was particular even in the minutest details. Thus
+one of the points on which he insisted--apparently a trivial matter,
+but in reality of considerable importance in mechanical
+construction--was the avoidance of sharp interior angles in ironwork,
+whether wrought or cast; for he found that in such interior angles
+cracks were apt to originate; and when the article was a tool, the
+sharp angle was less pleasant to the hand as well as to the eye. In
+the application of his favourite round or hollow corner system--as, for
+instance, in the case of the points of junction of the arms of a wheel
+with its centre and rim--he used to illustrate its superiority by
+holding up his hand and pointing out the nice rounded hollow at the
+junction of the fingers, or by referring to the junction of the
+branches to the stem of a tree. Hence he made a point of having all
+the angles of his machine framework nicely rounded off on their
+exterior, and carefully hollowed in their interior angles. In forging
+such articles he would so shape his metal before bending that the
+result should be the right hollow or rounded corner when bent; the
+anticipated external angle falling into its proper place when the bar
+so shaped was brought to its ultimate form. In all such matters of
+detail he was greatly assisted by his early dexterity as a blacksmith;
+and he used to say that to be a good smith you must be able to SEE in
+the bar of iron the object proposed to be got out of it by the hammer
+or the tool, just as the sculptor is supposed to see in the block of
+stone the statue which he proposes to bring forth from it by his mind
+and his chisel.
+
+Mr. Maudslay did not allow himself to forget his skill in the use of
+the hammer, and to the last he took pleasure in handling it, sometimes
+in the way of business, and often through sheer love of his art. Mr
+Nasmyth says, "It was one of my duties, while acting as assistant in
+his beautiful little workshop, to keep up a stock of handy bars of lead
+which he had placed on a shelf under his work-bench, which was of thick
+slate for the more ready making of his usual illustrative sketches of
+machinery in chalk. His love of iron-forging led him to take delight
+in forging the models of work to be ultimately done in iron; and cold
+lead being of about the same malleability as red-hot iron, furnished a
+convenient material for illustrating the method to be adopted with the
+large work. I well remember the smile of satisfaction that lit up his
+honest face when he met with a good excuse for 'having a go at' one of
+the bars of lead with hammer and anvil as if it were a bar of iron; and
+how, with a few dexterous strokes, punchings of holes, and rounded
+notches, he would give the rough bar or block its desired form. He
+always aimed at working it out of the solid as much as possible, so as
+to avoid the risk of any concealed defect, to which ironwork built up
+of welded parts is so liable; and when he had thus cleverly finished
+his model, he used forthwith to send for the foreman of smiths, and
+show him how he was to instruct his men as to the proper forging of the
+desired object." One of Mr. Maudslay's old workmen, when informing us
+of the skilful manner in which he handled the file, said, "It was a
+pleasure to see him handle a tool of any kind, but he was QUITE
+SPLENDID with an eighteen-inch file!" The vice at which he worked was
+constructed by himself, and it was perfect of its kind. It could be
+turned round to any position on the bench; the jaws would turn from the
+horizontal to the perpendicular or any other position--upside-down if
+necessary--and they would open twelve inches parallel.
+
+Mr. Nasmyth furnishes the following further recollections of Mr.
+Maudslay, which will serve in some measure to illustrate his personal
+character. "Henry Maudslay," he says, "lived in the days of
+snuff-taking, which unhappily, as I think, has given way to the
+cigar-smoking system. He enjoyed his occasional pinch very much. It
+generally preceded the giving out of a new notion or suggestion for an
+improvement or alteration of some job in hand. As with most of those
+who enjoy their pinch, about three times as much was taken between the
+fingers as was utilized by the nose, and the consequence was that a
+large unconsumed surplus collected in the folds of the master's
+waistcoat as he sat working at his bench. Sometimes a file, or a tool,
+or some small piece of work would drop, and then it was my duty to go
+down on my knees and fetch it up. On such occasions, while waiting for
+the article, he would take the opportunity of pulling down his
+waistcoat front, which had become disarranged by his energetic working
+at the bench; and many a time have I come up with the dropped article,
+half-blinded by the snuff jerked into my eyes from off his waistcoat
+front.
+
+"All the while he was at work he would be narrating some incident in
+his past life, or describing the progress of some new and important
+undertaking, in illustrating which he would use the bit of chalk ready
+to his hand upon the slate bench before him, which was thus in almost
+constant use. One of the pleasures he indulged in while he sat at work
+was Music, of which he was very fond,--more particularly of melodies
+and airs which took a lasting hold on his mind. Hence he was never
+without an assortment of musical boxes, some of which were of a large
+size. One of these he would set agoing on his library table, which was
+next to his workshop, and with the door kept open, he was thus enabled
+to enjoy the music while he sat working at his bench. Intimate friends
+would frequently call upon him and sit by the hour, but though talking
+all the while he never dropped his work, but continued employed on it
+with as much zeal as if he were only beginning life. His old friend
+Sir Samuel Bentham was a frequent caller in this way, as well as Sir
+Isambard Brunel while occupied with his Thames Tunnel works[15] and Mr.
+Chantrey, who was accustomed to consult him about the casting of his
+bronze statuary. Mr. Barton of the Royal Mint, and Mr. Donkin the
+engineer, with whom Mr. Barton was associated in ascertaining and
+devising a correct system of dividing the Standard Yard, and many
+others, had like audience of Mr. Maudslay in his little workshop, for
+friendly converse, for advice, or on affairs of business.
+
+"It was a special and constant practice with him on a workman's
+holiday, or on a Sunday morning, to take a walk through his workshops
+when all was quiet, and then and there examine the various jobs in
+hand. On such occasions he carried with him a piece of chalk, with
+which, in a neat and very legible hand, he would record his remarks in
+the most pithy and sometimes caustic terms. Any evidence of want of
+correctness in setting things square, or in 'flat filing,' which he
+held in high esteem, or untidiness in not sweeping down the bench and
+laying the tools in order, was sure to have a record in chalk made on
+the spot. If it was a mild case, the reproof was recorded in gentle
+terms, simply to show that the master's eye was on the workman; but
+where the case deserved hearty approbation or required equally hearty
+reproof, the words employed were few, but went straight to the mark.
+These chalk jottings on the bench were held in the highest respect by
+the workmen themselves, whether they conveyed praise or blame, as they
+were sure to be deserved; and when the men next assembled, it soon
+became known all over the shop who had received the honour or otherwise
+of one of the master's bench memoranda in chalk."
+
+The vigilant, the critical, and yet withal the generous eye of the
+master being over all his workmen, it will readily be understood how
+Maudslay's works came to be regarded as a first-class school for
+mechanical engineers. Every one felt that the quality of his
+workmanship was fully understood; and, if he had the right stuff in
+him, and was determined to advance, that his progress in skill would be
+thoroughly appreciated. It is scarcely necessary to point out how this
+feeling, pervading the establishment, must have operated, not only in
+maintaining the quality of the work, but in improving the character of
+the workmen. The results were felt in the increased practical ability
+of a large number of artisans, some of whom subsequently rose to the
+highest distinction. Indeed it may be said that what Oxford and
+Cambridge are in letters, workshops such as Maudslay's and Penn's are
+in mechanics. Nor can Oxford and Cambridge men be prouder of the
+connection with their respective colleges than mechanics such as
+Whitworth, Nasmyth, Roberts, Muir, and Lewis, are of their connection
+with the school of Maudslay. For all these distinguished engineers at
+one time or another formed part of his working staff, and were trained
+to the exercise of their special abilities under his own eye. The
+result has been a development of mechanical ability the like of which
+perhaps is not to be found in any age or country.
+
+Although Mr. Maudslay was an unceasing inventor, he troubled himself
+very little about patenting his inventions. He considered that the
+superiority of his tools and the excellence of his work were his surest
+protection. Yet he had sometimes the annoyance of being threatened
+with actions by persons who had patented the inventions which he
+himself had made.[16] He was much beset by inventors, sometimes sadly
+out at elbows, but always with a boundless fortune looming before them.
+To such as applied to him for advice in a frank and candid spirit, he
+did not hesitate to speak freely, and communicate the results of his
+great experience in the most liberal manner; and to poor and deserving
+men of this class he was often found as ready to help them with his
+purse as with his still more valuable advice. He had a singular way of
+estimating the abilities of those who thus called upon him about their
+projects. The highest order of man was marked in his own mind at 100
+degrees; and by this ideal standard he measured others, setting them
+down at 90 degrees, 80 degrees, and so on. A very first-rate man he
+would set down at 95 degrees, but men of this rank were exceedingly
+rare. After an interview with one of the applicants to him for advice,
+he would say to his pupil Nasmyth, "Jem, I think that man may be set
+down at 45 degrees, but he might be WORKED UP TO 60 degrees"--a common
+enough way of speaking of the working of a steam-engine, but a somewhat
+novel though by no means an inexpressive method of estimating the
+powers of an individual.
+
+But while he had much toleration for modest and meritorious inventors,
+he had a great dislike for secret-mongers,--schemers of the close,
+cunning sort,--and usually made short work of them. He had an almost
+equal aversion for what he called the "fiddle-faddle inventors," with
+their omnibus patents, into which they packed every possible thing that
+their noddles could imagine. "Only once or twice in a century," said
+he, "does a great inventor appear, and yet here we have a set of
+fellows each taking out as many patents as would fill a cart,--some of
+them embodying not a single original idea, but including in their
+specifications all manner of modifications of well-known processes, as
+well as anticipating the arrangements which may become practicable in
+the progress of mechanical improvement." Many of these "patents" he
+regarded as mere pit-falls to catch the unwary; and he spoke of such
+"inventors" as the pests of the profession.
+
+The personal appearance of Henry Maudslay was in correspondence with
+his character. He was of a commanding presence, for he stood full six
+feet two inches in height, a massive and portly man. His face was
+round, full, and lit up with good humour. A fine, large, and square
+forehead, of the grand constructive order, dominated over all, and his
+bright keen eye gave energy and life to his countenance. He was
+thoroughly "jolly" and good-natured, yet full of force and character.
+It was a positive delight to hear his cheerful, ringing laugh. He was
+cordial in manner, and his frankness set everybody at their ease who
+had occasion to meet him, even for the first time. No one could be
+more faithful and consistent in his friendships, nor more firm in the
+hour of adversity. In fine, Henry Maudslay was, as described by his
+friend Mr. Nasmyth, the very beau ideal of an honest, upright,
+straight-forward, hard-working, intelligent Englishman.
+
+A severe cold which he caught on his way home from one of his visits to
+France, was the cause of his death, which occurred on the 14th of
+February, 1831. The void which his decease caused was long and deeply
+felt, not only by his family and his large circle of friends, but by
+his workmen, who admired him for his industrial skill, and loved him
+because of his invariably manly, generous, and upright conduct towards
+them. He directed that he should be buried in Woolwich
+parish-churchyard, where a cast-iron tomb, made to his own design, was
+erected over his remains. He had ever a warm heart for Woolwich, where
+he had been born and brought up. He often returned to it, sometimes to
+carry his mother a share of his week's wages while she lived, and
+afterwards to refresh himself with a sight of the neighbourhood with
+which he had been so familiar when a boy. He liked its green common,
+with the soldiers about it; Shooter's Hill, with its out-look over Kent
+and down the valley of the Thames; the river busy with shipping, and
+the royal craft loading and unloading their armaments at the dockyard
+wharves. He liked the clangour of the Arsenal smithy where he had
+first learned his art, and all the busy industry of the place. It was
+natural, therefore, that, being proud of his early connection with
+Woolwich, he should wish to lie there; and Woolwich, on its part, let
+us add, has equal reason to be proud of Henry Maudslay.
+
+
+
+[1] The words Bramah uses in describing this part of his patent of 1795
+are these--"The piston must be made perfectly watertight by leather or
+other materials, as used in pump-making." He elsewhere speaks of the
+piston-rod "working through the stuffing-box." But in practice, as we
+have above shown, these methods were found to be altogether inefficient.
+
+[2] In this lathe the slide rest and frame were moveable along the
+traversing-bar, according to the length of the work, and could be
+placed in any position and secured by a handle and screw underneath.
+The Rest, however, afterwards underwent many important modifications;
+but the principle of the whole machine was there.
+
+[3] PLUMIER, L'Art de Tourner, Paris, 1754, p. 155.
+
+[4] Machines approuvees par l' Academie, 1719.
+
+[5] Machines approuvees par l' Academie, 1733.
+
+[6] L'Art de Tourner en perfection, 49.
+
+[7] It consisted of two parallel bars of wood or iron connected
+together at both extremities by bolts or keys of sufficient width to
+admit of the article required to be planed. A moveable frame was
+placed between the two bars, motion being given to it by a long
+cylindrical thread acting on any tool put into the sliding frame, and,
+consequently, causing the screw, by means of a handle at each end of
+it, to push or draw the point or cutting-edge of the tool either
+way.--Mr. George Rennie's Preface to Buchanan's Practical Essays on
+Mill Work, 3rd Ed. xli.
+
+[8] Turning was a favourite amusement amongst the French nobles of last
+century, many of whom acquired great dexterity in the art, which they
+turned to account when compelled to emigrate at the Revolution. Louis
+XVI. himself was a very good locksmith, and could have earned a fair
+living at the trade. Our own George III. was a good turner, and was
+learned in wheels and treadles, chucks and chisels. Henry Mayhew says,
+on the authority of an old working turner, that, with average industry,
+the King might have made from 40s. to 50s. a-week as a hard wood and
+ivory turner. Lord John Hay, though one-armed, was an adept at the
+latter, and Lord Gray was another capital turner. Indeed the late Mr.
+Holtzapffel's elaborately illustrated treatise was written quite as
+much for amateurs as for working mechanics. Among other noble
+handicraftsmen we may mention the late Lord Douglas, who cultivated
+bookbinding. Lord Traquair's fancy was cutlery, and one could not come
+to him in a more welcome fashion than with a pair of old razors to set
+up.
+
+[9] Professor WILLIS, Lectures on the Results of the Great Exhibition
+of 1851, 1st series, p. 306.
+
+[10] Address delivered before the British Association at Manchester in
+1861; and Useful Information for Engineers, 1st series, p. 22.
+
+[11] Life of Sir Samuel Bentham, 97-8.
+
+[12] Remarks on the Introduction of the Slide Principle in Tools and
+Machines employed in the Production of Machinery, in Buchanan's
+Practical Essays on Mill Work and other Machinery. 3rd ed. p. 397.
+
+[13] So far as words and drawings can serve to describe the
+block-making machinery, it will be found very ably described by Mr.
+Farey in his article under this head in Rees's Cyclopaedia, and by Dr.
+Brewster in the Edinburgh Cyclopaedia. A very good account will also
+be found in Tomlinson's Cyclopaedia of the Useful Arts, Art. "Block."
+
+[14] The remuneration paid to Mr. Brunel for his share in the invention
+was only one year's savings, which, however, were estimated by Sir
+Samuel Bentham at 17,663L.; besides which a grant of 5000L. was
+afterwards made to Brunel when labouring under pecuniary difficulties.
+But the ANNUAL saving to the nation by the adoption of the block-making
+machinery was probably more than the entire sum paid to the engineer.
+Brunel afterwards invented other wood-working machinery, but none to
+compare in merit and excellence with the above, For further particulars
+of his career, see BEAMISH'S Memoirs of Sir Marc Isambard Brunel, C.E.
+London. 1862.
+
+[15] Among the last works executed by the firm during Mr. Maudslay's
+lifetime was the famous Shield employed by his friend Brunel in
+carrying forward the excavation of the Thames Tunnel. He also supplied
+the pumping-engines for the same great work, the completion of which he
+did not live to see.
+
+[16] His principal patent's were--two, taken out in 1805 and 1808,
+while in Margaret Street, for printing calicoes (Nos. 2872 and 3117);
+one taken out in 1806, in conjunction with Mr. Donkin, for lifting
+heavy weights (2948); one taken out in 1807, while still in Margaret
+Street, for improvements in the steam-engine, reducing its parts and
+rendering it more compact and portable (3050); another, taken out in
+conjunction with Robert Dickinson in 1812, for sweetening water and
+other liquids (3538); and, lastly, a patent taken out in conjunction
+with Joshua Field in 1824 for preventing concentration of brine in
+boilers (5021).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+JOSEPH CLEMENT.
+
+"It is almost impossible to over-estimate the importance of these
+inventions. The Greeks would have elevated their authors among the
+gods; nor will the enlightened judgment of modern times deny them the
+place among their fellow-men which is so undeniably their
+due."--Edinburgh Review.
+
+
+That Skill in mechanical contrivance is a matter of education and
+training as well as of inborn faculty, is clear from the fact of so
+many of our distinguished mechanics undergoing the same kind of
+practical discipline, and perhaps still more so from the circumstance
+of so many of them passing through the same workshops. Thus Maudslay
+and Clement were trained in the workshops of Bramah; and Roberts,
+Whitworth, Nasmyth, and others, were trained in those of Maudslay.
+
+Joseph Clement was born at Great Ashby in Westmoreland, in the year
+1779. His father was a hand-loom weaver, and a man of remarkable
+culture considering his humble station in life. He was an ardent
+student of natural history, and possessed a much more complete
+knowledge of several sub-branches of that science than was to have been
+looked for in a common working-man. One of the departments which he
+specially studied was Entomology. In his leisure hours he was
+accustomed to traverse the country searching the hedge-bottoms for
+beetles and other insects, of which he formed a remarkably complete
+collection; and the capture of a rare specimen was quite an event in
+his life. In order more deliberately to study the habits of the bee
+tribe, he had a number of hives constructed for the purpose of enabling
+him to watch their proceedings without leaving his work; and the
+pursuit was a source of the greatest pleasure to him. He was a lover
+of all dumb creatures; his cottage was haunted by birds which flew in
+and out at his door, and some of them became so tame as to hop up to
+him and feed out of his hand. "Old Clement" was also a bit of a
+mechanic, and such of his leisure moments as he did not devote to
+insect-hunting, were employed in working a lathe of his own
+construction, which he used to turn his bobbing on, and also in various
+kinds of amateur mechanics.
+
+His boy Joseph, like other poor men's sons, was early set to work. He
+received very little education, and learnt only the merest rudiments of
+reading and writing at the village school. The rest of his education
+he gave to himself as he grew older. His father needed his help at the
+loom, where he worked with him for some years; but, as handloom weaving
+was gradually being driven out by improved mechanism, the father
+prudently resolved to put his son to a better trade. They have a
+saying in Cumberland that when the bairns reach a certain age, they are
+thrown on to the house-rigg, and that those who stick on are made
+thatchers of, while those who fall off are sent to St. Bees to be made
+parsons of. Joseph must have been one of those that stuck on--at all
+events his father decided to make him a thatcher, afterwards a slater,
+and he worked at that trade for five years, between eighteen and
+twenty-three.
+
+The son, like the father, had a strong liking for mechanics, and as the
+slating trade did not keep him in regular employment, especially in
+winter time, he had plenty of opportunity for following the bent of his
+inclinations. He made a friend of the village blacksmith, whose smithy
+he was accustomed to frequent, and there he learned to work at the
+forge, to handle the hammer and file, and in a short time to shoe
+horses with considerable expertness. A cousin of his named Farer, a
+clock and watchmaker by trade, having returned to the village from
+London, brought with him some books on mechanics, which he lent to
+Joseph to read; and they kindled in him an ardent desire to be a
+mechanic instead of a slater. He nevertheless continued to maintain
+himself by the latter trade for some time longer, until his skill had
+grown; and, by way of cultivating it, he determined, with the aid of
+his friend the village blacksmith, to make a turning-lathe. The two
+set to work, and the result was the production of an article in every
+way superior to that made by Clement's father, which was accordingly
+displaced to make room for the new machine. It was found to work very
+satisfactorily, and by its means Joseph proceeded to turn fifes,
+flutes, clarinets, and hautboys; for to his other accomplishments he
+joined that of music, and could play upon the instruments that he made.
+One of his most ambitious efforts was the making of a pair of
+Northumberland bagpipes, which he finished to his satisfaction, and
+performed upon to the great delight of the villagers. To assist his
+father in his entomological studies, he even contrived, with the aid of
+the descriptions given in the books borrowed from his cousin the
+watchmaker, to make for him a microscope, from which he proceeded to
+make a reflecting telescope, which proved a very good instrument. At
+this early period (1804) he also seems to have directed his attention
+to screw-making--a branch of mechanics in which he afterwards became
+famous; and he proceeded to make a pair of very satisfactory
+die-stocks, though it is said that he had not before seen or even heard
+of such a contrivance for making screws.
+
+So clever a workman was not likely to remain long a village slater.
+Although the ingenious pieces of work which he turned out by his lathe
+did not bring him in much money, he liked the occupation so much better
+than slating that he was gradually giving up that trade. His father
+urged him to stick to slating as "a safe thing;" but his own mind was
+in favour of following his instinct to be a mechanic; and at length he
+determined to leave his village and seek work in a new line. He
+succeeded in finding employment in a small factory at Kirby Stephen, a
+town some thirteen miles from Great Ashby, where he worked at making
+power-looms. From an old statement of account against his employer
+which we have seen, in his own handwriting, dated the 6th September,
+1805, it appears that his earnings at such work as "fitting the first
+set of iron loames," "fitting up shittles," and "making moddles," were
+3s. 6d. a day; and he must, during the same time, have lived with his
+employer, who charged him as a set-off "14 weaks bord at 8s. per weak."
+He afterwards seems to have worked at piece-work in partnership with
+one Andrew Gamble supplying the materials as well as the workmanship
+for the looms and shuttles. His employer, Mr. George Dickinson, also
+seems to have bought his reflecting telescope from him for the sum of
+12L.
+
+From Kirby Stephen Clement removed to Carlisle, where he was employed
+by Forster and Sons during the next two years at the same description
+of work; and he conducted himself, according; to their certificate on
+his leaving their employment to proceed to Glasgow in 1807, "with great
+sobriety and industry, entirely to their satisfaction." While working
+at Glasgow as a turner, he took lessons in drawing from Peter
+Nicholson, the well-known writer on carpentry--a highly ingenious man.
+Nicholson happened to call at the shop at which Clement worked in order
+to make a drawing of a power-loom; and Clement's expressions of
+admiration at his expertness were so enthusiastic, that Nicholson,
+pleased with the youth's praise, asked if he could be of service to him
+in any way. Emboldened by the offer, Clement requested, as the
+greatest favour he could confer upon him, to have the loan of the
+drawing he had just made, in order that he might copy it. The request
+was at once complied with; and Clement, though very poor at the time,
+and scarcely able to buy candle for the long winter evenings, sat up
+late every night until he had finished it. Though the first drawing he
+had ever made, he handed it back to Nicholson instead of the original,
+and at first the draughtsman did not recognise that the drawing was not
+his own. When Clement told him that it was only the copy, Nicholson's
+brief but emphatic praise was--"Young man, YOU'LL DO!" Proud to have
+such a pupil, Nicholson generously offered to give him gratuitous
+lessons in drawing, which were thankfully accepted; and Clement,
+working at nights with great ardour, soon made rapid progress, and
+became an expert draughtsman.
+
+Trade being very slack in Glasgow at the time, Clement, after about a
+year's stay in the place, accepted a situation with Messrs. Leys,
+Masson, and Co., of Aberdeen, with whom he began at a guinea and a half
+a week, from which he gradually rose to two guineas, and ultimately to
+three guineas. His principal work consisted in designing and making
+power-looms for his employers, and fitting them up in different parts
+of the country. He continued to devote himself to the study of
+practical mechanics, and made many improvements in the tools with which
+he worked. While at Glasgow he had made an improved pair of die-stocks
+for screws; and, at Aberdeen, he made a turning-lathe with a sliding
+mandrill and guide-screws, for cutting screws, furnished also with the
+means for correcting guide-screws. In the same machine he introduced a
+small slide rest, into which he fixed the tool for cutting the
+screws,--having never before seen a slide rest, though it is very
+probable he may have heard of what Maudslay had already done in the
+same direction. Clement continued during this period of his life an
+industrious self-cultivator, occupying most of his spare hours in
+mechanical and landscape drawing, and in various studies. Among the
+papers left behind him we find a ticket to a course of instruction on
+Natural Philosophy given by Professor Copland in the Marischal College
+at Aberdeen, which Clement attended in the session of 1812-13; and we
+do not doubt that our mechanic was among the most diligent of his
+pupils. Towards the end of 1813, after saving about 100L. out of his
+wages, Clement resolved to proceed to London for the purpose of
+improving himself in his trade and pushing his way in the world. The
+coach by which he travelled set him down in Snow Hill, Holborn; and his
+first thought was of finding work. He had no friend in town to consult
+on the matter, so he made inquiry of the coach-guard whether he knew of
+any person in the mechanical line in that neighbourhood. The guard
+said, "Yes; there was Alexander Galloway's show shop, just round the
+corner, and he employed a large number of hands." Running round the
+corner, Clement looked in at Galloway's window, through which he saw
+some lathes and other articles used in machine shops. Next morning he
+called upon the owner of the shop to ask employment. "What can you
+do?" asked Galloway. "I can work at the forge," said Clement.
+"Anything else?" "I can turn." "What else?" "I can draw." "What!"
+said Galloway, "can you draw? Then I will engage you." A man who could
+draw or work to a drawing in those days was regarded as a superior sort
+of mechanic. Though Galloway was one of the leading tradesmen of his
+time, and had excellent opportunities for advancement, he missed them
+all. As Clement afterwards said of him, "He was only a mouthing
+common-council man, the height of whose ambition was to be an
+alderman;" and, like most corporation celebrities, he held a low rank
+in his own business. He very rarely went into his workshops to
+superintend or direct his workmen, leaving this to his foremen--a
+sufficient indication of the causes of his failure as a mechanic.[1]
+
+On entering Galloway's shop, Clement was first employed in working at
+the lathe; but finding the tools so bad that it was impossible to
+execute satisfactory work with them, he at once went to the forge, and
+began making a new set of tools for himself. The other men, to whom
+such a proceeding was entirely new, came round him to observe his
+operations, and they were much struck with his manual dexterity. The
+tools made, he proceeded to use them, displaying what seemed to the
+other workmen an unusual degree of energy and intelligence; and some of
+the old hands did not hesitate already to pronounce Clement to be the
+best mechanic in the shop. When Saturday night came round, the other
+men were curious to know what wages Galloway would allow the new hand;
+and when he had been paid, they asked him. "A guinea," was the reply.
+"A guinea! Why, you are worth two if you are worth a shilling," said
+an old man who came out of the rank--an excellent mechanic, who, though
+comparatively worthless through his devotion to drink, knew Clement's
+money value to his employer better than any man there; and he added,
+"Wait for a week or two, and if you are not better paid than this, I
+can tell you of a master who will give you a fairer wage." Several
+Saturdays came round, but no advance was made on the guinea a week; and
+then the old workman recommended Clement to offer himself to Bramah at
+Pimlico, who was always on the look out for first-rate mechanics.
+
+Clement acted on the advice, and took with him some of his drawings, at
+sight of which Bramah immediately engaged him for a month; and at the
+end of that time he had given so much satisfaction, that it was agreed
+he should continue for three months longer at two guineas a week.
+Clement was placed in charge of the tools of the shop, and he showed
+himself so apt at introducing improvements in them, as well as in
+organizing the work with a view to despatch and economy, that at the
+end of the term Bramah made him a handsome present, adding, "if I had
+secured your services five years since, I would now have been a richer
+man by many thousands of pounds." A formal agreement for a term of
+five years was then entered into between Bramah and Clement, dated the
+1st of April, 1814, by which the latter undertook to fill the office of
+chief-draughtsman and superintendent of the Pimlico Works, in
+consideration of a salary of three guineas a week, with an advance of
+four shillings a week in each succeeding year of the engagement. This
+arrangement proved of mutual advantage to both. Clement devoted
+himself with increased zeal to the improvement of the mechanical
+arrangements of the concern, exhibiting his ingenuity in many ways, and
+taking; a genuine pride in upholding the character of his master for
+turning out first-class work.
+
+On the death of Bramah, his sons returned from college and entered into
+possession of the business. They found Clement the ruling mind there
+and grew jealous of him to such an extent that his situation became
+uncomfortable; and by mutual consent he was allowed to leave before the
+expiry of his term of agreement. He had no difficulty in finding
+employment; and was at once taken on as chief draughtsman at Maudslay
+and Field's where he was of much assistance in proportioning the early
+marine engines, for the manufacture of which that firm were becoming
+celebrated. After a short time, he became desirous of beginning
+business on his own account as a mechanical engineer. He was
+encouraged to do this by the Duke of Northumberland, who, being a great
+lover of mechanics and himself a capital turner, used often to visit
+Maudslay's, and thus became acquainted with Clement, whose expertness
+as a draughtsman and mechanic he greatly admired. Being a man of
+frugal and sober habits, always keeping his expenditure very
+considerably within his income, Clement had been enabled to accumulate
+about 500L., which he thought would be enough for his purpose; and he
+accordingly proceeded, in 1817, to take a small workshop in Prospect
+Place, Newington Butts, where he began business as a mechanical
+draughtsman and manufacturer of small machinery requiring first-class
+workmanship.
+
+From the time when he took his first gratuitous lessons in drawing from
+Peter Nicholson, at Glasgow, in 1807, he had been steadily improving in
+this art, the knowledge of which is indispensable to whoever aspires to
+eminence as a mechanical engineer,--until by general consent Clement
+was confessed to stand unrivalled as a draughtsman. Some of the very
+best drawings contained in the Transactions of the Society of Arts,
+from the year 1817 downwards,--especially those requiring the
+delineation of any unusually elaborate piece of machinery,--proceeded
+from the hand of Clement. In some of these, he reached a degree of
+truth in mechanical perspective which has never been surpassed.[2] To
+facilitate his labours, he invented an extremely ingenious instrument,
+by means of which ellipses of all proportions, as well as circles and
+right lines, might be geometrically drawn on paper or on copper. He
+took his idea of this instrument from the trammel used by carpenters
+for drawing imperfect ellipses; and when he had succeeded in avoiding
+the crossing of the points, he proceeded to invent the straight-line
+motion. For this invention the Society of Arts awarded him their gold
+medal in 1818. Some years later, he submitted to the same Society his
+invention of a stand for drawings of large size. He had experienced
+considerable difficulty in making such drawings, and with his
+accustomed readiness to overcome obstacles, he forthwith set to work
+and brought out his new drawing-table.
+
+As with many other original-minded mechanics, invention became a habit
+with him, and by study and labour he rarely failed in attaining the
+object which he had bent his mind upon accomplishing. Indeed, nothing
+pleased him better than to have what he called "a tough job;" as it
+stimulated his inventive faculty, in the exercise of which he took the
+highest pleasure. Hence mechanical schemers of all kinds were
+accustomed to resort to Clement for help when they had found an idea
+which they desired to embody in a machine. If there was any value in
+their idea, none could be more ready than he to recognise its merit,
+and to work it into shape; but if worthless, he spoke out his mind at
+once, dissuading the projector from wasting upon it further labour or
+expense.
+
+One of the important branches of practical mechanics to which Clement
+continued through life to devote himself, was the improvement of
+self-acting tools, more especially of the slide-lathe. He introduced
+various improvements in its construction and arrangement, until in his
+hands it became as nearly perfect as it was possible to be. In 1818,
+he furnished the lathe with a slide rest twenty-two inches long, for
+the purpose of cutting screws, provided with the means of
+self-correction; and some years later, in 1827, the Society of Arts
+awarded him their gold Isis medal for his improved turning-lathe, which
+embodied many ingenious contrivances calculated to increase its
+precision and accuracy in large surface-turning.
+
+The beautiful arrangements embodied in Mr. Clement's improved lathe can
+with difficulty be described in words; but its ingenuity may be
+inferred from a brief statement of the defects which it was invented to
+remedy, and which it successfully overcame. When the mandrill of a
+lathe, having a metal plate fixed to it, turns round with a uniform
+motion, and the slide rest which carries the cutter is moving from the
+circumference of the work to the centre, it will be obvious that the
+quantity of metal passing over the edge of the cutter at each
+revolution, and therefore at equal intervals of time, is continually
+diminishing, in exact proportion to the spiral line described by the
+cutter on the face of the work. But in turning metal plates it is
+found very in expedient to increase the speed of the work beyond a
+certain quantity; for when this happens, and the tool passes the work
+at too great a velocity, it heats, softens, and is ground away, the
+edge of the cutter becomes dull, and the surface of the plate is
+indented and burnished, instead of being turned. Hence loss of time on
+the part of the workman, and diminished work on the part of the tool,
+results which, considering the wages of the one and the capital
+expended on the construction of the other, are of no small importance;
+for the prime objects of all improvement of tools are, economy of time
+and economy of capital--to minimize labour and cost, and maximize
+result.
+
+The defect to which we have referred was almost the only remaining
+imperfection in the lathe, and Mr. Clement overcame it by making the
+machine self-regulating; so that, whatever might be the situation of
+the cutter, equal quantities of metal should pass over it in equal
+times,--the speed at the centre not exceeding that suited to the work
+at the circumference,--while the workman was enabled to convert the
+varying rate of the mandrill into a uniform one whenever he chose.
+Thus the expedients of wheels, riggers, and drums, of different
+diameters, by which it had been endeavoured to alter the speed of the
+lathe-mandrill, according to the hardness of the metal and the diameter
+of the thing to be turned, were effectually disposed of. These, though
+answering very well where cylinders of equal diameter had to be bored,
+and a uniform motion was all that was required, were found very
+inefficient where a Plane surface had to be turned; and it was in such
+cases that Mr. Clement's lathe was found so valuable. By its means
+surfaces of unrivalled correctness were produced, and the slide-lathe,
+so improved, became recognised and adopted as the most accurate and
+extensively applicable of all machine-tools.
+
+The year after Mr. Clement brought out his improved turning-lathe, he
+added to it his self-adjusting double driving centre-chuck, for which
+the Society of Arts awarded him their silver medal in 1828. In
+introducing this invention to the notice of the Society, Mr. Clement
+said, "Although I have been in the habit of turning and making
+turning-lathes and other machinery for upwards of thirty-five years,
+and have examined the best turning-lathes in the principal
+manufactories throughout Great Britain, I find it universally regretted
+by all practical men that they cannot turn anything perfectly true
+between the centres of the lathe." It was found by experience, that
+there was a degree of eccentricity, and consequently of imperfection,
+in the figure of any long cylinder turned while suspended between the
+centres of the lathe, and made to revolve by the action of a single
+driver. Under such circumstances the pressure of the tool tended to
+force the work out of the right line and to distribute the strain
+between the driver and the adjacent centre, so that one end of the
+cylinder became eccentric with respect to the other. By Mr. Clement's
+invention of the two-armed driver, which was self-adjusting, the strain
+was taken from the centre and divided between the two arms, which being
+equidistant from the centre, effectually corrected all eccentricity in
+the work. This invention was found of great importance in ensuring the
+true turning of large machinery, which before had been found a matter
+of considerable difficulty.
+
+In the same year (1828) Mr. Clement began the making of fluted taps and
+dies, and he established a mechanical practice with reference to the
+pitch of the screw, which proved of the greatest importance in the
+economics of manufacture. Before his time, each mechanical engineer
+adopted a thread of his own; so that when a piece of work came under
+repair, the screw-hob had usually to be drilled out, and a new thread
+was introduced according to the usage which prevailed in the shop in
+which the work was executed. Mr. Clement saw a great waste of labour
+in this practice, and he promulgated the idea that every screw of a
+particular length ought to be furnished with its appointed number of
+threads of a settled pitch. Taking the inch as the basis of his
+calculations, he determined the number of threads in each case; and the
+practice thus initiated by him, recommended as it was by convenience
+and economy, was very shortly adopted throughout the trade. It may be
+mentioned that one of Clement's ablest journeymen, Mr. Whitworth, has,
+since his time, been mainly instrumental in establishing the settled
+practice; and Whitworth's thread (initiated by Clement) has become
+recognised throughout the mechanical world. To carry out his idea,
+Clement invented his screw-engine lathe, with gearing, mandrill, and
+sliding-table wheel-work, by means of which he first cut the inside
+screw-tools from the left-handed hobs--the reverse mode having before
+been adopted,--while in shaping machines he was the first to use the
+revolving cutter attached to the slide rest. Then, in 1828, he fluted
+the taps for the first time with a revolving cutter,--other makers
+having up to that time only notched them. Among his other inventions
+in screws may be mentioned his headless tap, which, according to Mr.
+Nasmyth, is so valuable an invention, that, "if he had done nothing
+else, it ought to immortalize him among mechanics. It passed right
+through the hole to be tapped, and was thus enabled to do the duty of
+three ordinary screws." By these improvements much greater precision
+was secured in the manufacture of tools and machinery, accompanied by a
+greatly reduced cost of production; the results of which are felt to
+this day.
+
+Another of Mr. Clement's ingenious inventions was his Planing Machine,
+by means of which metal plates of large dimensions were planed with
+perfect truth and finished with beautiful accuracy. There is perhaps
+scarcely a machine about which there has been more controversy than
+this; and we do not pretend to be able to determine the respective
+merits of the many able mechanics who have had a hand in its invention.
+It is exceedingly probable that others besides Clement worked out the
+problem in their own way, by independent methods; and this is confirmed
+by the circumstance that though the results achieved by the respective
+inventors were the same, the methods employed by them were in many
+respects different. As regards Clement, we find that previous to the
+year 1820 he had a machine in regular use for planing the triangular
+bars of lathes and the sides of weaving-looms. This instrument was
+found so useful and so economical in its working, that Clement
+proceeded to elaborate a planing machine of a more complete kind, which
+he finished and set to work in the year 1825. He prepared no model of
+it, but made it direct from the working drawings; and it was so nicely
+constructed, that when put together it went without a hitch, and has
+continued steadily working for more than thirty years down to the
+present day.
+
+Clement took out no patent for his invention, relying for protection
+mainly on his own and his workmen's skill in using it. We therefore
+find no specification of his machine at the Patent Office, as in the
+case of most other capital inventions; but a very complete account of
+it is to be found in the Transactions of the Society of Arts for 1832,
+as described by Mr. Varley. The practical value of the Planing Machine
+induced the Society to apply to Mr. Clement for liberty to publish a
+full description of it; and Mr. Varley's paper was the result.[3] It
+may be briefly stated that this engineer's plane differs greatly from
+the carpenter's plane, the cutter of which is only allowed to project
+so far as to admit of a thin shaving to be sliced off,--the plane
+working flat in proportion to the width of the tool, and its length and
+straightness preventing the cutter from descending into any hollows in
+the wood. The engineer's plane more resembles the turning-lathe, of
+which indeed it is but a modification, working up on the same
+principle, on flat surfaces. The tools or cutters in Clement's machine
+were similar to those used in the lathe, varying in like manner, but
+performing their work in right lines,--the tool being stationary and
+the work moving under it, the tool only travelling when making lateral
+cuts. To save time two cutters were mounted, one to cut the work while
+going, the other while returning, both being so arranged and held as to
+be presented to the work in the firmest manner, and with the least
+possible friction. The bed of the machine, on which the work was laid,
+passed under the cutters on perfectly true rollers or wheels, lodged
+and held in their bearings as accurately as the best mandrill could be,
+and having set-screws acting against their ends totally preventing all
+end-motion. The machine was bedded on a massive and solid foundation
+of masonry in heavy blocks, the support at all points being so complete
+as effectually to destroy all tendency to vibration, with the object of
+securing full, round, and quiet cuts. The rollers on which the
+planing-machine travelled were so true, that Clement himself used to
+say of them, "If you were to put but a paper shaving under one of the
+rollers, it would at once stop all the rest." Nor was this any
+exaggeration--the entire mechanism, notwithstanding its great size,
+being as true and accurate as that of a watch.
+
+By an ingenious adaptation of the apparatus, which will also be found
+described in the Society of Arts paper, the planing machine might be
+fitted with a lathe-bed, either to hold two centres, or a head with a
+suitable mandrill. When so fitted, the machine was enabled to do the
+work of a turning-lathe, though in a different way, cutting cylinders
+or cones in their longitudinal direction perfectly straight, as well as
+solids or prisms of any angle, either by the longitudinal or lateral
+motion of the cutter; whilst by making the work revolve, it might be
+turned as in any other lathe. This ingenious machine, as contrived by
+Mr. Clement, therefore represented a complete union of the
+turning-lathe with the planing machine and dividing engine, by which
+turning of the most complicated kind might readily be executed. For
+ten years after it was set in motion, Clement's was the only machine of
+the sort available for planing large work; and being consequently very
+much in request, it was often kept going night and day,--the earnings
+by the planing machine alone during that time forming the principal
+income of its inventor. As it took in a piece of work six feet square,
+and as his charge for planing was three-halfpence the square inch, or
+eighteen shillings the square foot, he could thus earn by his machine
+alone some ten pounds for every day's work of twelve hours. We may add
+that since planing machines in various forms have become common in
+mechanical workshops, the cost of planing does not amount to more than
+three-halfpence the square foot.
+
+The excellence of Mr. Clement's tools, and his well-known skill in
+designing and executing work requiring unusual accuracy and finish, led
+to his being employed by Mr. Babbage to make his celebrated Calculating
+or Difference Engine. The contrivance of a machine that should work
+out complicated sums in arithmetic with perfect precision, was, as may
+readily be imagined, one of the most difficult feats of the mechanical
+intellect. To do this was in an especial sense to stamp matter with
+the impress of mind, and render it subservient to the highest thinking
+faculty. Attempts had been made at an early period to perform
+arithmetical calculations by mechanical aids more rapidly and precisely
+than it was possible to do by the operations of the individual mind.
+The preparation of arithmetical tables of high numbers involved a vast
+deal of labour, and even with the greatest care errors were unavoidable
+and numerous. Thus in a multipltcation-table prepared by a man so
+eminent as Dr. Hutton for the Board of Longitude, no fewer than forty
+errors were discovered in a single page taken at random. In the tables
+of the Nautical Almanac, where the greatest possible precision was
+desirable and necessary, more than five hundred errors were detected by
+one person; and the Tables of the Board of Longitude were found equally
+incorrect. But such errors were impossible to be avoided so long as
+the ordinary modes of calculating, transcribing, and printing continued
+in use.
+
+The earliest and simplest form of calculating apparatus was that
+employed by the schoolboys of ancient Greece, called the Abacus;
+consisting of a smooth board with a narrow rim, on which they were
+taught to compute by means of progressive rows of pebbles, bits of bone
+or ivory, or pieces of silver coin, used as counters. The same board,
+strewn over with sand, was used for teaching the rudiments of writing
+and the principles of geometry. The Romans subsequently adopted the
+Abacus, dividing it by means of perpendicular lines or bars, and from
+the designation of calculus which they gave to each pebble or counter
+employed on the board, we have derived our English word to calculate.
+The same instrument continued to be employed during the middle ages,
+and the table used by the English Court of Exchequer was but a modified
+form of the Greek Abacus, the chequered lines across it giving the
+designation to the Court, which still survives. Tallies, from the
+French word tailler to cut, were another of the mechanical methods
+employed to record computations, though in a very rude way. Step by
+step improvements were made; the most important being that invented by
+Napier of Merchiston, the inventor of logarithms, commonly called
+Napier's bones, consisting of a number of rods divided into ten equal
+squares and numbered, so that the whole when placed together formed the
+common multiplication table. By these means various operations in
+multiplication and division were performed. Sir Samuel Morland,
+Gunter, and Lamb introduced other contrivances, applicable to
+trigonometry; Gunter's scale being still in common use. The
+calculating machines of Gersten and Pascal were of a different kind,
+working out arithmetical calculations by means of trains of wheels and
+other arrangements; and that contrived by Lord Stanhope for the purpose
+of verifying his calculations with respect to the National Debt was of
+like character. But none of these will bear for a moment to be
+compared with the machine designed by Mr. Babbage for performing
+arithmetical calculations and mathematical analyses, as well as for
+recording the calculations when made, thereby getting rid entirely of
+individual error in the operations of calculation, transcription, and
+printing.
+
+The French government, in their desire to promote the extension of the
+decimal system, had ordered the construction of logarithmical tables of
+vast extent; but the great labour and expense involved in the
+undertaking prevented the design from being carried out. It was
+reserved for Mr. Babbage to develope the idea by means of a machine
+which he called the Difference Engine. This machine is of so
+complicated a character that it would be impossible for us to give any
+intelligible description of it in words. Although Dr. Lardner was
+unrivalled in the art of describing mechanism, he occupied twenty-five
+pages of the 'Edinburgh Review' (vol.59) in endeavouring to describe
+its action, and there were several features in it which he gave up as
+hopeless. Some parts of the apparatus and modes of action are indeed
+extraordinary and perhaps none more so than that for ensuring accuracy
+in the calculated results,--the machine actually correcting itself, and
+rubbing itself back into accuracy, when the disposition to err occurs,
+by the friction of the adjacent machinery! When an error is made, the
+wheels become locked and refuse to proceed; thus the machine must go
+rightly or not at all,--an arrangement as nearly resembling volition as
+anything that brass and steel are likely to accomplish.
+
+This intricate subject was taken up by Mr. Babbage in 1821, when he
+undertook to superintend for the British government the construction of
+a machine for calculating and printing mathematical and astronomical
+tables. The model first constructed to illustrate the nature of his
+invention produced figures at the rate of 44 a minute. In 1823 the
+Royal Society was requested to report upon the invention, and after
+full inquiry the committee recommended it as one highly deserving of
+public encouragement. A sum of 1500L. was then placed at Mr. Babbage's
+disposal by the Lords of the Treasury for the purpose of enabling him
+to perfect his invention. It was at this time that he engaged Mr.
+Clement as draughtsman and mechanic to embody his ideas in a working
+machine. Numerous tools were expressly contrived by the latter for
+executing the several parts, and workmen were specially educated for
+the purpose of using them. Some idea of the elaborate character of the
+drawings may be formed from the fact that those required for the
+calculating machinery alone--not to mention the printing machinery,
+which was almost equally elaborate--covered not less than four hundred
+square feet of surface! The cost of executing the calculating machine
+was of course very great, and the progress of the work was necessarily
+slow. The consequence was that the government first became impatient,
+and then began to grumble at the expense. At the end of seven years
+the engineer's bills alone were found to amount to nearly 7200L., and
+Mr. Babbage's costs out of pocket to 7000L. more. In order to make
+more satisfactory progress, it was determined to remove the works to
+the neighbourhood of Mr. Babbage's own residence; but as Clement's
+claims for conducting the operations in the new premises were thought
+exorbitant, and as he himself considered that the work did not yield
+him the average profit of ordinary employment in his own trade, he
+eventually withdrew from the enterprise, taking with him the tools
+which he had constructed for executing the machine. The government
+also shortly after withdrew from it, and from that time the scheme was
+suspended, the Calculating Engine remaining a beautiful but unfinished
+fragment of a great work. Though originally intended to go as far as
+twenty figures, it was only completed to the extent of being capable of
+calculating to the depth of five figures, and two orders of
+differences; and only a small part of the proposed printing machinery
+was ever made. The engine was placed in the museum of King's College
+in 1843, enclosed in a glass case, until the year 1862, when it was
+removed for a time to the Great Exhibition, where it formed perhaps the
+most remarkable and beautifully executed piece of mechanism the
+combined result of intellectual and mechanical contrivance--in the
+entire collection.[4]
+
+Clement was on various other occasions invited to undertake work
+requiring extra skill, which other mechanics were unwilling or unable
+to execute. He was thus always full of employment, never being under
+the necessity of canvassing for customers. He was almost constantly in
+his workshop, in which he took great pride. His dwelling was over the
+office in the yard, and it was with difficulty he could be induced to
+leave the premises. On one occasion Mr. Brunel of the Great Western
+Railway called upon him to ask if he could supply him with a superior
+steam-whistle for his locomotives, the whistles which they were using
+giving forth very little sound. Clement examined the specimen brought
+by Brunel, and pronounced it to be "mere tallow-chandler's work." He
+undertook to supply a proper article, and after his usual fashion he
+proceeded to contrive a machine or tool for the express purpose of
+making steam-whistles. They were made and supplied, and when mounted
+on the locomotive the effect was indeed "screaming." They were heard
+miles off, and Brunel, delighted, ordered a hundred. But when the bill
+came in, it was found that the charge made for them was very high--as
+much as 40L. the set. The company demurred at the price,--Brunel
+declaring it to be six times more than the price they had before been
+paying. "That may be;" rejoined Clement, "but mine are more than six
+times better. You ordered a first-rate article, and you must be
+content to pay for it." The matter was referred to an arbitrator, who
+awarded the full sum claimed. Mr. Weld mentions a similar case of an
+order which Clement received from America to make a large screw of
+given dimensions "in the best possible manner," and he accordingly
+proceeded to make one with the greatest mathematical accuracy. But his
+bill amounted to some hundreds of pounds, which completely staggered
+the American, who did not calculate on having to pay more than 20L. at
+the utmost for the screw. The matter was, however, referred to
+arbitrators, who gave their decision, as in the former case, in favour
+of the mechanic.[5]
+
+One of the last works which Clement executed as a matter of pleasure,
+was the building of an organ for his own use. It will be remembered
+that when working as a slater at Great Ashby, he had made flutes and
+clarinets, and now in his old age he determined to try his skill at
+making an organ--in his opinion the king of musical instruments. The
+building of it became his hobby, and his greatest delight was in
+superintending its progress. It cost him about two thousand pounds in
+labour alone, but he lived to finish it, and we have been informed that
+it was pronounced a very excellent instrument.
+
+Clement was a heavy-browed man, without any polish of manner or speech;
+for to the last he continued to use his strong Westmoreland dialect.
+He was not educated in a literary sense; for he read but little, and
+could write with difficulty. He was eminently a mechanic, and had
+achieved his exquisite skill by observation, experience, and
+reflection. His head was a complete repertory of inventions, on which
+he was constantly drawing for the improvement of mechanical practice.
+Though he had never more than thirty workmen in his factory, they were
+all of the first class; and the example which Clement set before them
+of extreme carefulness and accuracy in execution rendered his shop one
+of the best schools of its time for the training of thoroughly
+accomplished mechanics. Mr. Clement died in 1844, in his sixty-fifth
+year; after which his works were carried on by Mr. Wilkinson, one of
+his nephews; and his planing machine still continues in useful work.
+
+
+
+[1] On one occasion Galloway had a cast-iron roof made for his
+workshop, so flat and so independent of ties that the wonder was that
+it should have stood an hour. One day Peter Keir, an engineer much
+employed by the government--a clever man, though some what
+eccentric--was taken into the shop by Galloway to admire the new roof.
+Keir, on glancing up at it, immediately exclaimed, "Come outside, and
+let us speak about it there!" All that he could say to Galloway
+respecting the unsoundness of its construction was of no avail. The
+fact was that, however Keir might argue about its not being able to
+stand, there it was actually standing, and that was enough for
+Galloway. Keir went home, his mind filled with Galloway's most
+unprincipled roof. "If that stands," said he to himself, "all that I
+have been learning and doing for thirty years has been wrong." That
+night he could not sleep for thinking about it. In the morning he
+strolled up Primrose Hill, and returned home still muttering to himself
+about "that roof." "What," said his wife to him, "are you thinking of
+Galloway's roof?" "Yes," said he. "Then you have seen the papers?"
+"No--what about them?" "Galloway's roof has fallen in this morning,
+and killed eight or ten of the men!" Keir immediately went to bed, and
+slept soundly till next morning.
+
+[2] See more particularly The Transactions of the Society for the
+Encouragement of Arts, vol. xxxiii. (1817), at pp. 74, 157, 160, 175,
+208 (an admirable drawing; of Mr. James Allen's Theodolite); vol.
+xxxvi. (1818), pp. 28, 176 (a series of remarkable illustrations of Mr.
+Clement's own invention of an Instrument for Drawing Ellipses); vol.
+xliii. (1825), containing an illustration of the Drawing Table invented
+by him for large drawings; vol. xlvi. (1828), containing a series of
+elaborate illustrations of his Prize Turning Lathe; and xlviii. 1829,
+containing illustrations of his Self-adjusting Double Driver Centre
+Chuck.
+
+[3] Transactions of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, vol.
+xlix. p.157.
+
+[4] A complete account of the calculating machine, as well as of an
+analytical engine afterwards contrived by Mr. Babbage, of still greater
+power than the other, will be found in the Bibliotheque Universelle de
+Geneve, of which a translation into English, with copious original
+notes, by the late Lady Lovelace, daughter of Lord Byron, was published
+in the 3rd vol. of Taylor's Scientific Memoirs (London, 1843). A
+history of the machine, and of the circumstances connected with its
+construction, will also be found in Weld's History of the Royal
+Society, vol. ii. 369-391. It remains to be added, that the perusal by
+Messrs. Scheutz of Stockholm of Dr. Lardner's account of Mr. Babbage's
+engine in the Edinburgh Review, led those clever mechanics to enter
+upon the scheme of constructing and completing it, and the result is,
+that their machine not only calculates the tables, but prints the
+results. It took them nearly twenty years to perfect it, but when
+completed the machine seemed to be almost capable of thinking. The
+original was exhibited at the Paris Exhibition of 1855. A copy of it
+has since been secured by the English government at a cost of 1200L.,
+and it is now busily employed at Somerset House in working out annuity
+and other tables for the Registrar-General. The copy was constructed,
+with several admirable improvements, by the Messrs. Donkin, the
+well-known mechanical engineers, after the working drawings of the
+Messrs. Scheutz.
+
+[5] History of the Royal Society, ii. 374.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+FOX OF DERBY--MURRAY OF LEEDS--ROBERTS AND WHITWORTH OF MANCHESTER.
+
+"Founders and senators of states and cities, lawgivers, extirpers of
+tyrants, fathers of the people, and other eminent persons in civil
+government, were honoured but with titles of Worthies or demi-gods;
+whereas, such as were inventors and authors of new arts, endowments,
+and commodities towards man's life, were ever consecrated amongst the
+gods themselves."--BACON, Advancement of Learning.
+
+
+While such were the advances made in the arts of tool-making and
+engine-construction through the labours of Bramah, Maudslay, and
+Clement, there were other mechanics of almost equal eminence who
+flourished about the same time and subsequently in several of the
+northern manufacturing towns. Among these may be mentioned James Fox
+of Derby; Matthew Murray and Peter Fairbairn of Leeds; Richard Roberts,
+Joseph Whitworth, James Nasmyth, and William Fairbairn of Manchester;
+to all of whom the manufacturing industry of Great Britain stands in
+the highest degree indebted.
+
+James Fox, the founder of the Derby firm of mechanical engineers, was
+originally a butler in the service of the Rev. Thomas Gisborne, of
+Foxhall Lodge, Staffordshire. Though a situation of this kind might
+not seem by any means favourable for the display of mechanical ability,
+yet the butler's instinct for handicraft was so strong that it could
+not be repressed; and his master not only encouraged him in the
+handling of tools in his leisure hours, but had so genuine an
+admiration of his skill as well as his excellent qualities of
+character, that he eventually furnished him with the means of beginning
+business on his own account.
+
+The growth and extension of the cotton, silk, and lace trades, in the
+neighbourhood of Derby, furnished Fox with sufficient opportunities for
+the exercise of his mechanical skill; and he soon found ample scope for
+its employment. His lace machinery became celebrated, and he supplied
+it largely to the neighbouring town of Nottingham; he also obtained
+considerable employment from the great firms of Arkwright and
+Strutt--the founders of the modern cotton manufacture. Mr. Fox also
+became celebrated for his lathes, which were of excellent quality,
+still maintaining their high reputation; and besides making largely for
+the supply of the home demand, he exported much machinery abroad, to
+France, Russia, and the Mauritius.
+
+The present Messrs. Fox of Derby, who continue to carry on the business
+of the firm, claim for their grandfather, its founder, that he made the
+first planing machine in 1814,[1] and they add that the original
+article continued in use until quite recently. We have been furnished
+by Samuel Hall, formerly a workman at the Messrs. Fox's, with the
+following description of the machine:--"It was essentially the same in
+principle as the planing machine now in general use, although differing
+in detail. It had a self-acting ratchet motion for moving the slides
+of a compound slide rest, and a self-acting reversing tackle,
+consisting of three bevel wheels, one a stud, one loose on the driving
+shaft, and another on a socket, with a pinion on the opposite end of
+the driving shaft running on the socket. The other end was the place
+for the driving pulley. A clutch box was placed between the two
+opposite wheels, which was made to slide on a feather, so that by means
+of another shaft containing levers and a tumbling ball, the box on
+reversing was carried from one bevel wheel to the opposite one." The
+same James Fox is also said at a very early period to have invented a
+screw-cutting machine, an engine for accurately dividing and cutting
+the teeth of wheels, and a self-acting lathe. But the evidence as to
+the dates at which these several inventions are said to have been made
+is so conflicting that it is impossible to decide with whom the merit
+of making them really rests. The same idea is found floating at the
+same time in many minds, the like necessity pressing upon all, and the
+process of invention takes place in like manner: hence the
+contemporaneousness of so many inventions, and the disputes that arise
+respecting them, as described in a previous chapter.
+
+There are still other claimants for the merit of having invented the
+planing machine; among whom may be mentioned more particularly Matthew
+Murray of Leeds, and Richard Roberts of Manchester. We are informed by
+Mr. March, the present mayor of Leeds, head of the celebrated
+tool-manufacturing firm of that town, that when he first went to work
+at Matthew Murray's, in 1814, a planing machine of his invention was
+used to plane the circular part or back of the D valve, which he had by
+that time introduced in the steam-engine. Mr. March says, "I recollect
+it very distinctly, and even the sort of framing on which it stood.
+The machine was not patented, and like many inventions in those days,
+it was kept as much a secret as possible, being locked up in a small
+room by itself, to which the ordinary workmen could not obtain access.
+The year in which I remember it being in use was, so far as I am aware,
+long before any planing-machine of a similar kind had been invented."
+
+Matthew Murray was born at Stockton-on-Tees in the year 1763. His
+parents were of the working class, and Matthew, like the other members
+of the family, was brought up with the ordinary career of labour before
+him. When of due age his father apprenticed him to the trade of a
+blacksmith, in which he very soon acquired considerable expertness. He
+married before his term had expired; after which, trade being slack at
+Stockton, he found it necessary to look for work elsewhere. Leaving
+his wife behind him, he set out for Leeds with his bundle on his back,
+and after a long journey on foot, he reached that town with not enough
+money left in his pocket to pay for a bed at the Bay Horse inn, where
+he put up. But telling the landlord that he expected work at
+Marshall's, and seeming to be a respectable young man, the landlord
+trusted him; and he was so fortunate as to obtain the job which he
+sought at Mr. Marshall's, who was then beginning the manufacture of
+flax, for which the firm has since become so famous.
+
+Mr. Marshall was at that time engaged in improving the method of
+manufacture,[2] and the young blacksmith was so fortunate or rather so
+dexterous as to be able to suggest several improvements in the
+machinery which secured the approval of his employer, who made him a
+present of 20L., and very shortly promoted him to be the first mechanic
+in the workshop. On this stroke of good fortune Murray took a house at
+the neighbouring village of Beeston, sent to Stockton for his wife, who
+speedily joined him, and he now felt himself fairly started in the
+world. He remained with Mr. Marshall for about twelve years, during
+which he introduced numerous improvements in the machinery for spinning
+flax, and obtained the reputation of being a first-rate mechanic. This
+induced Mr. James Fenton and Mr. David Wood to offer to join him in the
+establishment of an engineering and machine-making factory at Leeds;
+which he agreed to, and operations were commenced at Holbeck in the
+year 1795.
+
+As Mr. Murray had obtained considerable practical knowledge of the
+steam-engine while working at Mr. Marshall's, he took principal charge
+of the engine-building department, while his partner Wood directed the
+machine-making. In the branch of engine-building Mr. Murray very
+shortly established a high reputation, treading close upon the heels of
+Boulton and Watt--so close, indeed, that that firm became very jealous
+of him, and purchased a large piece of ground close to his works with
+the object of preventing their extension.[3] His additions to the
+steam-engine were of great practical value, one of which, the
+self-acting apparatus attached to the boiler for the purpose of
+regulating the intensity of fire under it, and consequently the
+production of steam, is still in general use. This was invented by him
+as early as 1799. He also subsequently invented the D slide valve, or
+at least greatly improved it, while he added to the power of the
+air-pump, and gave a new arrangement to the other parts, with a view to
+the simplification of the powers of the engine. To make the D valve
+work efficiently, it was found necessary to form two perfectly plane
+surfaces, to produce which he invented his planing machine. He was
+also the first to adopt the practice of placing the piston in a
+horizontal position in the common condensing engine. Among his other
+modifications in the steam-engine, was his improvement of the
+locomotive as invented by Trevithick; and it ought to be remembered to
+his honour that he made the first locomotive that regularly worked upon
+any railway.
+
+This was the engine erected by him for Blenkinsop, to work the
+Middleton colliery railway near Leeds, on which it began to run in
+1812, and continued in regular use for many years. In this engine he
+introduced the double cylinder--Trevithick's engine being provided with
+only one cylinder, the defects of which were supplemented by the
+addition of a fly-wheel to carry the crank over the dead points.
+
+But Matthew Murray's most important inventions, considered in their
+effects on manufacturing industry, were those connected with the
+machinery for heckling and spinning flax, which he very greatly
+improved. His heckling machine obtained for him the prize of the gold
+medal of the Society of Arts; and this as well as his machine for wet
+flax-spinning by means of sponge weights proved of the greatest
+practical value. At the time when these inventions were made the flax
+trade was on the point of expiring, the spinners being unable to
+produce yarn to a profit; and their almost immediate effect was to
+reduce the cost of production, to improve immensely the quality of the
+manufacture, and to establish the British linen trade on a solid
+foundation. The production of flax-machinery became an important
+branch of manufacture at Leeds, large quantities being made for use at
+home as well as for exportation, giving employment to an increasing
+number of highly skilled mechanics.[4] Mr. Murray's faculty for
+organising work, perfected by experience, enabled him also to introduce
+many valuable improvements in the mechanics of manufacturing. His
+pre-eminent skill in mill-gearing became generally acknowledged, and
+the effects of his labours are felt to this day in the extensive and
+still thriving branches of industry which his ingenuity and ability
+mainly contributed to establish. All the machine tools used in his
+establishment were designed by himself, and he was most careful in the
+personal superintendence of all the details of their construction. Mr.
+Murray died at Leeds in 1826, in his sixty-third year.
+
+We have not yet exhausted the list of claimants to the invention of the
+Planing Machine, for we find still another in the person of Richard
+Roberts of Manchester, one of the most prolific of modern inventors.
+Mr. Roberts has indeed achieved so many undisputed inventions, that he
+can readily afford to divide the honour in this case with others. He
+has contrived things so various as the self-acting mule and the best
+electro-magnet, wet gas-meters and dry planing machines, iron
+billard-tables and turret-clocks, the centrifugal railway and the drill
+slotting-machine, an apparatus for making cigars and machinery for the
+propulsion and equipment of steamships; so that he may almost be
+regarded as the Admirable Crichton of modern mechanics.
+
+Richard Roberts was born in 1789, at Carreghova in the parish of
+Llanymynech. His father was by trade a shoemaker, to which he
+occasionally added the occupation of toll-keeper. The house in which
+Richard was born stood upon the border line which then divided the
+counties of Salop and Montgomery; the front door opening in the one
+county, and the back door in the other. Richard, when a boy, received
+next to no education, and as soon as he was of fitting age was put to
+common labouring work. For some time he worked in a quarry near his
+father's dwelling; but being of an ingenious turn, he occupied his
+leisure in making various articles of mechanism, partly for amusement
+and partly for profit. One of his first achievements, while working as
+a quarryman, was a spinning-wheel, of which he was very proud, for it
+was considered "a good job." Thus he gradually acquired dexterity in
+handling tools, and he shortly came to entertain the ambition of
+becoming a mechanic.
+
+There were several ironworks in the neighbour hood, and thither he went
+in search of employment. He succeeded in finding work as a
+pattern-maker at Bradley, near Bilston; under John Wilkinson, the
+famous ironmaster--a man of great enterprise as well as mechanical
+skill; for he was the first man, as already stated, that Watt could
+find capable of boring a cylinder with any approach to truth, for the
+purposes of his steam-engines. After acquiring some practical
+knowledge of the art of working in wood as well as iron, Roberts
+proceeded to Birmingham, where he passed through different shops,
+gaining further experience in mechanical practice. He tried his hand
+at many kinds of work, and acquired considerable dexterity in each. He
+was regarded as a sort of jack-of-all-trades; for he was a good turner,
+a tolerable wheel-wright, and could repair mill-work at a pinch.
+
+He next moved northward to the Horsley ironworks, Tipton, where he was
+working as a pattern-maker when he had the misfortune to be drawn in
+his own county for the militia. He immediately left his work and made
+his way homeward to Llanymynech, determined not to be a soldier or even
+a militiaman. But home was not the place for him to rest in, and after
+bidding a hasty adieu to his father, he crossed the country northward
+on foot and reached Liverpool, in the hope of finding work there.
+Failing in that, he set out for Manchester and reached it at dusk, very
+weary and very miry in consequence of the road being in such a wretched
+state of mud and ruts. He relates that, not knowing a person in the
+town, he went up to an apple-stall ostensibly to buy a pennyworth of
+apples, but really to ask the stall-keeper if he knew of any person in
+want of a hand. Was there any turner in the neighbourhood? Yes, round
+the corner. Thither he went at once, found the wood-turner in, and was
+promised a job on the following morning. He remained with the turner
+for only a short time, after which he found a job in Salford at lathe
+and tool-making. But hearing that the militia warrant-officers were
+still searching for him, he became uneasy and determined to take refuge
+in London.
+
+He trudged all the way on foot to that great hiding-place, and first
+tried Holtzapffel's, the famous tool-maker's, but failing in his
+application he next went to Maudslay's and succeeded in getting
+employment. He worked there for some time, acquiring much valuable
+practical knowledge in the use of tools, cultivating his skill by
+contact with first-class workmen, and benefiting by the spirit of
+active contrivance which pervaded the Maudslay shops. His manual
+dexterity greatly increased, and his inventive ingenuity fully
+stimulated, he determined on making his way back to Manchester, which,
+even more than London itself, at that time presented abundant openings
+for men of mechanical skill. Hence we find so many of the best
+mechanics trained at Maudslay's and Clement's--Nasmyth, Lewis, Muir,
+Roberts, Whitworth, and others--shortly rising into distinction there
+as leading mechanicians and tool-makers.
+
+The mere enumeration of the various results of Mr. Roberts's inventive
+skill during the period of his settlement at Manchester as a mechanical
+engineer, would occupy more space than we can well spare. But we may
+briefly mention a few of the more important. In 1816, while carrying
+on business on his own account in Deansgate, he invented his improved
+sector for correctly sizing wheels in blank previously to their being
+cut, which is still extensively used. In the same year he invented his
+improved screw-lathe; and in the following year, at the request of the
+boroughreeve and constables of Manchester, he contrived an oscillating
+and rotating wet gas meter of a new kind, which enabled them to sell
+gas by measure. This was the first meter in which a water lute was
+applied to prevent the escape of gas by the index shaft, the want of
+which, as well as its great complexity, had prevented the only other
+gas meter then in existence from working satisfactorily. The water
+lute was immediately adopted by the patentee of that meter. The
+planing machine, though claimed, as we have seen, by many inventors,
+was constructed by Mr. Roberts after an original plan of his own in
+1817, and became the tool most generally employed in mechanical
+workshops--acting by means of a chain and rack--though it has since
+been superseded to some extent by the planing machine of Whitworth,
+which works both ways upon an endless screw. Improvements followed in
+the slide-lathe (giving a large range of speed with increased diameters
+for the same size of headstocks, &c.), in the wheel-cutting engine, in
+the scale-beam (by which, with a load of 2 oz. on each end, the
+fifteen-hundredth part of a grain could be indicated), in the
+broaching-machine, the slotting-machine, and other engines.
+
+But the inventions by which his fame became most extensively known
+arose out of circumstances connected with the cotton manufactures of
+Manchester and the neighbourhood. The great improvements which he
+introduced in the machine for making weavers' reeds, led to the
+formation of the firm of Sharp, Roberts, and Co., of which Mr. Roberts
+was the acting mechanical partner for many years. Not less important
+were his improvements in power-looms for weaving fustians, which were
+extensively adopted. But by far the most famous of his inventions was
+unquestionably his Self-acting Mule, one of the most elaborate and
+beautiful pieces of machinery ever contrived. Before its invention,
+the working of the entire machinery of the cotton-mill, as well as the
+employment of the piecers, cleaners, and other classes of operatives,
+depended upon the spinners, who, though receiving the highest rates of
+pay, were by much the most given to strikes; and they were frequently
+accustomed to turn out in times when trade was brisk, thereby bringing
+the whole operations of the manufactories to a standstill, and throwing
+all the other operatives out of employment. A long-continued strike of
+this sort took place in 1824, when the idea occurred to the masters
+that it might be possible to make the spinning-mules run out and in at
+the proper speed by means of self-acting machinery, and thus render
+them in some measure independent of the more refractory class of their
+workmen. It seemed, however, to be so very difficult a problem, that
+they were by no means sanguine of success in its solution. Some time
+passed before they could find any mechanic willing so much as to
+consider the subject. Mr. Ashton of Staley-bridge made every effort
+with this object, but the answer he got was uniformly the same. The
+thing was declared to be impracticable and impossible. Mr. Ashton,
+accompanied by two other leading spinners, called on Sharp, Roberts,
+and Co., to seek an interview with Mr. Roberts. They introduced the
+subject to him, but he would scarcely listen to their explanations,
+cutting them short with the remark that he knew nothing whatever about
+cotton-spinning. They insisted, nevertheless, on explaining to him
+what they required, but they went away without being able to obtain
+from him any promise of assistance in bringing out the required machine.
+
+The strike continued, and the manufacturers again called upon Mr.
+Roberts, but with no better result. A third time they called and
+appealed to Mr. Sharp, the capitalist of the firm, who promised to use
+his best endeavours to induce his mechanical partner to take the matter
+in hand. But Mr. Roberts, notwithstanding his reticence, had been
+occupied in carefully pondering the subject since Mr. Ashton's first
+interview with him. The very difficulty of the problem to be solved
+had tempted him boldly to grapple with it, though he would not hold out
+the slightest expectation to the cotton-spinners of his being able to
+help them in their emergency until he saw his way perfectly clear.
+That time had now come; and when Mr. Sharp introduced the subject, he
+said he had turned the matter over and thought he could construct the
+required self-acting machinery. It was arranged that he should proceed
+with it at once, and after a close study of four months he brought out
+the machine now so extensively known as the self-acting mule. The
+invention was patented in 1825, and was perfected by subsequent
+additions, which were also patented.
+
+Like so many other inventions, the idea of the self-acting mule was not
+new. Thus Mr. William Strutt of Derby, the father of Lord Belper,
+invented a machine of this sort at an early period; Mr. William Belly,
+of the New Lanark Mills, invented a second; and various other
+projectors tried their skill in the same direction; but none of these
+inventions came into practical use. In such cases it has become
+generally admitted that the real inventor is not the person who
+suggests the idea of the invention, but he who first works it out into
+a practicable process, and so makes it of practical and commercial
+value. This was accomplished by Mr. Roberts, who, working out the idea
+after his own independent methods, succeeded in making the first
+self-acting mule that would really act as such; and he is therefore
+fairly entitled to be regarded as its inventor.
+
+By means of this beautiful contrivance, spindle-carriages; bearing
+hundreds of spindles, run themselves out and in by means of automatic
+machinery, at the proper speed, without a hand touching them; the only
+labour required being that of a few boys and girls to watch them and
+mend the broken threads when the carriage recedes from the roller beam,
+and to stop it when the cop is completely formed, as is indicated by
+the bell of the counter attached to the working gear. Mr. Baines
+describes the self-acting mule while at work as "drawing out, twisting,
+and winding up many thousand threads, with unfailing precision and
+indefatigable patience and strength--a scene as magical to the eye
+which is not familiarized with it, as the effects have been marvellous
+in augmenting the wealth and population of the country." [5]
+
+Mr. Roberts's great success with the self-acting mule led to his being
+often appealed to for help in the mechanics of manufacturing. In 1826,
+the year after his patent was taken out, he was sent for to Mulhouse,
+in Alsace, to design and arrange the machine establishment of Andre
+Koechlin and Co.; and in that and the two subsequent years he fairly
+set the works a-going, instructing the workmen in the manufacture of
+spinning-machinery, and thus contributing largely to the success of the
+French cotton manufacture. In 1832 he patented his invention of the
+Radial Arm for "winding on" in the self-acting mule, now in general
+use; and in future years he took out sundry patents for roving,
+slubbing, spinning, and doubling cotton and other fibrous materials;
+and for weaving, beetling, and mangling fabrics of various sorts.
+
+A considerable branch of business carried on by the firm of Sharp,
+Roberts, and Co. was the manufacture of iron billiard-tables, which
+were constructed with almost perfect truth by means of Mr. Roberts's
+planing-machine, and became a large article of export. But a much more
+important and remunerative department was the manufacture of
+locomotives, which was begun by the firm shortly after the opening of
+the Liverpool and Manchester Railway had marked this as one of the
+chief branches of future mechanical engineering. Mr. Roberts adroitly
+seized the opportunity presented by this new field of invention and
+enterprise, and devoted himself for a time to the careful study of the
+locomotive and its powers. As early as the year 1829 we find him
+presenting to the Manchester Mechanics' Institute a machine exhibiting
+the nature of friction upon railroads, in solution of the problem then
+under discussion in the scientific journals. In the following year he
+patented an arrangement for communicating power to both driving-wheels
+of the locomotive, at all times in the exact proportions required when
+turning to the right or left,--an arrangement which has since been
+adopted in many road locomotives and agricultural engines. In the same
+patent will be found embodied his invention of the steam-brake, which
+was also a favourite idea of George Stephenson, since elaborated by Mr.
+MacConnell of the London and North-Western Railway. In 1834, Sharp,
+Roberts, and Co. began the manufacture of locomotives on a large scale;
+and the compactness of their engines, the excellence of their
+workmanship, and the numerous original improvements introduced in them,
+speedily secured for the engines of the Atlas firm a high reputation
+and a very large demand. Among Mr. Roberts's improvements may be
+mentioned his method of manufacturing the crank axle, of welding the
+rim and tyres of the wheels, and his arrangement and form of the
+wrought-iron framing and axle-guards. His system of templets and
+gauges, by means of which every part of an engine or tender
+corresponded with that of every other engine or tender of the same
+class, was as great an improvement as Maudslay's system of uniformity
+of parts in other descriptions of machinery.
+
+In connection with the subject of railways, we may allude in passing to
+Mr. Roberts's invention of the Jacquard punching machine--a self-acting
+tool of great power, used for punching any required number of holes, of
+any pitch and to any pattern, with mathematical accuracy, in bridge or
+boiler plates. The origin of this invention was somewhat similar to
+that of the self-acting mule. The contractors for the Conway Tubular
+Bridge while under construction, in 1848, were greatly hampered by
+combinations amongst the workmen, and they despaired of being able to
+finish the girders within the time specified in the contract. The
+punching of the iron plates by hand was a tedious and expensive as well
+as an inaccurate process; and the work was proceeding so slowly that
+the contractors found it absolutely necessary to adopt some new method
+of punching if they were to finish the work in time. In their
+emergency they appealed to Mr. Roberts, and endeavoured to persuade him
+to take the matter up. He at length consented to do so, and evolved
+the machine in question during his evening's leisure--for the most part
+while quietly sipping his tea. The machine was produced, the
+contractors were enabled to proceed with the punching of the plates
+independent of the refractory men, and the work was executed with a
+despatch, accuracy, and excellence that would not otherwise have been
+possible. Only a few years since Mr. Roberts added a useful companion
+to the Jacquard punching machine, in his combined self-acting machine
+for shearing iron and punching both webs of angle or T iron
+simultaneously to any required pitch; though this machine, like others
+which have proceeded from his fertile brain, is ahead even of this
+fast-manufacturing age, and has not yet come into general use, but is
+certain to do so before many years have elapsed.
+
+These inventions were surely enough for one man to have accomplished;
+but we have not yet done. The mere enumeration of his other inventions
+would occupy several pages. We shall merely allude to a few of them.
+One was his Turret Clock, for which he obtained the medal at the Great
+Exhibition of 1851. Another was his Prize Electro-Magnet of 1845.
+When this subject was first mentioned to him, he said he did not know
+anything of the theory or practice of electro-magnetism, but he would
+try and find out. The result of his trying was that he won the prize
+for the most powerful electro-magnet: one is placed in the museum at
+Peel Park, Manchester, and another with the Scottish Society of Arts,
+Edinburgh. In 1846 he perfected an American invention for making
+cigars by machinery; enabling a boy, working one of his cigar-engines,
+to make as many as 5000 in a day. In 1852 he patented improvements in
+the construction, propelling, and equipment of steamships, which have,
+we believe, been adopted to a certain extent by the Admiralty; and a
+few years later, in 1855, we find him presenting the Secretary of War
+with plans of elongated rifle projectiles to be used in smooth-bore
+ordnance with a view to utilize the old-pattern gun. His head, like
+many inventors of the time, being full of the mechanics of war, he went
+so far as to wait upon Louis Napoleon, and laid before him a plan by
+which Sebastopol was to be blown down. In short, upon whatever subject
+he turned his mind, he left the impress of his inventive faculty. If
+it was imperfect, he improved it; if incapable of improvement, and
+impracticable, he invented something entirely new, superseding it
+altogether. But with all his inventive genius, in the exercise of
+which Mr. Roberts has so largely added to the productive power of the
+country, we regret to say that he is not gifted with the commercial
+faculty. He has helped others in their difficulties, but forgotten
+himself. Many have profited by his inventions, without even
+acknowledging the obligations which they owed to him. They have used
+his brains and copied his tools, and the "sucked orange" is all but
+forgotten. There may have been a want of worldly wisdom on his part,
+but it is lamentable to think that one of the most prolific and useful
+inventors of his time should in his old age be left to fight with
+poverty.
+
+Mr. Whitworth is another of the first-class tool-makers of Manchester
+who has turned to excellent account his training in the workshops of
+Maudslay and Clement. He has carried fully out the system of
+uniformity in Screw Threads which they initiated; and he has still
+further improved the mechanism of the planing machine, enabling it to
+work both backwards and forwards by means of a screw and roller motion.
+His "Jim Crow Machine," so called from its peculiar motion in reversing
+itself and working both ways, is an extremely beautiful tool, adapted
+alike for horizontal, vertical, or angular motions. The minute
+accuracy of Mr. Whitworth's machines is not the least of their merits;
+and nothing will satisfy him short of perfect truth. At the meeting of
+the Institute of Mechanical Engineers at Glasgow in 1856 he read a
+paper on the essential importance of possessing a true plane as a
+standard of reference in mechanical constructions, and he described
+elaborately the true method of securing it,--namely, by scraping,
+instead of by the ordinary process of grinding. At the same meeting he
+exhibited a machine of his invention by which he stated that a
+difference of the millionth part of an inch in length could at once be
+detected. He also there urged his favourite idea of uniformity, and
+proper gradations of size of parts, in all the various branches of the
+mechanical arts, as a chief means towards economy of production--a
+principle, as he showed, capable of very extensive application. To
+show the progress of tools and machinery in his own time, Mr. Whitworth
+cited the fact that thirty years since the cost of labour for making a
+surface of cast-iron true--one of the most important operations in
+mechanics--by chipping and filing by the hand, was 12s. a square foot;
+whereas it is now done by the planing machine at a cost for labour of
+less than a penny. Then in machinery, pieces of 74 reed
+printing-cotton cloth of 29 yards each could not be produced at less
+cost than 30s. 6d. per piece; whereas the same description is now sold
+for 3s. 9d. Mr. Whitworth has been among the most effective workers in
+this field of improvement, his tools taking the first place in point of
+speed, accuracy, and finish of work, in which respects they challenge
+competition with the world. Mr. Whitworth has of late years been
+applying himself with his accustomed ardour to the development of the
+powers of rifled guns and projectiles,--a branch of mechanical science
+in which he confessedly holds a foremost place, and in perfecting which
+he is still occupied.
+
+
+
+[1] Engineer, Oct. 10th, 1862.
+
+[2] We are informed in Mr. Longstaffe's Annals and Characteristics of
+Darlington, that the spinning of flax by machinery was first begun by
+one John Kendrew, an ingenious self-taught mechanic of that town, who
+invented a machine for the purpose, for which he took out a patent in
+1787. Mr. Marshall went over from Leeds to see his machine, and agreed
+to give him so much per spindle for the right to use it. But ceasing
+to pay the patent right, Kendrew commenced an action against him for a
+sum of nine hundred pounds alleged to be due under the agreement. The
+claim was disputed, and Kendrew lost his action; and it is added in
+Longstaffe's Annals, that even had he succeeded, it would have been of
+no use; for Mr. Marshall declared that he had not then the money
+wherewith to pay him. It is possible that Matthew Murray may have
+obtained some experience of flax-machinery in working for Kendrew,
+which afterwards proved of use to him in Mr. Marshall's establishment.
+
+[3] The purchase of this large piece of ground, known as Camp Field,
+had the effect of "plugging up" Matthew Murray for a time; and it
+remained disused, except for the deposit of dead dogs and other
+rubbish, for more than half a century. It has only been enclosed
+during the present year, and now forms part of the works of Messrs.
+Smith, Beacock, and Tannet, the eminent tool-makers.
+
+[4] Among more recent improvers of flax-machinery, the late Sir Peter
+Fairbairn is entitled to high merit: the work turned out by him being
+of first-rate excellence, embodying numerous inventions and
+improvements of great value and importance.
+
+[5] EDWARD BAINES, Esq., M.P., History of the Cotton Manufacture, 212.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+JAMES NASMYTH.
+
+ "By Hammer and Hand
+ All Arts doth stand."
+ Hammermen's Motto.
+
+
+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:--[1]
+
+"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 19th 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 10s. 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 10s. 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 1833, 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.[2] 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." [3]
+
+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,[4] 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 15 or 20 cwt. 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.[5]
+
+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.[6] 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,[7]
+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." [8]
+
+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.
+
+
+
+[1] 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.
+
+[2] 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.
+
+[3] Cyclopaedia of Useful Arts, ii. 739.
+
+[4] 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.
+
+[5] 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.
+
+[6] See Memoirs of the Literary and Philosophical Society of
+Manchester, 3rd series, vol. 1. 407.
+
+[7] 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."
+
+[8] SIR JOHN HERSCHEL in Good Words for April, 1863.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+WILLIAM FAIRBAIRN.
+
+"In science there is work for all hands, more or less skilled; and he
+is usually the most fit to occupy the higher posts who has risen from
+the ranks, and has experimentally acquainted himself with the nature of
+the work to be done in each and every, even the humblest department."
+J. D. Forbes.
+
+
+The development of the mechanical industry of England has been so
+rapid, especially as regards the wonders achieved by the machine-tools
+above referred to, that it may almost be said to have been accomplished
+within the life of the present generation. "When I first entered this
+city," said Mr. Fairbairn, in his inaugural address as President of the
+British Association at Manchester in 1861, "the whole of the machinery
+was executed by hand. There were neither planing, slotting, nor
+shaping machines; and, with the exception of very imperfect lathes and
+a few drills, the preparatory operations of construction were effected
+entirely by the hands of the workmen. Now, everything is done by
+machine-tools with a degree of accuracy which the unaided hand could
+never accomplish. The automaton or self-acting machine-tool has within
+itself an almost creative power; in fact, so great are its powers of
+adaptation, that there is no operation of the human hand that it does
+not imitate." In a letter to the author, Mr. Fairbairn says, "The
+great pioneers of machine-tool-making were Maudslay, Murray of Leeds,
+Clement and Fox of Derby, who were ably followed by Nasmyth, Roberts,
+and Whitworth, of Manchester, and Sir Peter Fairbairn of Leeds; and Mr.
+Fairbairn might well have added, by himself,--for he has been one of
+the most influential and successful of mechanical engineers.
+
+William Fairbairn was born at Kelso on the 19th of February, 1787. His
+parents occupied a humble but respectable position in life. His
+father, Andrew Fairbairn, was the son of a gardener in the employment
+of Mr. Baillie of Mellerston, and lived at Smailholm, a village lying a
+few miles west of Kelso. Tracing the Fairbairns still further back, we
+find several of them occupying the station of "portioners," or small
+lairds, at Earlston on the Tweed, where the family had been settled
+since the days of the Solemn League and Covenant. By his mother's
+side, the subject of our memoir is supposed to be descended from the
+ancient Border family of Douglas.
+
+While Andrew Fairbairn (William's father) lived at Smailholm, Walter
+Scott was living with his grandmother in Smailholm or Sandyknowe Tower,
+whither he had been sent from Edinburgh in the hope that change of air
+would help the cure of his diseased hip-joint; and Andrew, being nine
+years his senior, and a strong youth for his age, was accustomed to
+carry the little patient about in his arms, until he was able to walk
+by himself. At a later period, when Miss Scott, Walter's aunt, removed
+from Smailholm to Kelso, the intercourse between the families was
+renewed. Scott was then an Edinburgh advocate, engaged in collecting
+materials for his Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, or, as his aunt
+described his pursuit, "running after the auld wives of the country
+gatherin' havers." He used frequently to read over by the fireside in
+the evening the results of his curious industry, which, however, were
+not very greatly appreciated by his nearest relatives; and they did not
+scruple to declare that for the "Advocate" to go about collecting
+"ballants" was mere waste of time as well as money.
+
+William Fairbairn's first schoolmaster was a decrepit old man who went
+by the name of "Bowed Johnnie Ker,"--a Cameronian, with a nasal twang,
+which his pupils learnt much more readily than they did his lessons in
+reading and arithmetic, notwithstanding a liberal use of "the tawse."
+Yet Johnnie had a taste for music, and taught his pupils to SING their
+reading lessons, which was reckoned quite a novelty in education.
+After a short time our scholar was transferred to the parish-school of
+the town, kept by a Mr. White, where he was placed under the charge of
+a rather severe helper, who, instead of the tawse, administered
+discipline by means of his knuckles, hard as horn, which he applied
+with a peculiar jerk to the crania of his pupils. At this school
+Willie Fairbairn lost the greater part of the singing accomplishments
+which he had acquired under "Bowed Johnnie," but he learnt in lieu of
+them to read from Scott and Barrow's collections of prose and poetry,
+while he obtained some knowledge of arithmetic, in which he proceeded
+as far as practice and the rule of three. This constituted his whole
+stock of school-learning up to his tenth year. Out of school-hours he
+learnt to climb the ruined walls of the old abbey of the town, and
+there was scarcely an arch, or tower, or cranny of it with which he did
+not become familiar.
+
+When in his twelfth year, his father, who had been brought up to
+farm-work, and possessed considerable practical knowledge of
+agriculture, was offered the charge of a farm at Moy in Ross-shire,
+belonging to Lord Seaforth of Brahan Castle. The farm was of about 300
+acres, situated on the banks of the river Conan, some five miles from
+the town of Dingwall. The family travelled thither in a covered cart,
+a distance of 200 miles, through a very wild and hilly country,
+arriving at their destination at the end of October, 1799. The farm,
+when reached, was found overgrown with whins and brushwood, and covered
+in many places with great stones and rocks; it was, in short, as nearly
+in a state of nature as it was possible to be. The house intended for
+the farmer's reception was not finished, and Andrew Fairbairn, with his
+wife and five children, had to take temporary refuge in a miserable
+hovel, very unlike the comfortable house which they had quitted at
+Kelso. By next spring, however, the new house was ready; and Andrew
+Fairbairn set vigorously to work at the reclamation of the land. After
+about two years' labours it exhibited an altogether different
+appearance, and in place of whins and stones there were to be seen
+heavy crops of barley and turnips. The barren years of 1800 and 1801,
+however, pressed very hardly on Andrew Fairbairn as on every other
+farmer of arable land. About that time, Andrew's brother Peter, who
+acted as secretary to Lord Seaforth, and through whose influence the
+former had obtained the farm, left Brahan Castle for the West Indies
+with his Lordship, who--notwithstanding his being both deaf and
+dumb--had been appointed to the Governorship of Barbadoes; and in
+consequence of various difficulties which occurred shortly after his
+leaving, Andrew Fairbairn found it necessary to give up his holding,
+whereupon he engaged as steward to Mackenzie of Allengrange, with whom
+he remained for two years.
+
+While the family lived at Moy, none of the boys were put to school.
+They could not be spared from the farm and the household. Those of
+them that could not work afield were wanted to help to nurse the
+younger children at home. But Andrew Fairbairn possessed a great
+treasure in his wife, who was a woman of much energy of character,
+setting before her children an example of patient industry, thrift,
+discreetness, and piety, which could not fail to exercise a powerful
+influence upon them in after-life; and this, of itself, was an
+education which probably far more than compensated for the boys' loss
+of school-culture during their life at Moy. Mrs. Fairbairn span and
+made all the children's clothes, as well as the blankets and sheeting;
+and, while in the Highlands, she not only made her own and her
+daughters' dresses, and her sons' jackets and trowsers, but her
+husband's coats and waistcoats; besides helping her neighbours to cut
+out their clothing for family wear.
+
+One of William's duties at home was to nurse his younger brother Peter,
+then a delicate child under two years old; and to relieve himself of
+the labour of carrying him about, he began the construction of a little
+waggon in which to wheel him. This was, however, a work of some
+difficulty, as all the tools he possessed were only a knife, a gimlet,
+and an old saw. With these implements, a piece of thin board, and a
+few nails, he nevertheless contrived to make a tolerably serviceable
+waggon-body. His chief difficulty consisted in making the wheels,
+which he contrived to surmount by cutting sections from the stem of a
+small alder-tree, and with a red-hot poker he bored the requisite holes
+in their centres to receive the axle. The waggon was then mounted on
+its four wheels, and to the great joy of its maker was found to answer
+its purpose admirably. In it he wheeled his little brother--afterwards
+well known as Sir Peter Fairbairn, mayor of Leeds--in various
+directions about the farm, and sometimes to a considerable distance
+from it; and the vehicle was regarded on the whole as a decided
+success. His father encouraged him in his little feats of construction
+of a similar kind, and he proceeded to make and rig miniature boats and
+ships, and then miniature wind and water mills, in which last art he
+acquired such expertness that he had sometimes five or six mills going
+at a time. The machinery was all made with a knife, the water-spouts
+being formed by the bark of a tree, and the millstones represented by
+round discs of the same material. Such were the first constructive
+efforts of the future millwright and engineer.
+
+When the family removed to Allengrange in 1801, the boys were sent to
+school at Munlachy, about a mile and a half distant from the farm. The
+school was attended by about forty barefooted boys in tartan kilt's,
+and about twenty girls, all of the poorer class. The schoolmaster was
+one Donald Frazer, a good teacher, but a severe disciplinarian. Under
+him, William made some progress in reading, writing, and arithmetic;
+and though he himself has often lamented the meagreness of his school
+instruction, it is clear, from what he has since been enabled to
+accomplish, that these early lessons were enough at all events to set
+him fairly on the road of self-culture, and proved the fruitful seed of
+much valuable intellectual labour, as well as of many excellent
+practical books.
+
+After two years' trial of his new situation, which was by no means
+satisfactory, Andrew Fairbairn determined again to remove southward
+with his family; and, selling off everything, they set sail from
+Cromarty for Leith in June, 1803. Having seen his wife and children
+temporarily settled at Kelso, he looked out for a situation, and
+shortly after proceeded to undertake the management of Sir William
+Ingleby's farm at Ripley in Yorkshire. Meanwhile William was placed
+for three months under the charge of his uncle William, the parish
+schoolmaster of Galashiels, for the purpose of receiving instruction in
+book-keeping and land-surveying, from which he derived considerable
+benefit. He could not, however, remain longer at school; for being of
+the age of fourteen, it was thought necessary that he should be set to
+work without further delay. His first employment was on the fine new
+bridge at Kelso, then in course of construction after the designs of
+Mr. Rennie; but in helping one day to carry a handbarrow-load of stone,
+his strength proving insufficient, he gave way under it, and the stones
+fell upon him, one of them inflicting a serious wound on his leg, which
+kept him a cripple for months. In the mean time his father, being
+dissatisfied with his prospects at Ripley, accepted the appointment of
+manager of the Percy Main Colliery Company's farm in the neighbourhood
+of Newcastle-on-Tyne, whither he proceeded with his family towards the
+end of 1803, William joining them in the following February, when the
+wound in his leg had sufficiently healed to enable him to travel.
+
+Percy Main is situated within two miles of North Shields, and is one of
+the largest collieries in that district. William was immediately set
+to work at the colliery, his first employment being to lead coals from
+behind the screen to the pitmen's houses. His Scotch accent, and
+perhaps his awkwardness, exposed him to much annoyance from the "pit
+lads," who were a very rough and profligate set; and as boxing was a
+favourite pastime among them, our youth had to fight his way to their
+respect, passing through a campaign of no less than seventeen pitched
+battles. He was several times on the point of abandoning the work
+altogether, rather than undergo the buffetings and insults to which he
+was almost a daily martyr, when a protracted contest with one of the
+noted boxers of the colliery, in which he proved the victor, at length
+relieved him from further persecution.
+
+In the following year, at the age of sixteen, he was articled as an
+engineer for five years to the owners of Percy Main, and was placed
+under the charge of Mr. Robinson, the engine-wright of the colliery.
+His wages as apprentice were 8s. a week; but by working over-hours,
+making wooden wedges used in pit-work, and blocking out segments of
+solid oak required for walling the sides of the mine, he considerably
+increased his earnings, which enabled him to add to the gross income of
+the family, who were still struggling with the difficulties of small
+means and increasing expenses. When not engaged upon over-work in the
+evenings, he occupied himself in self-education. He drew up a scheme
+of daily study with this object, to which he endeavoured to adhere as
+closely as possible,--devoting the evenings of Mondays to mensuration
+and arithmetic; Tuesdays to history and poetry; Wednesdays to
+recreation, novels, and romances; Thursdays to algebra and mathematics;
+Fridays to Euclid and trigonometry; Saturdays to recreation; and
+Sundays to church, Milton, and recreation. He was enabled to extend
+the range of his reading by the help of the North Shields Subscription
+Library, to which his father entered him a subscriber. Portions of his
+spare time were also occasionally devoted to mechanical construction,
+in which he cultivated the useful art of handling tools. One of his
+first attempts was the contrivance of a piece of machinery worked by a
+weight and a pendulum, that should at the same time serve for a
+timepiece and an orrery; but his want of means, as well as of time,
+prevented him prosecuting this contrivance to completion. He was more
+successful with the construction of a fiddle, on which he was ambitious
+to become a performer. It must have been a tolerable instrument, for a
+professional player offered him 20s. for it. But though he succeeded
+in making a fiddle, and for some time persevered in the attempt to play
+upon it, he did not succeed in producing any satisfactory melody, and
+at length gave up the attempt, convinced that nature had not intended
+him for a musician.[1]
+
+In due course of time our young engineer was removed from the workshop,
+and appointed to take charge of the pumps of the mine and the
+steam-engine by which they were kept in work. This employment was more
+to his taste, gave him better "insight," and afforded him greater
+opportunities for improvement. The work was, however, very trying, and
+at times severe, especially in winter, the engineer being liable to be
+drenched with water every time that he descended the shaft to regulate
+the working of the pumps; but, thanks to a stout constitution, he bore
+through these exposures without injury, though others sank under them.
+At this period he had the advantage of occasional days of leisure, to
+which he was entitled by reason of his nightwork; and during such
+leisure he usually applied himself to reading and study.
+
+It was about this time that William Fairbairn made the acquaintance of
+George Stephenson, while the latter was employed in working the
+ballast-engine at Willington Quay. He greatly admired George as a
+workman, and was accustomed in the summer evenings to go over to the
+Quay occasionally and take charge of George's engine, to enable him to
+earn a few shillings extra by heaving ballast out of the collier
+vessels. Stephenson's zeal in the pursuit of mechanical knowledge
+probably was not without its influence in stimulating William Fairbairn
+himself to carry on so diligently the work of self-culture. But little
+could the latter have dreamt, while serving his apprenticeship at Percy
+Main, that his friend George Stephenson, the brakesman, should yet be
+recognised as among the greatest engineers of his age, and that he
+himself should have the opportunity, in his capacity of President of
+the Institute of Mechanical Engineers at Newcastle, of making public
+acknowledgment of the opportunities for education which he had enjoyed
+in that neighbourhood in his early years.[2]
+
+Having finished his five years' apprenticeship at Percy Main, by which
+time he had reached his twenty-first year, William Fairbairn shortly
+after determined to go forth into the world in search of experience.
+At Newcastle he found employment as a millwright for a few weeks,
+during which he worked at the erection of a sawmill in the Close. From
+thence he went to Bedlington at an advanced wage. He remained there
+for six months, during which he was so fortunate as to make the
+acquaintance of Miss Mar, who five years after, when his wanderings had
+ceased, became his wife. On the completion of the job on which he had
+been employed, our engineer prepared to make another change. Work was
+difficult to be had in the North, and, joined by a comrade, he resolved
+to try his fortune in London. Adopting the cheapest route, he took
+passage by a Shields collier, in which he sailed for the Thames on the
+11th of December, 1811. It was then war-time, and the vessel was very
+short-handed, the crew consisting only of three old men and three boys,
+with the skipper and mate; so that the vessel was no sooner fairly at
+sea than both the passenger youths had to lend a hand in working her,
+and this continued for the greater part of the voyage. The weather was
+very rough, and in consequence of the captain's anxiety to avoid
+privateers he hugged the shore too close, and when navigating the
+inside passage of the Swin, between Yarmouth and the Nore, the vessel
+very narrowly escaped shipwreck. After beating about along shore, the
+captain half drunk the greater part of the time, the vessel at last
+reached the Thames with loss of spars and an anchor, after a tedious
+voyage of fourteen days.
+
+On arriving off Blackwall the captain went ashore ostensibly in search
+of the Coal Exchange, taking our young engineer with him. The former
+was still under the influence of drink; and though he failed to reach
+the Exchange that night, he succeeded in reaching a public house in
+Wapping, beyond which he could not be got. At ten o'clock the two
+started on their return to the ship; but the captain took the
+opportunity of the darkness to separate from his companion, and did not
+reach the ship until next morning. It afterwards came out that he had
+been taken up and lodged in the watch-house. The youth, left alone in
+the streets of the strange city, felt himself in an awkward dilemma.
+He asked the next watchman he met to recommend him to a lodging, on
+which the man took him to a house in New Gravel Lane, where he
+succeeded in finding accommodation. What was his horror next morning
+to learn that a whole family--the Williamsons--had been murdered in the
+very next house during the night! Making the best of his way back to
+the ship, he found that his comrade, who had suffered dreadfully from
+sea-sickness during the voyage, had nearly recovered, and was able to
+accompany him into the City in search of work. They had between them a
+sum of only about eight pounds, so that it was necessary for them to
+take immediate steps to obtain employment.
+
+They thought themselves fortunate in getting the promise of a job from
+Mr. Rennie, the celebrated engineer, whose works were situated at the
+south end of Blackfriars Bridge. Mr. Rennie sent the two young men to
+his foreman, with the request that he should set them to work. The
+foreman referred them to the secretary of the Millwrights' Society, the
+shop being filled with Union men, who set their shoulders together to
+exclude those of their own grade, however skilled, who could not
+produce evidence that they had complied with the rules of the trade.
+Describing his first experience of London Unionists, nearly half a
+century later, before an assembly of working men at Derby, Mr.
+Fairbairn said, "When I first entered London, a young man from the
+country had no chance whatever of success, in consequence of the trade
+guilds and unions. I had no difficulty in finding employment, but
+before I could begin work I had to run the gauntlet of the trade
+societies; and after dancing attendance for nearly six weeks, with very
+little money in my pocket, and having to 'box Harry' all the time, I
+was ultimately declared illegitimate, and sent adrift to seek my
+fortune elsewhere. There were then three millwright societies in
+London: one called the Old Society, another the New Society, and a
+third the Independent Society. These societies were not founded for
+the protection of the trade, but for the maintenance of high wages, and
+for the exclusion of all those who could not assert their claims to
+work in London and other corporate towns. Laws of a most arbitrary
+character were enforced, and they were governed by cliques of
+self-appointed officers, who never failed to take care of their own
+interests." [3]
+
+Their first application for leave to work in London having thus
+disastrously ended, the two youths determined to try their fortune in
+the country, and with aching hearts they started next morning before
+daylight. Their hopes had been suddenly crushed, their slender funds
+were nearly exhausted, and they scarce knew where to turn. But they
+set their faces bravely northward, and pushed along the high road,
+through slush and snow, as far as Hertford, which they reached after
+nearly eight hours' walking, on the moderate fare during their journey
+of a penny roll and a pint of ale each. Though wet to the skin, they
+immediately sought out a master millwright, and applied for work. He
+said he had no job vacant at present; but, seeing their sorry plight,
+he had compassion upon them, and said, "Though I cannot give you
+employment, you seem to be two nice lads;" and he concluded by offering
+Fairbairn a half-crown. But his proud spirit revolted at taking money
+which he had not earned; and he declined the proffered gift with
+thanks, saying he was sorry they could not have work. He then turned
+away from the door, on which his companion, mortified by his refusal to
+accept the half-crown at a time when they were reduced almost to their
+last penny, broke out in bitter remonstrances and regrets. Weary, wet,
+and disheartened, the two turned into Hertford churchyard, and rested
+for a while upon a tombstone, Fairbairn's companion relieving himself
+by a good cry, and occasional angry outbursts of "Why didn't you take
+the half-crown?" "Come, come, man!" said Fairbairn, "it's of no use
+crying; cheer up; let's try another road; something must soon cast up."
+They rose, and set out again, but when they reached the bridge, the
+dispirited youth again broke down; and, leaning his back against the
+parapet, said, "I winna gang a bit further; let's get back to London."
+Against this Fairbairn remonstrated, saying "It's of no use lamenting;
+we must try what we can do here; if the worst comes to the worst, we
+can 'list; you are a strong chap--they'll soon take you; and as for me,
+I'll join too; I think I could fight a bit." After this council of
+war, the pair determined to find lodgings in the town for the night,
+and begin their search for work anew on the morrow.
+
+Next day, when passing along one of the back streets of Hertford, they
+came to a wheelwright's shop, where they made the usual enquiries. The
+wheelwright, said that he did not think there was any job to be had in
+the town; but if the two young men pushed on to Cheshunt, he thought
+they might find work at a windmill which was under contract to be
+finished in three weeks, and where the millwright wanted hands. Here
+was a glimpse of hope at last; and the strength and spirits of both
+revived in an instant. They set out immediately; walked the seven
+miles to Cheshunt; succeeded in obtaining the expected employment;
+worked at the job a fortnight; and entered London again with nearly
+three pounds in their pockets.
+
+Our young millwright at length succeeded in obtaining regular
+employment in the metropolis at good wages. He worked first at
+Grundy's Patent Ropery at Shadwell, and afterwards at Mr. Penn's of
+Greenwich, gaining much valuable insight, and sedulously improving his
+mind by study in his leisure hours. Among the acquaintances he then
+made was an enthusiastic projector of the name of Hall, who had taken
+out one patent for making hemp from bean-stalks, and contemplated
+taking out another for effecting spade tillage by steam. The young
+engineer was invited to make the requisite model, which he did, and it
+cost him both time and money, which the out-at-elbows projector was
+unable to repay; and all that came of the project was the exhibition of
+the model at the Society of Arts and before the Board of Agriculture,
+in whose collection it is probably still to be found. Another more
+successful machine constructed By Mr. Fairbairn about the same time was
+a sausage-chopping machine, which he contrived and made for a
+pork-butcher for 33l. It was the first order he had ever had on his
+own account; and, as the machine when made did its work admirably, he
+was naturally very proud of it. The machine was provided with a
+fly-wheel and double crank, with connecting rods which worked a cross
+head. It contained a dozen knives crossing each other at right angles
+in such a way as to enable them to mince or divide the meat on a
+revolving block. Another part of the apparatus accomplished the
+filling of the sausages in a very expert manner, to the entire
+satisfaction of the pork-butcher.
+
+As work was scarce in London at the time, and our engineer was bent on
+gathering further experience in his trade, he determined to make a tour
+in the South of England and South Wales; and set out from London in
+April 1813 with 7L. in his pocket. After visiting Bath and Frome, he
+settled to work for six weeks at Bathgate; after which he travelled by
+Bradford and Trowbridge--always on foot--to Bristol. From thence he
+travelled through South Wales, spending a few days each at Newport,
+Llandaff, and Cardiff, where he took ship for Dublin. By the time he
+reached Ireland his means were all but exhausted, only three-halfpence
+remaining in his pocket; but, being young, hopeful, skilful, and
+industrious, he was light of heart, and looked cheerfully forward. The
+next day he succeeded in finding employment at Mr. Robinson's, of the
+Phoenix Foundry, where he was put to work at once upon a set of
+patterns for some nail-machinery. Mr. Robinson was a man of spirit and
+enterprise, and, seeing the quantities of English machine-made nails
+imported into Ireland, he was desirous of giving Irish industry the
+benefit of the manufacture. The construction of the nail-making
+machinery occupied Mr. Fairbairn the entire summer; and on its
+completion he set sail in the month of October for Liverpool. It may
+be added, that, notwithstanding the expense incurred by Mr. Robinson in
+setting up the new nail-machinery, his workmen threatened him with a
+strike if he ventured to use it. As he could not brave the opposition
+of the Unionists, then all-powerful in Dublin, the machinery was never
+set to work; the nail-making trade left Ireland, never to return; and
+the Irish market was thenceforward supplied entirely with English-made
+nails. The Dublin iron-manufacture was ruined in the same way; not
+through any local disadvantages, but solely by the prohibitory
+regulations enforced by the workmen of the Trades Unions.
+
+Arrived at Liverpool, after a voyage of two days--which was then
+considered a fair passage--our engineer proceeded to Manchester, which
+had already become the principal centre of manufacturing operations in
+the North of England. As we have already seen in the memoirs of
+Nasmyth, Roberts, and Whitworth, Manchester offered great attractions
+for highly-skilled mechanics; and it was as fortunate for Manchester as
+for William Fairbairn himself that he settled down there as a working
+millwright in the year 1814, bringing with him no capital, but an
+abundance of energy, skill, and practical experience in his trade.
+Afterwards describing the characteristics of the millwright of that
+time, Mr. Fairbairn said--"In those days a good millwright was a man of
+large resources; he was generally well educated, and could draw out his
+own designs and work at the lathe; he had a knowledge of mill
+machinery, pumps, and cranes, and could turn his hand to the bench or
+the forge with equal adroitness and facility. If hard pressed, as was
+frequently the case in country places far from towns, he could devise
+for himself expedients which enabled him to meet special requirements,
+and to complete his work without assistance. This was the class of men
+with whom I associated in early life--proud of their calling, fertile
+in resources, and aware of their value in a country where the
+industrial arts were rapidly developing." [4]
+
+When William Fairbairn entered Manchester he was twenty-four years of
+age; and his hat still "covered his family." But, being now pretty
+well satiated with his "wandetschaft,"--as German tradesmen term their
+stage of travelling in search of trade experience,--he desired to
+settle, and, if fortune favoured him, to marry the object of his
+affections, to whom his heart still faithfully turned during all his
+wanderings. He succeeded in finding employment with Mr. Adam
+Parkinson, remaining with him for two years, working as a millwright,
+at good wages. Out of his earnings he saved sufficient to furnish a
+two-roomed cottage comfortably; and there we find him fairly installed
+with his wife by the end of 1816. As in the case of most men of a
+thoughtful turn, marriage served not only to settle our engineer, but
+to stimulate him to more energetic action. He now began to aim at
+taking a higher position, and entertained the ambition of beginning
+business on his own account. One of his first efforts in this
+direction was the preparation of the design of a cast-iron bridge over
+the Irwell, at Blackfriars, for which a prize was offered. The attempt
+was unsuccessful, and a stone bridge was eventually decided on; but the
+effort made was creditable, and proved the beginning of many designs.
+The first job he executed on his own account was the erection of an
+iron conservatory and hothouse for Mr. J. Hulme, of Clayton, near
+Manchester; and he induced one of his shopmates, James Lillie, to join
+him in the undertaking. This proved the beginning of a business
+connection which lasted for a period of fifteen years, and laid the
+foundation of a partnership, the reputation of which, in connection
+with mill-work and the construction of iron machinery generally,
+eventually became known all over the civilized world.
+
+Although the patterns for the conservatory were all made, and the
+castings were begun, the work was not proceeded with, in consequence of
+the notice given by a Birmingham firm that the plan after which it was
+proposed to construct it was an infringement of their patent. The
+young firm were consequently under the necessity of looking about them
+for other employment. And to be prepared for executing orders, they
+proceeded in the year 1817 to hire a small shed at a rent of 12s. a
+week, in which they set up a lathe of their own making, capable of
+turning shafts of from 3 to 6 inches diameter; and they hired a strong
+Irishman to drive the wheel and assist at the heavy work. Their first
+job was the erection of a cullender, and their next a calico-polishing
+machine; but orders came in slowly, and James Lillie began to despair
+of success. His more hopeful partner strenuously urged him to
+perseverance, and so buoyed him up with hopes of orders, that he
+determined to go on a little longer. They then issued cards among the
+manufacturers, and made a tour of the principal firms, offering their
+services and soliciting work.
+
+Amongst others, Mr. Fairbairn called upon the Messrs. Adam and George
+Murray, the large cotton-spinners, taking with him the designs of his
+iron bridge. Mr. Adam Murray received him kindly, heard his
+explanations, and invited him to call on the following day with his
+partner. The manufacturer must have been favourably impressed by this
+interview, for next day, when Fairbairn and Lillie called, he took them
+over his mill, and asked whether they felt themselves competent to
+renew with horizontal cross-shafts the whole of the work by which the
+mule-spinning machinery was turned. This was a formidable enterprise
+for a young firm without capital and almost without plant to undertake;
+but they had confidence in themselves, and boldly replied that they
+were willing and able to execute the work. On this, Mr. Murray said he
+would call and see them at their own workshop, to satisfy himself that
+they possessed the means of undertaking such an order. This proposal
+was by no means encouraging to the partners, who feared that when Mr.
+Murray spied "the nakedness of the land" in that quarter, he might
+repent him of his generous intentions. He paid his promised visit, and
+it is probable that he was more favourably impressed by the individual
+merits of the partners than by the excellence of their
+machine-tools--of which they had only one, the lathe which they had
+just made and set up; nevertheless he gave them the order, and they
+began with glad hearts and willing hands and minds to execute this
+their first contract. It may be sufficient to state that by working
+late and early--from 5 in the morning until 9 at night for a
+considerable period--they succeeded in completing the alterations
+within the time specified, and to Mr. Murray's entire satisfaction.
+The practical skill of the young men being thus proved, and their
+anxiety to execute the work entrusted to them to the best of their
+ability having excited the admiration of their employer, he took the
+opportunity of recommending them to his friends in the trade, and
+amongst others to Mr. John Kennedy, of the firm of MacConnel and
+Kennedy, then the largest spinners in the kingdom.
+
+The Cotton Trade had by this time sprung into great importance, and was
+increasing with extraordinary rapidity. Population and wealth were
+pouring into South Lancashire, and industry and enterprise were
+everywhere on foot. The foundations were being laid of a system of
+manufacturing in iron, machinery, and textile fabrics of nearly all
+kinds, the like of which has perhaps never been surpassed in any
+country. It was a race of industry, in which the prizes were won by
+the swift, the strong, and the skilled. For the most part, the early
+Lancashire manufacturers started very nearly equal in point of worldly
+circumstances, men originally of the smallest means often coming to the
+front--work men, weavers, mechanics, pedlers, farmers, or labourers--in
+course of time rearing immense manufacturing concerns by sheer force of
+industry, energy, and personal ability. The description given by one
+of the largest employers in Lancashire, of the capital with which he
+started, might apply to many of them: "When I married," said he, "my
+wife had a spinning-wheel, and I had a loom--that was the beginning of
+our fortune." As an illustration of the rapid rise of Manchester men
+from small beginnings, the following outline of John Kennedy's career,
+intimately connected as he was with the subject of our memoir--may not
+be without interest in this place.
+
+John Kennedy was one of five young men of nearly the same age, who came
+from the same neighbourhood in Scotland, and eventually settled in
+Manchester as cottons-pinners about the end of last century. The
+others were his brother James, his partner James MacConnel, and the
+brothers Murray, above referred to--Mr. Fairbairn's first extensive
+employers. John Kennedy's parents were respectable peasants, possessed
+of a little bit of ground at Knocknalling, in the stewartry of
+Kirkcudbright, on which they contrived to live, and that was all. John
+was one of a family of five sons and two daughters, and the father
+dying early, the responsibility and the toil of bringing up these
+children devolved upon the mother. She was a strict disciplinarian,
+and early impressed upon the minds of her boys that they had their own
+way to make in the world. One of the first things she made them think
+about was, the learning of some useful trade for the purpose of
+securing an independent living; "for," said she, "if you have gotten
+mechanical skill and intelligence, and are honest and trustworthy, you
+will always find employment and be ready to avail yourselves of
+opportunities for advancing yourselves in life." Though the mother
+desired to give her sons the benefits of school education, there was
+but little of that commodity to be had in the remote district of
+Knocknalling. The parish-school was six miles distant, and the
+teaching given in it was of a very inferior sort--usually administered
+by students, probationers for the ministry, or by half-fledged
+dominies, themselves more needing instruction than able to impart it.
+The Kennedys could only attend the school during a few months in
+summer-time, so that what they had acquired by the end of one season
+was often forgotten by the beginning of the next. They learnt,
+however, to read the Testament, say their catechism, and write their
+own names.
+
+As the children grew up, they each longed for the time to come when
+they could be put to a trade. The family were poorly clad; stockings
+and shoes were luxuries rarely indulged in; and Mr. Kennedy used in
+after-life to tell his grandchildren of a certain Sunday which he
+remembered shortly after his father died, when he was setting out for
+Dalry church, and had borrowed his brother Alexander's stockings, his
+brother ran after him and cried, "See that you keep out of the dirt,
+for mind you have got my stockings on!" John indulged in many
+day-dreams about the world that lay beyond the valley and the mountains
+which surrounded the place of his birth. Though a mere boy, the
+natural objects, eternally unchangeable, which daily met his eyes--the
+profound silence of the scene, broken only by the bleating of a
+solitary sheep, or the crowing of a distant cock, or the thrasher
+beating out with his flail the scanty grain of the black oats spread
+upon a skin in the open air, or the streamlets leaping from the rocky
+clefts, or the distant church-bell sounding up the valley on
+Sundays--all bred in his mind a profound melancholy and feeling of
+loneliness, and he used to think to himself, "What can I do to see and
+know something of the world beyond this?" The greatest pleasure he
+experienced during that period was when packmen came round with their
+stores of clothing and hardware, and displayed them for sale; he
+eagerly listened to all that such visitors had to tell of the ongoings
+of the world beyond the valley.
+
+The people of the Knocknalling district were very poor. The greater
+part of them were unable to support the younger members, whose custom
+it was to move off elsewhere in search of a living when they arrived at
+working years,--some to America, some to the West Indies, and some to
+the manufacturing districts of the south. Whole families took their
+departure in this way, and the few friendships which Kennedy formed
+amongst those of his own age were thus suddenly snapped, and only a
+great blank remained. But he too could follow their example, and enter
+upon that wider world in which so many others had ventured and
+succeeded. As early as eight years of age, his mother still impressing
+upon her boys the necessity of learning to work, John gathered courage
+to say to her that he wished to leave home and apprentice himself to
+some handicraft business. Having seen some carpenters working in the
+neighbourhood, with good clothes on their backs, and hearing the men's
+characters well spoken of, he thought it would be a fine thing to be a
+carpenter too, particularly as the occupation would enable him to move
+from place to place and see the world. He was as yet, however, of too
+tender an age to set out on the journey of life; but when he was about
+eleven years old, Adam Murray, one of his most intimate acquaintances,
+having gone off to serve an apprenticeship in Lancashire with Mr.
+Cannan of Chowbent, himself a native of the district, the event again
+awakened in him a strong desire to migrate from Knocknalling. Others
+had gone after Murray, James MacConnel and two or three more; and at
+length, at about fourteen years of age, Kennedy himself left his native
+home for Lancashire. About the time that he set out, Paul Jones was
+ravaging the coasts of Galloway, and producing general consternation
+throughout the district. Great excitement also prevailed through the
+occurrence of the Gordon riots in London, which extended into remote
+country places; and Kennedy remembered being nearly frightened out of
+his wits on one occasion by a poor dominie whose school he attended,
+who preached to his boys about the horrors that were coming upon the
+land through the introduction of Popery. The boy set out for England
+on the 2nd of February, 1784, mounted upon a Galloway, his little
+package of clothes and necessaries strapped behind him. As he passed
+along the glen, recognising each familiar spot, his heart was in his
+mouth, and he dared scarcely trust himself to look back. The ground
+was covered with snow, and nature quite frozen up. He had the company
+of his brother Alexander as far as the town of New Galloway, where he
+slept the first night. The next day, accompanied by one of his future
+masters, Mr. James Smith, a partner of Mr. Cannan's, who had originally
+entered his service as a workman, they started on ponyback for
+Dumfries. After a long day's ride, they entered the town in the
+evening, and amongst the things which excited the boy's surprise were
+the few street-lamps of the town, and a waggon with four horses and
+four wheels. In his remote valley carts were as yet unknown, and even
+in Dumfries itself they were comparative rarities; the common means of
+transport in the district being what were called "tumbling cars." The
+day after, they reached Longtown, and slept there; the boy noting
+ANOTHER lamp. The next stage was to Carlisle, where Mr. Smith, whose
+firm had supplied a carding engine and spinning-jenny to a small
+manufacturer in the town, went to "gate" and trim them. One was put up
+in a small house, the other in a small room; and the sight of these
+machines was John Kennedy's first introduction to cotton-spinning.
+While going up the inn-stairs he was amazed and not a little alarmed at
+seeing two men in armour--he had heard of the battles between the Scots
+and English--and believed these to be some of the fighting men; though
+they proved to be but effigies. Five more days were occupied in
+travelling southward, the resting places being at Penrith, Kendal,
+Preston, and Chorley, the two travellers arriving at Chowbent on Sunday
+the 8th of February, 1784. Mr. Cannan seems to have collected about
+him a little colony of Scotsmen, mostly from the same neighbourhood,
+and in the evening there was quite an assembly of them at the "Bear's
+Paw," where Kennedy put up, to hear the tidings from their native
+county brought by the last new comer. On the following morning the boy
+began his apprenticeship as a carpenter with the firm of Cannan and
+Smith, serving seven years for his meat and clothing. He applied
+himself to his trade, and became a good, steady workman. He was
+thoughtful and self-improving, always endeavouring to acquire knowledge
+of new arts and to obtain insight into new machines. "Even in early
+life," said he, in the account of his career addressed to his children,
+"I felt a strong desire to know what others knew, and was always ready
+to communicate what little I knew myself; and by admitting at once my
+want of education, I found that I often made friends of those on whom I
+had no claims beyond what an ardent desire for knowledge could give me."
+
+His apprenticeship over, John Kennedy commenced business[5] in a small
+way in Manchester in 1791, in conjunction with two other workmen,
+Sandford and MacConnel. Their business was machine-making and
+mule-spinning, Kennedy taking the direction of the machine department.
+The firm at first put up their mules for spinning in any convenient
+garrets they could hire at a low rental. After some time, they took
+part of a small factory in Canal Street, and carried on their business
+on a larger scale. Kennedy and MacConnel afterwards occupied a little
+factory in the same street,--since removed to give place to Fairbairn's
+large machine works. The progress of the firm was steady and even
+rapid, and they went on building mills and extending their
+business--Mr. Kennedy, as he advanced in life, gathering honour,
+wealth, and troops of friends. Notwithstanding the defects of his
+early education, he was one of the few men of his class who became
+distinguished for his literary labours in connexion principally with
+the cotton trade. Towards the close of his life, he prepared several
+papers of great interest for the Literary and Philosophical Society of
+Manchester, which are to be found printed in their Proceedings; one of
+these, on the Invention of the Mule by Samuel Crompton, was for a long
+time the only record which the public possessed of the merits and
+claims of that distinguished inventor. His knowledge of the history of
+the cotton manufacture in its various stages, and of mechanical
+inventions generally, was most extensive and accurate. Among his
+friends he numbered James Watt, who placed his son in his establishment
+for the purpose of acquiring knowledge and experience of his
+profession. At a much later period he numbered George Stephenson among
+his friends, having been one of the first directors of the Liverpool
+and Manchester Railway, and one of the three judges (selected because
+of his sound judgment and proved impartiality, as well as his knowledge
+of mechanical engineering) to adjudicate on the celebrated competition
+of Locomotives at Rainhill. By these successive steps did this poor
+Scotch boy become one of the leading men of Manchester, closing his
+long and useful life in 1855 at an advanced age, his mental faculties
+remaining clear and unclouded to the last. His departure from life was
+happy and tranquil--so easy that it was for a time doubtful whether he
+was dead or asleep.
+
+To return to Mr. Fairbairn's career, and his progress as a millwright
+and engineer in Manchester. When he and his partner undertook the
+extensive alterations in Mr. Murray's factory, both were in a great
+measure unacquainted with the working of cotton-mills, having until
+then been occupied principally with corn-mills, and printing and
+bleaching works; so that an entirely new field was now opened to their
+united exertions. Sedulously improving their opportunities, the young
+partners not only thoroughly mastered the practical details of
+cotton-mill work, but they were very shortly enabled to introduce a
+series of improvements of the greatest importance in this branch of our
+national manufactures. Bringing their vigorous practical minds to bear
+on the subject, they at once saw that the gearing of even the best
+mills was of a very clumsy and imperfect character. They found the
+machinery driven by large square cast-iron shafts, on which huge wooden
+drums, some of them as much as four feet in diameter, revolved at the
+rate of about forty revolutions a minute; and the couplings were so
+badly fitted that they might be heard creaking and groaning a long way
+off. The speeds of the driving-shafts were mostly got up by a series
+of straps and counter drums, which not only crowded the rooms, but
+seriously obstructed the light where most required for conducting the
+delicate operations of the different machines. Another serious defect
+lay in the construction of the shafts, and in the mode of fixing the
+couplings, which were constantly giving way, so that a week seldom
+passed without one or more breaks-down. The repairs were usually made
+on Sundays, which were the millwrights' hardest working days, to their
+own serious moral detriment; but when trade was good, every
+consideration was made to give way to the uninterrupted running of the
+mills during the rest of the week.
+
+It occurred to Mr. Fairbairn that the defective arrangements thus
+briefly described, might be remedied by the introduction of lighter
+shafts driven at double or treble the velocity, smaller drums to drive
+the machinery, and the use of wrought-iron wherever practicable,
+because of its greater lightness and strength compared with wood. He
+also provided for the simplification of the hangers and fixings by
+which the shafting was supported, and introduced the "half-lap
+coupling" so well known to millwrights and engineers. His partner
+entered fully into his views; and the opportunity shortly presented
+itself of carrying them into effect in the large new mill erected in
+1818, for the firm of MacConnel and Kennedy. The machinery of that
+concern proved a great improvement on all that had preceded it; and, to
+Messrs. Fairbairn and Lillie's new system of gearing Mr. Kennedy added
+an original invention of his own in a system of double speeds, with the
+object of giving an increased quantity of twist in the finer
+descriptions of mule yarn.
+
+The satisfactory execution of this important work at once placed the
+firm of Fairbairn and Lillie in the very front rank of engineering
+millwrights. Mr. Kennedy's good word was of itself a passport to fame
+and business, and as he was more than satisfied with the manner in
+which his mill machinery had been planned and executed, he sounded
+their praises in all quarters. Orders poured in upon them so rapidly,
+that they had difficulty in keeping pace with the demands of the trade.
+They then removed from their original shed to larger premises in
+Matherstreet, where they erected additional lathes and other
+tool-machines, and eventually a steam-engine. They afterwards added a
+large cellar under an adjoining factory to their premises; and from
+time to time provided new means of turning out work with increased
+efficiency and despatch. In due course of time the firm erected a
+factory of their own, fitted with the most improved machinery for
+turning out millwork; and they went on from one contract to another,
+until their reputation as engineers became widely celebrated. In
+1826-7, they supplied the water-wheels for the extensive cotton-mills
+belonging to Kirkman Finlay and Company, at Catrine Bank in Ayrshire.
+These wheels are even at this day regarded as among the most perfect
+hydraulic machines in Europe. About the same time they supplied the
+mill gearing and water-machinery for Messrs. Escher and Company's large
+works at Zurich, among the largest cotton manufactories on the
+continent.
+
+In the mean while the industry of Manchester and the neighbourhood,
+through which the firm had risen and prospered, was not neglected, but
+had the full benefit of the various improvements which they were
+introducing in mill machinery. In the course of a few years an entire
+revolution was effected in the gearing. Ponderous masses of timber and
+cast-iron, with their enormous bearings and couplings, gave place to
+slender rods of wrought-iron and light frames or hooks by which they
+were suspended. In like manner, lighter yet stronger wheels and
+pulleys were introduced, the whole arrangements were improved, and, the
+workmanship being greatly more accurate, friction was avoided, while
+the speed was increased from about 40 to upwards of 300 revolutions a
+minute. The fly-wheel of the engine was also converted into a first
+motion by the formation of teeth on its periphery, by which a
+considerable saving was effected both in cost and power.
+
+These great improvements formed quite an era in the history of mill
+machinery; and exercised the most important influence on the
+development of the cotton, flax, silk, and other branches of
+manufacture. Mr. Fairbairn says the system introduced by his firm was
+at first strongly condemned by leading engineers, and it was with
+difficulty that he could overcome the force of their opposition; nor
+was it until a wheel of thirty tons weight for a pair of engines of
+100-horse power each was erected and set to work, that their
+prognostications of failure entirely ceased. From that time the
+principles introduced by Mr. Fairbairn have been adopted wherever steam
+is employed as a motive power in mills.
+
+Mr. Fairbairn and his partner had a hard uphill battle to fight while
+these improvements were being introduced; but energy and perseverance,
+guided by sound judgment, secured their usual reward, and the firm
+became known as one of the most thriving and enterprising in
+Manchester. Long years after, when addressing an assembly of working
+men, Mr. Fairbairn, while urging the necessity of labour and
+application as the only sure means of self-improvement, said, "I can
+tell you from experience, that there is no labour so sweet, none so
+consolatory, as that which is founded upon an honest, straightforward,
+and honourable ambition." The history of any prosperous business,
+however, so closely resembles every other, and its details are usually
+of so monotonous a character, that it is unnecessary for us to pursue
+this part of the subject; and we will content ourselves with briefly
+indicating the several further improvements introduced by Mr. Fairbairn
+in the mechanics of construction in the course of his long and useful
+career.
+
+His improvements in water-wheels were of great value, especially as
+regarded the new form of bucket which he introduced with the object of
+facilitating the escape of the air as the water entered the bucket
+above, and its readmission as the water emptied itself out below. This
+arrangement enabled the water to act upon the wheel with the maximum of
+effect in all states of the river; and it so generally recommended
+itself, that it very soon became adopted in most water-mills both at
+home and abroad.[6] His labours were not, however, confined to his own
+particular calling as a mill engineer, but were shortly directed to
+other equally important branches of the constructive art. Thus he was
+among the first to direct his attention to iron ship building as a
+special branch of business. In 1829, Mr. Houston, of Johnstown, near
+Paisley, launched a light boat on the Ardrossan Canal for the purpose
+of ascertaining the speed at which it could be towed by horses with two
+or three persons on board. To the surprise of Mr. Houston and the
+other gentlemen present, it was found that the labour the horses had to
+perform in towing the boat was mach greater at six or seven, than at
+nine miles an hour. This anomaly was very puzzling to the
+experimenters, and at the request of the Council of the Forth and Clyde
+Canal, Mr. Fairbairn, who had already become extensively known as a
+scientific mechanic, was requested to visit Scotland and institute a
+series of experiments with light boats to determine the law of
+traction, and clear up, if possible, the apparent anomalies in Mr.
+Houston's experiments. This he did accordingly, and the results of his
+experiments were afterwards published, The trials extended over a
+series of years, and were conducted at a cost of several thousand
+pounds. The first experiments were made with vessels of wood, but they
+eventually led to the construction of iron vessels upon a large scale
+and on an entirely new principle of construction, with angle iron ribs
+and wrought-iron sheathing plates. The results proved most valuable,
+and had the effect of specially directing the attention of naval
+engineers to the employment of iron in ship building.
+
+Mr. Fairbairn himself fully recognised the value of the experiments,
+and proceeded to construct an iron vessel at his works at Manchester,
+in 1831, which went to sea the same year. Its success was such as to
+induce him to begin iron shipbuilding on a large scale, at the same
+time as the Messrs. Laird did at Birkenhead; and in 1835, Mr. Fairbairn
+established extensive works at Millwall, on the Thames,--afterwards
+occupied by Mr. Scott Russell, in whose yard the "Great Eastern"
+steamship was erected,--where in the course of some fourteen years he
+built upwards of a hundred and twenty iron ships, some of them above
+2000 tons burden. It was in fact the first great iron shipbuilding
+yard in Britain, and led the way in a branch of business which has
+since become of first-rate magnitude and importance. Mr. Fairbairn was
+a most laborious experimenter in iron, and investigated in great detail
+the subject of its strength, the value of different kinds of riveted
+joints compared with the solid plate, and the distribution of the
+material throughout the structure, as well as the form of the vessel
+itself. It would indeed be difficult to over-estimate the value of his
+investigations on these points in the earlier stages of this now highly
+important branch of the national industry.
+
+To facilitate the manufacture of his iron-sided ships, Mr. Fairbairn,
+about the year 1839, invented a machine for riveting boiler plates by
+steam-power. The usual method by which this process had before been
+executed was by hand-hammers, worked by men placed at each side of the
+plate to be riveted, acting simultaneously on both sides of the bolt.
+But this process was tedious and expensive, as well as clumsy and
+imperfect; and some more rapid and precise method of fixing the plates
+firmly together was urgently wanted. Mr. Fairbairn's machine
+completely supplied the want. By its means the rivet was driven into
+its place, and firmly fastened there by a couple of strokes of a hammer
+impelled by steam. Aided by the Jacquard punching-machine of Roberts,
+the riveting of plates of the largest size has thus become one of the
+simplest operations in iron-manufacturing.
+
+The thorough knowledge which Mr. Fairbairn possessed of the strength of
+wrought-iron in the form of the hollow beam (which a wrought-iron ship
+really is) naturally led to his being consulted by the late Robert
+Stephenson as to the structures by means of which it was proposed to
+span the estuary of the Conway and the Straits of Menai; and the result
+was the Conway and Britannia Tubular Bridges, the history of which we
+have fully described elsewhere.[7] There is no reason to doubt that by
+far the largest share of the merit of working out the practical details
+of those structures, and thus realizing Robert Stephenson's magnificent
+idea of the tubular bridge, belongs to Mr. Fairbairn.
+
+In all matters connected with the qualities and strength of iron, he
+came to be regarded as a first-rate authority, and his advice was often
+sought and highly valued. The elaborate experiments instituted by him
+as to the strength of iron of all kinds have formed the subject of
+various papers which he has read before the British Association, the
+Royal Society, and the Literary and Philosophical Society of
+Manchester. His practical inquiries as to the strength of boilers have
+led to his being frequently called upon to investigate the causes of
+boiler explosions, on which subject he has published many elaborate
+reports. The study of this subject led him to elucidate the law
+according to which the density of steam varies throughout an extensive
+range of pressures and atmospheres,--in singular confirmation of what
+had before been provisionally calculated from the mechanical theory of
+heat. His discovery of the true method of preventing the tendency of
+tubes to collapse, by dividing the flues of long boilers into short
+lengths by means of stiffening rings, arising out of the same
+investigation, was one of the valuable results of his minute study of
+the subject; and is calculated to be of essential value in the
+manufacturing districts by diminishing the chances of boiler
+explosions, and saving the lamentable loss of life which has during the
+last twenty years been occasioned by the malconstruction of boilers.
+Among Mr. Fairbairn's most recent, inquiries are those conducted by him
+at the instance of the British Government relative to the construction
+of iron-plated ships, his report of which has not yet been made public,
+most probably for weighty political reasons.
+
+We might also refer to the practical improvements which Mr. Fairbairn
+has been instrumental in introducing in the construction of buildings
+of various kinds by the use of iron. He has himself erected numerous
+iron structures, and pointed out the road which other manufacturers
+have readily followed. "I am one of those," said he, in his 'Lecture
+on the Progress of Engineering,' "who have great faith in iron walls
+and iron beams; and although I have both spoken and written much on the
+subject, I cannot too forcibly recommend it to public attention. It is
+now twenty years since I constructed an iron house, with the machinery
+of a corn-mill, for Halil Pasha, then Seraskier of the Turkish army at
+Constantinople. I believe it was the first iron house built in this
+country; and it was constructed at the works at Millwall, London, in
+1839." [8]
+
+Since then iron structures of all kinds have been erected: iron
+lighthouses, iron-and-crystal palaces, iron churches, and iron bridges.
+Iron roads have long been worked by iron locomotives; and before many
+years have passed a telegraph of iron wire will probably be found
+circling the globe. We now use iron roofs, iron bedsteads, iron ropes,
+and iron pavement; and even the famous "wooden walls of England" are
+rapidly becoming reconstructed of iron. In short, we are in the midst
+of what Mr. Worsaae has characterized as the Age of Iron.
+
+At the celebration of the opening of the North Wales Railway at Bangor,
+almost within sight of his iron bridge across the Straits of Menai,
+Robert Stephenson said, "We are daily producing from the bowels of the
+earth a raw material, in its crude state apparently of no worth, but
+which, when converted into a locomotive engine, flies over bridges of
+the same material, with a speed exceeding that of the bird, advancing
+wealth and comfort throughout the country. Such are the powers of that
+all-civilizing instrument, Iron."
+
+Iron indeed plays a highly important part in modern civilization. Out
+of it are formed alike the sword and the ploughshare, the cannon and
+the printing-press; and while civilization continues partial and
+half-developed, as it still is, our liberties and our industry must
+necessarily in a great measure depend for their protection upon the
+excellence of our weapons of war as well as on the superiority of our
+instruments of peace. Hence the skill and ingenuity displayed in the
+invention of rifled guns and artillery, and iron-sided ships and
+batteries, the fabrication of which would be impossible but for the
+extraordinary development of the iron-manufacture, and the marvellous
+power and precision of our tool-making machines, as described in
+preceding chapters.
+
+"Our strength, wealth, and commerce," said Mr. Cobden in the course of
+a recent debate in the House of Commons, "grow out of the skilled
+labour of the men working in metals. They are at the foundation of our
+manufacturing greatness; and in case you were attacked, they would at
+once be available, with their hard hands and skilled brains, to
+manufacture your muskets and your cannon, your shot and your shell.
+What has given us our Armstrongs, Whitworths, and Fairbairns, but the
+free industry of this country? If you can build three times more
+steam-engines than any other country, and have threefold the force of
+mechanics, to whom and to what do you owe that, but to the men who have
+trained them, and to those principles of commerce out of which the
+wealth of the country has grown? We who have some hand in doing that,
+are not ignorant that we have been and are increasing the strength of
+the country in proportion as we are raising up skilled artisans." [9]
+
+The reader who has followed us up to this point will have observed that
+handicraft labour was the first stage of the development of human
+power, and that machinery has been its last and highest. The
+uncivilized man began with a stone for a hammer, and a splinter of
+flint for a chisel, each stage of his progress being marked by an
+improvement in his tools. Every machine calculated to save labour or
+increase production was a substantial addition to his power over the
+material resources of nature, enabling him to subjugate them more
+effectually to his wants and uses; and every extension of machinery has
+served to introduce new classes of the population to the enjoyment of
+its benefits. In early times the products of skilled industry were for
+the most part luxuries intended for the few, whereas now the most
+exquisite tools and engines are employed in producing articles of
+ordinary consumption for the great mass of the community. Machines
+with millions of fingers work for millions of purchasers--for the poor
+as well as the rich; and while the machinery thus used enriches its
+owners, it no less enriches the public with its products.
+
+Much of the progress to which we have adverted has been the result of
+the skill and industry of our own time. "Indeed," says Mr. Fairbairn,
+"the mechanical operations of the present day could not have been
+accomplished at any cost thirty years ago; and what was then considered
+impossible is now performed with an exactitude that never fails to
+accomplish the end in view." For this we are mainly indebted to the
+almost creative power of modern machine-tools, and the facilities which
+they present for the production and reproduction of other machines. We
+also owe much to the mechanical agencies employed to drive them. Early
+inventors yoked wind and water to sails and wheels, and made them work
+machinery of various kinds; but modern inventors have availed
+themselves of the far more swift and powerful, yet docile force of
+steam, which has now laid upon it the heaviest share of the burden of
+toil, and indeed become the universal drudge. Coal, water, and a
+little oil, are all that the steam-engine, with its bowels of iron and
+heart of fire, needs to enable it to go on working night and day,
+without rest or sleep. Yoked to machinery of almost infinite variety,
+the results of vast ingenuity and labour, the Steam-engine pumps water,
+drives spindles, thrashes corn, prints books, hammers iron, ploughs
+land, saws timber, drives piles, impels ships, works railways,
+excavates docks; and, in a word, asserts an almost unbounded supremacy
+over the materials which enter into the daily use of mankind, for
+clothing, for labour, for defence, for household purposes, for
+locomotion, for food, or for instruction.
+
+
+
+[1] Long after, when married and settled at Manchester, the fiddle,
+which had been carefully preserved, was taken down from the shelf for
+the amusement of the children; but though they were well enough pleased
+with it, the instrument was never brought from its place without
+creating alarm in the mind of their mother lest anybody should hear it.
+At length a dancing-master, who was giving lessons in the
+neighbourhood, borrowed the fiddle, and, to the great relief of the
+family, it was never returned. Many years later Mr. Fairbairn was
+present at the starting of a cotton mill at Wesserling in Alsace
+belonging to Messrs. Gros, Deval, and Co., for which his Manchester
+firm had provided the mill-work and water-wheel (the first erected in
+France on the suspension principle, when the event was followed by an
+entertainment). During dinner Mr. Fairbairn had been explaining to M.
+Gros, who spoke a little English, the nature of home-brewed beer, which
+he much admired, having tasted it when in England. The dinner was
+followed by music, in the performance of which the host himself took
+part; and on Mr. Fairbairn's admiring his execution on the violin, M.
+Gros asked him if he played. "A little," was the almost unconscious
+reply. "Then you must have the goodness to play some," and the
+instrument was in a moment placed in his hands, amidst urgent requests
+from all sides that he should play. There was no alternative; so he
+proceeded to perform one of his best tunes--"The Keel Row." The
+company listened with amazement, until the performer's career was
+suddenly cut short by the host exclaiming at the top of his voice,
+"Stop, stop, Monsieur, by gar that be HOME-BREWED MUSIC!"
+
+[2] "Although not a native of Newcastle," he then said, "he owed almost
+everything to Newcastle. He got the rudiments of his education there,
+such as it was; and that was (something like that of his revered
+predecessor George Stephenson) at a colliery. He was brought up as an
+engineer at the Percy Main Colliery. He was there seven years; and if
+it had not been for the opportunities he then enjoyed, together with
+the use of the library at North Shields, he believed he would not have
+been there to address them. Being self-taught, but with some little
+ambition, and a determination to improve himself, he was now enabled to
+stand before them with some pretensions to mechanical knowledge, and
+the persuasion that he had been a useful contributor to practical
+science and objects connected with mechanical engineering."--Meeting of
+the Institute of Mechanical Engineers at Newcastle-on-Tyne, 1858.
+
+[3] Useful Information for Engineers, 2nd series, 1860, p. 211.
+
+[4] Lecture at Derby--Useful Information for Engineers, 2nd series, p.
+212.
+
+[5] One of the reasons which induced Kennedy thus early to begin the
+business of mule-spinning has been related as follows. While employed
+as apprentice at Chowbent, he happened to sleep over the master's
+apartment; and late one evening, on the latter returning from market,
+his wife asked his success. "I've sold the eightys," said he, "at a
+guinea a pound." "What," exclaimed the mistress, in a loud voice,
+"sold the eightys for ONLY a guinea a pound! I never heard of such a
+thing." The apprentice could not help overhearing the remark, and it
+set him a-thinking. He knew the price of cotton and the price of
+labour, and concluded there must be a very large margin of profit. So
+soon as he was out of his time, therefore, he determined that he should
+become a cotton spinner.
+
+[6] The subject will be found fully treated in Mr. Fairbairn's own
+work, A Treatise on Mills and Mill-Work, embodying the results of his
+large experience.
+
+[7] Lives of the Engineers, vol. iii. 416-40. See also An Account of
+the Construction of the Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges. By
+William Fairbairn, C.E. 1849.
+
+[8] Useful Information for Engineers, 2nd series, 225. The mere list
+of Mr. Fairbairn's writings would occupy considerable space; for,
+notwithstanding his great labours as an engineer, he has also been an
+industrious writer. His papers on Iron, read at different times before
+the British Association, the Royal Society, and the Literary and
+Philosophical Institution of Manchester, are of great value. The
+treatise on "Iron" in the Encyclopaedia Britannica is from his pen, and
+he has contributed a highly interesting paper to Dr. Scoffern's Useful
+Metals and their Alloys on the Application of Iron to the purposes of
+Ordnance, Machinery, Bridges, and House and Ship Building. Another
+valuable but less-known contribution to Iron literature is his Report
+on Machinery in General, published in the Reports on the Paris
+Universal Exhibition of 1855. The experiments conducted by Mr.
+Fairbairn for the purpose of proving the excellent properties of iron
+for shipbuilding--the account of which was published in the Trans
+actions of the Royal Society eventually led to his further experiments
+to determine the strength and form of the Britannia and Conway Tubular
+Bridges, plate-girders, and other constructions, the result of which
+was to establish quite a new era in the history of bridge as well as
+ship building.
+
+[9] House of Commons Debate, 7th July, 1862.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Industrial Biography, by Samuel Smiles
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+*The Project Gutenberg Etext of Industrial Biography by Smiles*
+
+[A history of machines and machining, including some references
+to early calculating machines. This was a rough printing, some
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+
+
+INDUSTRIAL BIOGRAPHY
+
+
+Iron Workers and Tool Makers
+
+
+by Samuel Smiles
+
+
+(this etext was produced from a reprint of the 1863 first edition)
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+The Author offers the following book as a continuation, in a more
+generally accessible form, of the Series of Memoirs of Industrial Men
+introduced in his Lives of the Engineers. While preparing that work
+he frequently came across the tracks of celebrated inventors,
+mechanics, and iron-workers--the founders, in a great measure, of the
+modern industry of Britain--whose labours seemed to him well worthy
+of being traced out and placed on record, and the more so as their
+lives presented many points of curious and original interest. Having
+been encouraged to prosecute the subject by offers of assistance from
+some of the most eminent living mechanical engineers, he is now
+enabled to present the following further series of memoirs to the
+public.
+
+Without exaggerating the importance of this class of biography, it
+may at least be averred that it has not yet received its due share of
+attention. While commemorating the labours and honouring the names of
+those who have striven to elevate man above the material and
+mechanical, the labours of the important industrial class to whom
+society owes so much of its comfort and well-being are also entitled
+to consideration. Without derogating from the biographic claims of
+those who minister to intellect and taste, those who minister to
+utility need not be overlooked. When a Frenchman was praising to Sir
+John Sinclair the artist who invented ruffles, the Baronet shrewdly
+remarked that some merit was also due to the man who added the shirt.
+
+A distinguished living mechanic thus expresses himself to the Author
+on this point: - "Kings, warriors, and statesmen have heretofore
+monopolized not only the pages of history, but almost those of
+biography. Surely some niche ought to be found for the Mechanic,
+without whose skill and labour society, as it is, could not exist. I
+do not begrudge destructive heroes their fame, but the constructive
+ones ought not to be forgotten; and there IS a heroism of skill and
+toil belonging to the latter class, worthy of as grateful
+record,--less perilous and romantic, it may be, than that of the
+other, but not less full of the results of human energy, bravery, and
+character. The lot of labour is indeed often a dull one; and it is
+doing a public service to endeavour to lighten it up by records of
+the struggles and triumphs of our more illustrious workers, and the
+results of their labours in the cause of human advancement."
+
+As respects the preparation of the following memoirs, the Author's
+principal task has consisted in selecting and arranging the materials
+so liberally placed at his disposal by gentlemen for the most part
+personally acquainted with the subjects of them, and but for whose
+assistance the book could not have been written. The materials for
+the biography of Henry Maudslay, for instance, have been partly
+supplied by the late Mr. Joshua Field, F.R.S. (his partner), but
+principally by Mr. James Nasmyth, C.E., his distinguished pupil. In
+like manner Mr. John Penn, C.E., has supplied the chief materials for
+the memoir of Joseph Clement, assisted by Mr. Wilkinson, Clement's
+nephew. The Author has also had the valuable assistance of Mr.
+William Fairbairn, F.R.S., Mr. J. O. March, tool manufacturer (Mayor
+of Leeds), Mr. Richard Roberts, C.E., Mr. Henry Maudslay, C.E., and
+Mr. J. Kitson, Jun., iron manufacturer, Leeds, in the preparation of
+the other memoirs of mechanical engineers included in this volume.
+
+The materials for the memoirs of the early iron-workers have in like
+manner been obtained for the most part from original sources; those
+of the Darbys and Reynoldses from Mr. Dickinson of Coalbrookdale, Mr.
+William Reynolds of Coed-du, and Mr. William G. Norris of the former
+place, as well as from Mr. Anstice of Madeley Wood, who has kindly
+supplied the original records of the firm. The substance of the
+biography of Benjamin Huntsman, the inventor of cast-steel, has been
+furnished by his lineal representatives; and the facts embodied in
+the memoirs of Henry Cort and David Mushet have been supplied by the
+sons of those inventors. To Mr. Anderson Kirkwood of Glasgow the
+Author is indebted for the memoir of James Beaumont Neilson, inventor
+of the hot blast; and to Mr. Ralph Moore, Inspector of Mines in
+Scotland, for various information relative to the progress of the
+Scotch iron manufacture.
+
+The memoirs of Dud Dudley and Andrew Yarranton are almost the only
+ones of the series in preparing which material assistance has been
+derived from books; but these have been largely illustrated by facts
+contained in original documents preserved in the State Paper Office,
+the careful examination of which has been conducted by Mr. W. Walker
+Wilkins.
+
+It will thus be observed that most of the information embodied in
+this volume, more especially that relating to the inventors of tools
+and machines, has heretofore existed only in the memories of the
+eminent mechanical engineers from whom it has been collected. The
+estimable Joshua Field has died since the date at which he
+communicated his recollections; and in a few more years many of the
+facts which have been caught and are here placed on record would,
+probably, in the ordinary course of things, have passed into
+oblivion. As it is, the Author feels that there are many gaps yet to
+be filled up; but the field of Industrial Biography is a wide one,and
+is open to all who will labour in it.
+
+
+London, October, 1863.
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IRON AND CIVILIZATION.
+
+The South Sea Islanders and iron
+Uses of iron for tools
+The Stone, Bronze, and Iron ages
+Recent discoveries in the beds of the Swiss lakes
+Iron the last metal to come into general use, and why
+The first iron smelters
+Early history of iron in Britain
+The Romans
+Social importance of the Smith in early times
+Enchanted swords
+Early scarcity of iron in Scotland
+Andrea de Ferrara
+Scarcity of iron in England at the time of the Armada
+Importance of iron for national defence
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+BEGINNINGS OF THE IRON-MANUFACTURER IN BRITAIN.
+
+Iron made in the Forest of Dean in Anglo-Saxon times
+Monkish iron-workers
+Early iron-smelting in Yorkshire
+Much iron imported from abroad
+Iron manufactures of Sussex
+Manufacture of cannon
+Wealthy ironmasters of Sussex
+Founder of the Gale family
+Extensive exports of English ordnance
+Destruction of timber in iron-smelting
+The manufacture placed under restrictions
+The Sussex furnaces blown out
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IRON SMELTING BY PIT-COAL--DUD DUDLEY.
+
+Greatly reduced production of English iron
+Proposal to use pit-coal instead of charcoal of wood in smelting
+Sturtevant's patent
+Rovenson's
+Dud Dudley; his family his history
+Uses pit-coal to smelt iron with success
+Takes out his patent
+The quality of the iron proved by tests
+Dudley's works swept away by a flood
+Rebuilds his works, and they are destroyed by a mob
+Renewal of his patent
+Outbreak of the Civil War
+Dudley joins the Royalists, and rises to be General of artillery
+His perilous adventures and hair-breadth escapes
+His estate confiscated
+Recommences iron-smelting
+Various attempts to smelt with pit-coal
+Dudley's petitions to the King
+His death
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ANDREW YARRANTON.
+
+A forgotten patriot
+The Yarranton family
+Andrew Yarranton's early life
+A soldier under the Parliament
+Begins iron works
+Is seized and imprisoned
+His plans for improving internal navigation
+Improvements in agriculture
+Manufacture of tin plate
+His journey into Saxony to learn it
+Travels in Holland
+His views of trade and industry
+His various projects
+His 'England's Improvement by Sea and Land'
+His proposed Land Bank
+His proposed Registry of Real Estate
+His controversies
+His iron-mining
+Value of his labours
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+COALBROOKDALE IRON WORKS--THE DARBYS AND REYNOLDSES.
+
+Failure in the attempts to smelt iron with pit-coal
+Dr. Blewstone's experiment
+Decay of the ironmanufacture
+Abraham Darby
+His manufacture of cast-iron pots at Bristol
+Removes to Coalbrookdale
+His method of smelting iron
+Increased use of coke
+Use of pit-coal by Richard Ford
+Richard Reynolds joins the Coalbrookdale firm
+Invention of the Craneges in iron-refining
+Letter of Richard Reynolds on the subject
+Invention of cast-iron rails by Reynolds
+Abraham Darby the Second constructs the first iron bridge
+Extension of the Coalbrookdale Works
+William Reynolds: his invention of inclined planes for working canals
+Retirement of Richard Reynolds from the firm
+His later years, character, and death
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+INVENTION OF CAST STEEL - BENJAMIN HUNTSMAN.
+
+Conversion of iron into steel
+Early Sheffield manufactures
+Invention of blistered steel
+Important uses of cast-steel
+Le Play's writings on the subject
+Early career of Benjamin Huntsman at Doncaster
+His experiments in steel-making
+Removes to the neighbourhood of Sheffield
+His laborious investigations, failures, and eventual success
+Process of making cast-steel
+The Sheffield manufacturers refuse to use it
+Their opposition foiled
+How they wrested Huntsman's secret from him
+Important results of the invention to the industry of Sheffield
+Henry Bessemer and his process
+Heath's invention
+Practical skill of the Sheffield artisans
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE INVENTIONS OF HENRY CORT.
+
+Parentage of Henry Cort
+Becomes a navy agent
+State of the iron trade
+Cort's experiments in iron-making
+Takes a foundry at Fontley
+Partnership with Jellicoe
+Various improvers in iron-making: Roebuck, Cranege, Onions
+Cort's improved processes described
+His patents
+His inventions adopted by Crawshay, Homfray, and other ironmasters
+Cort's iron approved by the Admiralty
+Public defalcations of Adam Jellicoe, Cort's partner
+Cort's property and patents confiscated
+Public proceedings thereon
+Ruin of Henry Cort
+Account of Richard Crawshay, the great ironmaster
+His early life
+Ironmonger in London
+Starts an iron-furnace at Merthyr Tydvil
+Projects and makes a canal
+Growth of Merthyr Tydvil and its industry
+Henry Cort the founder of the iron aristocracy, himself unrewarded
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SCOTCH IRON MANUFACTURE--Dr. ROEBUCK--DAVID MUSHET.
+
+Dr. Roebuck, a forgotten public benefactor
+His birth and education
+Begins business as a physician at Birmingham
+Investigations in metallurgy
+Removes to Scotland, and begins the manufacture of chemicals, &c.
+Starts the Carron Iron Works, near Falkirk
+His invention of refining iron in a pit-coal fire
+Embarks in coal-mining at Boroughstoness
+Residence at Kinneil House
+Pumping-engines wanted for his colliery
+Is introduced to James Watt
+Progress of Watt in inventing the steam-engine
+Interviews with Dr. Roebuck
+Roebuck becomes a partner in the steam-engine patent
+Is involved in difficulties, and eventually ruined
+Advance of the Scotch iron trade
+Discovery of the Black Band by David Mushet
+Early career of Mushet
+His laborious experiments
+His inventions and discoveries in iron and steel, and death
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+INVENTION OF THE HOT BLAST--JAMES BEAUMONT NEILSON.
+
+Difficulty of smelting the Black Band by ordinary process until the
+ invention of the hot blast
+Early career of James Beaumont Neilson
+Education and apprenticeship
+Works as an engine-fireman
+As colliery engine-wright
+Appointed foreman of the Glasgow Gas-works; afterwards manager and engineer
+His self-education
+His Workmen's Institute
+His experiments in iron-smelting
+Trials with heated air in the blast-furnace
+Incredulity of ironmasters
+Success of his experiments, and patenting of his process
+His patent right disputed, and established
+Extensive application of the hot blast
+Increase of the Scotch iron trade
+Extraordinary increase in the value of estates yielding Black Band
+Scotch iron aristocracy
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MECHANICAL INVENTIONS AND INVENTORS.
+
+Tools and civilization
+The beginnings of tools
+Dexterity of hand chiefly relied on
+Opposition to manufacturing machines
+Gradual process of invention
+The human race the true inventor
+Obscure origin of many inventions
+Inventions born before their time
+"Nothing new under the sun"
+The power of steam known to the ancients
+Passage from Roger Bacon
+Old inventions revived
+ Printing
+ Atmospheric locomotion
+ The balloon
+ The reaping machine
+ Tunnels
+ Gunpowder
+ Ancient firearms
+ The steam gun
+ The Congreve rocket
+ Coal-gas
+ Hydropathy
+ Anaesthetic agents
+ The Daguerreotype anticipated
+ The electric telegraph not new
+Forgotten inventors
+Disputed inventions
+Simultaneous inventions
+Inventions made step by step
+James Watt's difficulties with his workmen
+Improvements in modern machine-tools
+Their perfection
+The engines of "The Warrior"
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+JOSEPH BRAMAH.
+
+The inventive faculty
+Joseph Bramah's early life
+His amateur work
+Apprenticed to a carpenter
+Starts as cabinet-maker in London
+Takes out a patent for his water-closet
+Makes pumps and ironwork
+Invention of his lock
+Invents tools required in lock-making
+Invents his hydrostatic machine
+His hydraulic press
+The leathern collar invented by Henry Maudslay
+Bramah's other inventions
+His fire-engine
+His beer-pump
+Improvements in the steam-engine
+His improvements in machine-tools
+His number-printing machine
+His pen-cutter
+His hydraulic machinery
+Practises as civil engineer
+Altercation with William Huntington, "S.S."
+Bramah's character and death
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+HENRY MAUDSLAY.
+
+The Maudslays
+Henry Maudslay
+Employed as powder-boy in Woolwich Arsenal
+Advanced to the blacksmiths' shop
+His early dexterity in smith-work
+His "trivet" making
+Employed by Bramah
+Proves himself a first-class workman
+Advanced to be foreman of the works
+His inventions of tools required for lock-making
+His invention of the leathern collar in the hydraulic press
+Leaves Bramah's service and begins business for himself
+His first smithy in Wells Street
+His first job
+Invention of the slide-lathe
+Resume of the history of the turning-lathe
+Imperfection of tools about the middle of last century
+The hand-lathe
+Great advantages of the slide rest
+First extensively used in constructing Brunel's Block Machinery
+Memoir of Brunel
+Manufacture of ships' blocks
+Sir S. Bentham's specifications
+Introduction of Brunel to Maudslay
+The block-machinery made, and its success
+Increased operations of the firm
+Improvements in the steam-engine
+Invention of the punching-machine
+Further improvements in the slide-lathe
+Screw-cutting machine
+Maudslay a dexterous and thoughtful workman
+His character described by his pupil, James Nasmyth
+Anecdotes and traits
+Maudslay's works a first-class school for workmen
+His mode of estimating character
+His death
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+JOSEPH CLEMENT.
+
+Skill in contrivance a matter of education
+Birth and parentage of Joseph Clement
+Apprenticed to the trade of a slater
+His skill in amateur work
+Makes a turning-lathe
+Gives up slating, and becomes a mechanic
+Employed at Kirby Stephen in making power-looms
+Removes to Carlisle
+Glasgow
+Peter Nicholson teaches him drawing
+Removes to Aberdeen
+Works as a mechanic and attends College
+London
+Employed by Alexander Galloway
+Employed by Bramah
+Advanced to be foreman
+Draughtsman at Maudslay and Field's
+Begins business on his own account
+His skill as a mechanical draughtsman
+Invents his drawing instrument
+His drawing-table
+His improvements in the self-acting lathe
+His double-driving centre-chuck and two-armed driver
+His fluted taps and dies
+Invention of his Planing Machine
+Employed to make Babbage's Calculating Machine
+Resume of the history of apparatus for making calculations
+Babbage's engine proceeded with
+Its great cost
+Interruption of the work
+Clement's steam-whistles
+Makes an organ
+Character and death
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+FOX OF DERBY--MURRAY OF LEEDS--ROBERTS AND WHITWORTH OF MANCHESTER.
+
+The first Fox of Derby originally a butler
+His genius for mechanics
+Begins business as a machinist
+Invents a Planing Machine
+Matthew Murray's Planing Machine
+Murray's early career
+Employed as a blacksmith by Marshall of Leeds
+His improvements of flax-machinery
+Improvements in steam-engines
+Makes the first working locomotive for Mr. Blenkinsop
+Invents the Heckling Machine
+His improvements in tools
+Richard Roberts of Manchester
+First a quarryman, next a pattern-maker
+Drawn for the militia, and flies
+His travels
+His first employment at Manchester
+Goes to London, and works at Maudslay's
+Roberts's numerous inventions
+Invents a planing machine
+The self-acting mule
+Iron billiard-tables
+Improvements in the locomotive
+Invents the Jacquard punching machine
+Makes turret-clocks and electro-magnets
+Improvement in screw-steamships
+Mr. Whitworth's improvement of the planing machine
+His method of securing true surfaces
+His great mechanical skill
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+JAMES NASMYTH.
+
+Traditional origin of the Naesmyths
+Alexander Nasmyth the painter, and his family
+Early years of James Nasmyth
+The story of his life told by himself
+Becomes a pupil of Henry Maudslay
+How he lived and worked in London
+Begins business at Manchester
+Story of the invention of the Steam Hammer
+The important uses of the Hammer in modem engineering
+Invents the steam pile-driving machine
+Designs a new form of steam-engine
+Other inventions How he "Scotched" a strike
+Uses of strikes
+Retirement from business
+Skill as a draughtsman
+Curious speculations on antiquarian subjects
+Mr. Nasmyth's wonderful discoveries in Astronomy
+ described by Sir John Herschel
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+WILLIAM FAIRBAIRN.
+
+Summary of progress in machine-tools
+William Fairbairn's early years
+His education
+Life in the Highlands
+Begins work at Kelso Bridge
+An apprentice at Percy Main Colliery, North Shields
+Diligent self-culture
+Voyage to London
+Adventures
+Prevented obtaining work by the Millwrights' Union
+Travels into the country, finds work, and returns to London
+His first order, to make a sausage-chopping machine
+Wanderschaft
+Makes nail-machinery for a Dublin employer
+Proceeds to Manchester, where he settles and marries
+Begins business
+His first job
+Partnership with Mr. Lillie
+Employed by Messrs. Adam Murray and Co.
+Employed by Messrs. MacConnel and Kennedy
+Progress of the Cotton Trade
+Memoir of John Kennedy
+Mr. Fairbairn introduces great improvements in the gearing, &c.
+ of mill machinery
+Increasing business Improvements in water-wheels
+Experiments as to the law of traction of boats
+Begins building iron ships
+Experiments on the strength of wrought iron
+Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges
+Reports on iron
+On boiler explosions
+Iron construction
+Extended use of iron
+Its importance in civilization
+Opinion of Mr. Cobden
+Importance of modern machine-tools
+Conclusion
+
+
+
+INDUSTRIAL BIOGRAPHY.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IRON AND CIVILIZATION.
+
+"Iron is not only the soul of every other manufacture, but the main
+spring perhaps of civilized society."--FRANCIS HORNER.
+
+"Were the use of iron lost among us, we should in a few ages be
+unavoidably reduced to the wants and ignorance of the ancient savage
+Americans; so that he who first made known the use of that
+contemptible mineral may be truly styled the father of Arts and the
+author of Plenty."--JOHN LOCKE.
+
+
+When Captain Cook and the early navigators first sailed into the
+South Seas on their voyages of discovery, one of the things that
+struck them with most surprise was the avidity which the natives
+displayed for iron. "Nothing would go down with our visitors," says
+Cook, "but metal; and iron was their beloved article." A nail would
+buy a good-sized pig; and on one occasion the navigator bought some
+four hundred pounds weight of fish for a few wretched knives
+improvised out of an old hoop.
+
+"For iron tools," says Captain Carteret, "we might have purchased
+everything upon the Freewill Islands that we could have brought away.
+A few pieces of old iron hoop presented to one of the natives threw
+him into an ecstasy little short of distraction." At Otaheite the
+people were found generally well-behaved and honest; but they were
+not proof against the fascinations of iron. Captain Cook says that
+one of them, after resisting all other temptations, "was at length
+ensnared by the charms of basket of nails." Another lurked about for
+several days, watching the opportunity to steal a coal-rake.
+
+The navigators found they could pay their way from island to island
+merely with scraps of iron, which were as useful for the purpose as
+gold coins would have been in Europe. The drain, however, being
+continuous, Captain Cook became alarmed at finding his currency
+almost exhausted; and he relates his joy on recovering an old anchor
+which the French Captain Bougainville had lost at Bolabola, on which
+he felt as an English banker would do after a severe run upon him for
+gold, when suddenly placed in possession of a fresh store of bullion.
+
+The avidity for iron displayed by these poor islanders will not be
+wondered at when we consider that whoever among them was so fortunate
+as to obtain possession of an old nail, immediately became a man of
+greater power than his fellows, and assumed the rank of a capitalist.
+"An Otaheitan chief," says Cook, "who had got two nails in his
+possession, received no small emolument by letting out the use of
+them to his neighbours for the purpose of boring holes when their own
+methods failed, or were thought too tedious."
+
+The native methods referred to by Cook were of a very clumsy sort;
+the principal tools of the Otaheitans being of wood, stone, and
+flint. Their adzes and axes were of stone. The gouge most commonly
+used by them was made out of the bone of the human forearm. Their
+substitute for a knife was a shell, or a bit of flint or jasper.
+A shark's tooth, fixed to a piece of wood, served for an auger;
+a piece of coral for a file; and the skin of a sting-ray for a
+polisher. Their saw was made of jagged fishes' teeth fixed on the
+convex edge of a piece of hard wood. Their weapons were of a
+similarly rude description; their clubs and axes were headed with
+stone, and their lances and arrows were tipped with flint. Fire was
+another agency employed by them, usually in boat-building. Thus, the
+New Zealanders, whose tools were also of stone, wood, or bone, made
+their boats of the trunks of trees hollowed out by fire.
+
+The stone implements were fashioned, Captain Cook says, by rubbing
+one stone upon another until brought to the required shape; but,
+after all, they were found very inefficient for their purpose. They
+soon became blunted and useless; and the laborious process of making
+new tools had to be begun again. The delight of the islanders at
+being put in possession of a material which was capable of taking a
+comparatively sharp edge and keeping it, may therefore readily be
+imagined; and hence the remarkable incidents to which we have
+referred in the experience of the early voyagers. In the minds of the
+natives, iron became the representative of power, efficiency, and
+wealth; and they were ready almost to fall down and worship their new
+tools, esteeming the axe as a deity, offering sacrifices to the saw,
+and holding the knife in especial veneration.
+
+In the infancy of all nations the same difficulties must have been
+experienced for want of tools, before the arts of smelting and
+working in metals had become known; and it is not improbable that the
+Phoenician navigators who first frequented our coasts found the same
+avidity for bronze and iron existing among the poor woad-stained
+Britons who flocked down to the shore to see their ships and exchange
+food and skins with them, that Captain Cook discovered more than two
+thousand years later among the natives of Otaheite and New Zealand.
+For, the tools and weapons found in ancient burying-places in all
+parts of Britain clearly show that these islands also have passed
+through the epoch of stone and flint.
+
+There was recently exhibited at the Crystal Palace a collection of
+ancient European weapons and implements placed alongside a similar
+collection of articles brought from the South Seas; and they were in
+most respects so much alike that it was difficult to believe that
+they did not belong to the same race and period, instead of being the
+implements of races sundered by half the globe, and living at periods
+more than two thousand years apart. Nearly every weapon in the one
+collection had its counterpart in the other,--the mauls or celts of
+stone, the spearheads of flint or jasper, the arrowheads of flint or
+bone, and the saws of jagged stone, showing how human ingenuity,
+under like circumstances, had resorted to like expedients. It would
+also appear that the ancient tribes in these islands, like the New
+Zealanders, used fire to hollow out their larger boats; several
+specimens of this kind of vessel having recently been dug up in the
+valleys of the Witham and the Clyde, some of the latter from under
+the very streets of modern Glasgow.*
+ [footnote...
+"Mr.John Buchanan, a zealous antiquary, writing in 1855, informs us
+that in the course of the eight years preceding that date, no less
+than seventeen canoes had been dug out of this estuarine silt [of the
+valley of the Clyde], and that he had personally inspected a large
+number of them before they were exhumed. Five of them lay buried in
+silt under the streets of Glasgow, one in a vertical position with
+the prow uppermost, as if it had sunk in a storm.... Almost every one
+of these ancient boats was formed out of a single oak-stem, hollowed
+out by blunt tools, probably stone axes, aided by the action of fire;
+a few were cut beautifully smooth, evidently with metallic tools.
+Hence a gradation could be traced from a pattern of extreme rudeness
+to one showing great mechanical ingenuity.... In one of the canoes a
+beautifully polished celt or axe of greenstone was found; in the
+bottom of another a plug of cork, which, as Mr. Geikie remarks,
+'could only have come from the latitudes of Spain, Southern France,
+or Italy.'"-- Sir C. LYELL, Antiquity of Man, 48-9.
+ ...]
+Their smaller boats, or coracles, were made of osiers interwoven,
+covered with hides, and rigged with leathern sails and thong tackle.
+
+It will readily be imagined that anything like civilization, as at
+present understood, must have been next to impossible under such
+circumstances. "Miserable indeed," says Carlyle, "was the condition
+of the aboriginal savage, glaring fiercely from under his fleece of
+hair, which with the beard reached down to his loins, and hung round
+them like a matted cloak; the rest of his body sheeted in its thick
+natural fell. He loitered in the sunny glades of the forest, living
+on wild fruits; or, as the ancient Caledonians, squatted himself in
+morasses, lurking for his bestial or human prey; without implements,
+without arms, save the ball of heavy flint, to which, that his sole
+possession and defence might not be lost, he had attached a long cord
+of plaited thongs; thereby recovering as well as hurling it with
+deadly, unerring skill."
+
+The injunction given to man to "replenish the earth and subdue it"
+could not possibly be fulfilled with implements of stone. To fell a
+tree with a flint hatchet would occupy the labour of a month, and to
+clear a small patch of ground for purposes of culture would require
+the combined efforts of a tribe. For the same reason, dwellings could
+not be erected; and without dwellings domestic tranquillity,
+security, culture, and refinement, especially in a rude climate, were
+all but impossible. Mr. Emerson well observes, that "the effect of a
+house is immense on human tranquillity, power, and refinement. A man
+in a cave or a camp--a nomad--dies with no more estate than the wolf
+or the horse leaves. But so simple a labour as a house being
+achieved, his chief enemies are kept at bay. He is safe from the
+teeth of wild animals, from frost, sunstroke, and weather; and fine
+faculties begin to yield their fine harvest. Inventions and arts are
+born, manners, and social beauty and delight." But to build a house
+which should serve for shelter, for safety, and for comfort--in a
+word, as a home for the family, which is the nucleus of
+society--better tools than those of stone were absolutely
+indispensable.
+
+Hence most of the early European tribes were nomadic: first hunters,
+wandering about from place to place like the American Indians, after
+the game; then shepherds, following the herds of animals which they
+had learnt to tame, from one grazing-ground to another, living upon
+their milk and flesh, and clothing themselves in their skins held
+together by leathern thongs. It was only when implements of metal had
+been invented that it was possible to practise the art of agriculture
+with any considerable success. Then tribes would cease from their
+wanderings, and begin to form settlements, homesteads, villages, and
+towns. An old Scandinavian legend thus curiously illustrates this
+last period: -- There was a giantess whose daughter one day saw a
+husbandman ploughing in the field. She ran and picked him up with her
+finger and thumb, put him and his plough and oxen into her apron, and
+carried them to her mother, saying, "Mother, what sort of beetle is
+this that I have found wriggling in the sand? " But the mother said,
+"Put it away, my child; we must begone out of this land, for these
+people will dwell in it."
+
+M. Worsaae of Copenhagen, who has been followed by other antiquaries,
+has even gone so far as to divide the natural history of civilization
+into three epochs, according to the character of the tools used in
+each. The first was the Stone period, in which the implements chiefly
+used were sticks, bones, stones, and flints. The next was the Bronze
+period, distinguished by the introduction and general use of a metal
+composed of copper and tin, requiring a comparatively low degree of
+temperature to smelt it, and render it capable of being fashioned
+into weapons, tools, and implements; to make which, however,
+indicated a great advance in experience, sagacity, and skill in the
+manipulation of metals. With tools of bronze, to which considerable
+hardness could be given, trees were felled, stones hewn, houses and
+ships built, and agriculture practised with comparative facility.
+Last of all came the Iron period, when the art of smelting and
+working that most difficult but widely diffused of the minerals was
+discovered; from which point the progress made in all the arts of
+life has been of the most remarkable character.
+
+Although Mr. Wright rejects this classification as empirical, because
+the periods are not capable of being clearly defined, and all the
+three kinds of implements are found to have been in use at or about
+the same time,*
+ [footnote...
+THOMAS WRIGHT, F.S.A., The Celt, The Roman, and The Saxon,
+ed. 1861.
+ ...]
+there is, nevertheless, reason to believe that it is, on the whole,
+well founded. It is doubtless true that implements of stone continued
+in use long after those of bronze and iron had been invented, arising
+most probably from the dearness and scarcity of articles of metal;
+but when the art of smelting and working in iron and steel had
+sufficiently advanced, the use of stone, and afterwards of bronze
+tools and weapons, altogether ceased.
+
+The views of M. Worsaae, and the other Continental antiquarians who
+follow his classification, have indeed received remarkable
+confirmation of late years, by the discoveries which have been made
+in the beds of most of the Swiss lakes.*
+ [footnote...
+Referred to at length in the Antiquity of Man, by Sir C. Lyell, who
+adopts M. Worsaae's classification.
+ ...]
+It appears that a subsidence took place in the waters of the Lake of
+Zurich in the year 1854, laying bare considerable portions of its
+bed. The adjoining proprietors proceeded to enclose the new land, and
+began by erecting permanent dykes to prevent the return of the
+waters. While carrying on the works, several rows of stakes were
+exposed; and on digging down, the labourers turned up a number of
+pieces of charred wood, stones blackened by fire, utensils, bones,
+and other articles, showing that at some remote period, a number of
+human beings had lived over the spot, in dwellings supported by
+stakes driven into the bed of the lake.
+
+The discovery having attracted attention, explorations were made at
+other places, and it was shortly found that there was scarcely a lake
+in Switzerland which did not yield similar evidence of the existence
+of an ancient Lacustrine or Lake-dwelling population. Numbers of
+their tools and implements were brought to light--stone axes and
+saws, flint arrowheads, bone needles, and such like--mixed with the
+bones of wild animals slain in the chase; pieces of old boats,
+portions of twisted branches, bark, and rough planking, of which
+their dwellings had been formed, the latter still bearing the marks
+of the rude tools by which they had been laboriously cut. In the most
+ancient, or lowest series of deposits, no traces of metal, either of
+bronze or iron, were discovered; and it is most probable that these
+lake-dwellers lived in as primitive a state as the South Sea
+islanders discovered by Captain Cook, and that the huts over the
+water in which they lived resembled those found in Papua and Borneo,
+and the islands of the Salomon group, to this day.
+
+These aboriginal Swiss lake-dwellers seem to have been succeeded by a
+race of men using tools, implements, and ornaments of bronze. In some
+places the remains of this bronze period directly overlay those of the
+stone period, showing the latter to have been the most ancient; but in
+others, the village sites are altogether distinct. The articles with
+which the metal implements are intermixed, show that considerable
+progress had been made in the useful arts. The potter's wheel had been
+introduced. Agriculture had begun, and wild animals had given place to
+tame ones. The abundance of bronze also shows that commerce must have
+existed to a certain extent; for tin, which enters into its
+composition, is a comparatively rare metal, and must necessarily have
+been imported from other European countries.
+
+The Swiss antiquarians are of opinion that the men of bronze suddenly
+invaded and extirpated the men of flint; and that at some still later
+period, another stronger and more skilful race, supposed to have been
+Celts from Gaul, came armed with iron weapons, to whom the men of
+bronze succumbed, or with whom, more probably, they gradually
+intermingled. When iron, or rather steel, came into use, its
+superiority in affording a cutting edge was so decisive that it seems
+to have supplanted bronze almost at once;*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Mushet, however, observes that "the general use of hardened
+copper by the ancients for edge-tools and warlike instruments, does
+not preclude the supposition that iron was then comparatively
+plentiful, though it is probable that it was confined to the ruder
+arts of life. A knowledge of the mixture of copper, tin, and zinc,
+seems to have been among the first discoveries of the metallurgist.
+Instruments fabricated from these alloys, recommended by the use of
+ages, the perfection of the art, the splendour and polish of their
+surfaces, not easily injured by time and weather, would not soon be
+superseded by the invention of simple iron, inferior in edge and
+polish, at all times easily injured by rust, and in the early stages
+of its manufacture converted with difficulty into forms that required
+proportion or elegance."--(Papers on Iron and Steel, 365-6.) By some
+secret method that has been lost, perhaps because no longer needed
+since the invention of steel, the ancients manufactured bronze tools
+capable of taking a fine edge. in our own time, Chantrey the
+sculptor, in his reverence for classic metallurgy, had a bronze razor
+made with which he martyred himself in shaving; but none were found
+so hardy and devoted as to follow his example.
+ ...]
+the latter metal continuing to be employed only for the purpose of
+making scabbards or sword-handles. Shortly after the commencement of
+the iron age, the lake-habitations were abandoned, the only
+settlement of this later epoch yet discovered being that at Tene, on
+Lake Neufchatel: and it is a remarkable circumstance, showing the
+great antiquity of the lake-dwellings, that they are not mentioned by
+any of the Roman historians.
+
+That iron should have been one of the last of the metals to come into
+general use, is partly accounted for by the circumstance that iron,
+though one of the most generally diffused of minerals, never presents
+itself in a natural state, except in meteorites; and that to
+recognise its ores, and then to separate the metal from its matrix,
+demands the exercise of no small amount of observation and invention.
+Persons unacquainted with minerals would be unable to discover the
+slightest affinity between the rough ironstone as brought up from the
+mine, and the iron or steel of commerce. To unpractised eyes they
+would seem to possess no properties in common, and it is only after
+subjecting the stone to severe processes of manufacture that usable
+metal can be obtained from it. The effectual reduction of the ore
+requires an intense heat, maintained by artificial methods, such as
+furnaces and blowing apparatus.*
+ [footnote...
+It may be mentioned in passing, that while Zinc is fusible at
+3 degrees of Wedgwood's pyrometer, Silver at 22 degrees, Copper at
+27 degrees, and Gold at 32 degrees, Cast Iron is only fusible at
+130 degrees. Tin (one of the constituents of the ancient bronze) and
+Lead are fusible at much lower degrees than zinc.
+ ...]
+But it is principally in combination with other elements that iron is
+so valuable when compared with other metals. Thus, when combined with
+carbon, in varying proportions, substances are produced, so
+different, but each so valuable, that they might almost be regarded
+in the light of distinct metals,--such, for example, as cast-iron,
+and cast and bar steel; the various qualities of iron enabling it to
+be used for purposes so opposite as a steel pen and a railroad, the
+needle of a mariner's compass and an Armstrong gun, a surgeon's
+lancet and a steam engine, the mainspring of a watch and an iron
+ship, a pair of scissors and a Nasmyth hammer, a lady's earrings and
+a tubular bridge.
+
+The variety of purposes to which iron is thus capable of being
+applied, renders it of more use to mankind than all the other metals
+combined. Unlike iron, gold is found pure, and in an almost workable
+state; and at an erly period in history, it seems to have been much
+more plentiful than iron or steel. But gold was unsuited for the
+purposes of tools, and would serve for neither a saw, a chisel, an
+axe, nor a sword; whilst tempered steel could answer all these
+purposes. Hence we find the early warlike nations making the backs of
+their swords of gold or copper, and economizing their steel to form
+the cutting edge. This is illustrated by many ancient Scandinavian
+weapons in the museum at Copenhagen, which indicate the greatest
+parsimony in the use of steel at a period when both gold and copper
+appear to have been comparatively abundant.
+
+The knowledge of smelting and working in iron, like most other arts,
+came from the East. Iron was especially valued for purposes of war,
+of which indeed it was regarded as the symbol, being called "Mars" by
+the Romans.*
+ [footnote...
+The Romans named the other metals after the gods. Thus Quicksilver
+was called Mercury, Lead Saturn, Tin Jupiter, Copper Venus, Silver
+Luna, and so on; and our own language has received a colouring from
+the Roman nomenclature, which it continues to retain.
+ ...]
+We find frequent mention of it in the Bible. One of the earliest
+notices of the metal is in connexion with the conquest of Judea by
+the Philistines. To complete the subjection of the Israelites, their
+conquerors made captive all the smiths of the land, and carried them
+away. The Philistines felt that their hold of the country was
+insecure so long as the inhabitants possessed the means of forging
+weapons. Hence "there was no smith found throughout all the land of
+Israel; for the Philistines said, Lest the Hebrews make them swords
+or spears. But the Israelites went down to the Philistines, to
+sharpen every man his share, and his coulter, and his axe, and his
+mattock."*
+ [footnote...
+I. Samuel xiii. 19, 20.
+ ...]
+
+At a later period, when Jerusalem was taken by the Babylonians, one
+of their first acts was to carry the smiths and other craftsmen
+captives to Babylon.*
+ [footnote...
+II. Kings xxiv. 16.
+ ...]
+Deprived of their armourers, the Jews were rendered comparatively
+powerless.
+
+It was the knowledge of the art of iron-forging which laid the
+foundation of the once great empire of the Turks. Gibbon relates that
+these people were originally the despised slaves of the powerful Khan
+of the Geougen. They occupied certain districts of the mountain-ridge
+in the centre of Asia, called Imaus, Caf, and Altai, which yielded
+iron in large quantities. This metal the Turks were employed by the
+Khan to forge for his use in war. A bold leader arose among them, who
+persuaded the ironworkers that the arms which they forged for their
+masters might in their own hands become the instruments of freedom.
+Sallying forth from their mountains, they set up their standard, and
+their weapons soon freed them. For centuries after, the Turkish
+nation continued to celebrate the event of their liberation by an
+annual ceremony, in which a piece of iron was heated in the fire, and
+a smith's hammer was successively handled by the prince and his
+nobles.
+
+We can only conjecture how the art of smelting iron was discovered.
+Who first applied fire to the ore, and made it plastic; who
+discovered fire itself, and its uses in metallurgy? No one can tell.
+Tradition says that the metal was discovered through the accidental
+burning of a wood in Greece. Mr. Mushet thinks it more probable that
+the discovery was made on the conversion of wood into charcoal for
+culinary or chamber purposes. "If a mass of ore," he says,
+"accidentally dropped into the middle of the burning pile during a
+period of neglect, or during the existence of a thorough draught, a
+mixed mass, partly earthy and partly metallic, would be obtained,
+possessing ductility and extension under pressure. But if the
+conjecture is pushed still further, and we suppose that the ore was
+not an oxide, but rich in iron, magnetic or spicular, the result
+would in all probability be a mass of perfectly malleable iron. I
+have seen this fact illustrated in the roasting of a species of
+iron-stone, which was united with a considerable mass of bituminous
+matter. After a high temperature had been excited in the interior of
+the pile, plates of malleable iron of a tough and flexible nature
+were formed, and under circumstances where there was no fuel but that
+furnished by the ore itself."*
+ [footnote...
+Papers on Iron and Steel, 363-4.
+ ...]
+
+The metal once discovered, many attempts would be made to give to
+that which had been the effect of accident a more unerring result.
+The smelting of ore in an open heap of wood or charcoal being found
+tedious and wasteful, as well as uncertain, would naturally lead to
+the invention of a furnace; with the object of keeping the ore
+surrounded as much as possible with fuel while the process of
+conversion into iron was going forward. The low conical furnaces
+employed at this day by some of the tribes of Central and Southern
+Africa, are perhaps very much the same in character as those adopted
+by the early tribes of all countries where iron was first made. Small
+openings at the lower end of the cone to admit the air, and a larger
+orifice at the top, would, with charcoal, be sufficient to produce
+the requisite degree of heat for the reduction of the ore. To this
+the foot-blast was added, as still used in Ceylon and in India; and
+afterwards the water-blast, as employed in Spain (where it is known
+as the Catalan forge), along the coasts of the Mediterranean, and in
+some parts of America.
+
+It is worthy of remark, that the ruder the method employed for the
+reduction of the ore, the better the quality of the iron usually is.
+Where the art is little advanced, only the most tractable ores are
+selected; and as charcoal is the only fuel used, the quality of the
+metal is almost invariably excellent. The ore being long exposed to
+the charcoal fire, and the quantity made small, the result is a metal
+having many of the qualities of steel, capable of being used for
+weapons or tools after a comparatively small amount of forging.
+Dr. Livingstone speaks of the excellent quality of the iron made by
+the African tribes on the Zambesi, who refuse to use ordinary English
+iron, which they consider "rotten."*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. Livingstone brought with him to England a piece of the Zambesi
+iron, which he sent to a skilled Birmingham blacksmith to test.
+The result was, that he pronounced the metal as strongly resembling
+Swedish or Russian; both of which kinds are smelted with charcoal.
+The African iron was found "highly carbonized," and "when chilled it
+possessed the properties of steel."
+ ...]
+Du Chaillu also says of the Fans, that, in making their best knives
+and arrow-heads, they will not use European or American iron, greatly
+preferring their own. The celebrated wootz or steel of India, made in
+little cakes of only about two pounds weight, possesses qualities
+which no European steel can surpass. Out of this material the famous
+Damascus sword-blades were made; and its use for so long a period is
+perhaps one of the most striking proofs of the ancient civilization
+of India.
+
+The early history of iron in Britain is necessarily very obscure.
+When the Romans invaded the country, the metal seems to have been
+already known to the tribes along the coast. The natives had probably
+smelted it themselves in their rude bloomeries, or obtained it from
+the Phoenicians in small quantities in exchange for skins and food,
+or tin. We must, however, regard the stories told of the ancient
+British chariots armed with swords or scythes as altogether
+apocryphal. The existence of iron in sufficient quantity to be used
+for such a purpose is incompatible with contemporary facts, and
+unsupported by a single vestige remaining to our time. The country
+was then mostly forest, and the roads did not as yet exist upon which
+chariots could be used; whilst iron was too scarce to be mounted as
+scythes upon chariots, when the warriors themselves wanted it for
+swords. The orator Cicero, in a letter to Trebatius, then serving
+with the army in Britain, sarcastically advised him to capture and
+convey one of these vehicles to Italy for exhibition; but we do not
+hear that any specimen of the British war-chariot was ever seen in
+Rome.
+
+It is only in the tumuli along the coast, or in those of the
+Romano-British period, that iron implements are ever found; whilst in
+the ancient burying places of the interior of the country they are
+altogether wanting. Herodian says of the British pursued by Severus
+through the fens and marshes of the east coast, that they wore iron
+hoops round their middles and their necks, esteeming them as
+ornaments and tokens of riches, in like manner as other barbarous
+people then esteemed ornaments of silver and gold. Their only money,
+according to Caesar, consisted of pieces of brass or iron, reduced to
+a certain standard weight.*
+ [footnote...
+HOLINSHED, i. 517. Iron was also the currency of the Spartans, but it
+has been used as such in much more recent times. Adam Smith, in his
+Wealth of Nations (Book I. ch. 4, published in 1776), says, "there is
+at this day a village in Scotland where it is not uncommon, I am
+told, for a workman to carry nails, instead of money, to the baker's
+shop or the alehouse."
+ ...]
+It is particularly important to observe, says M. Worsaae, that all
+the antiquities which have hitherto been found in the large burying
+places of the Iron period, in Switzerland, Bavaria, Baden, France,
+England, and the North, exhibit traces more or less of Roman
+influence.
+ [footnote...
+Primeval Antiquities of Denmark. London, 1849, p. 140.
+ ...]
+The Romans themselves used weapons of bronze when they could not
+obtain iron in sufficient quantity, and many of the Roman weapons dug
+out of the ancient tumuli are of that metal. They possessed the art
+of tempering and hardening bronze to such a degree as to enable them
+to manufacture swords with it of a pretty good edge; and in those
+countries which they penetrated, their bronze implements gradually
+supplanted those which had been previously fashioned of stone. Great
+quantities of bronze tools have been found in different parts of
+England,--sometimes in heaps, as if they had been thrown away in
+basketfuls as things of little value. It has been conjectured that
+when the Romans came into Britain they found the inhabitants,
+especially those to the northward, in very nearly the same state as
+Captain Cook and other voyagers found the inhabitants of the South
+Sea Islands; that the Britons parted with their food and valuables
+for tools of inferior metal made in imitation of their stone ones;
+but finding themselves cheated by the Romans, as the natives of
+Otaheite have been cheated by Europeans, the Britons relinquished the
+bad tools when they became acquainted with articles made of better
+metal.*
+ [footnote...
+See Dr. Pearson's paper in the Philosophical Transactions, 1796,
+relative to certain ancient arms and utensils found in the river
+Witham between Kirkstead and Lincoln.
+ ...]
+The Roman colonists were the first makers of iron in Britain on any
+large scale. They availed themselves of the mineral riches of the
+country wherever they went. Every year brings their extraordinary
+industrial activity more clearly to light. They not only occupied the
+best sites for trade, intersected the land with a complete system of
+well-constructed roads, studded our hills and valleys with towns,
+villages, and pleasure-houses, and availed themselves of our
+medicinal springs for purposes of baths to an extent not even
+exceeded at this day, but they explored our mines and quarries, and
+carried on the smelting and manufacture of metals in nearly all parts
+of the island. The heaps of mining refuse left by them in the valleys
+and along the hill-sides of North Derbyshire are still spoken of by
+the country people as "old man," or the "old man's work." Year by
+year, from Dartmoor to the Moray Firth, the plough turns up fresh
+traces of their indefatigable industry and enterprise, in pigs of
+lead, implements of iron and bronze, vessels of pottery, coins, and
+sculpture; and it is a remarkable circumstance that in several
+districts where the existence of extensive iron beds had not been
+dreamt of until within the last twenty years, as in Northamptonshire
+and North Yorkshire, the remains of ancient workings recently
+discovered show that the Roman colonists were fully acquainted with
+them.
+
+But the principal iron mines worked by that people were those which
+were most conveniently situated for purposes of exportation, more
+especially in the southern counties and on the borders of Wales. The
+extensive cinder heaps found in the--Forest of De an--which formed
+the readiest resource of the modern iron-smelter when improved
+processes enabled him to reduce them--show that their principal iron
+manufactures were carried on in that quarter*
+ [footnote...
+"In the Forest of Dean and thereabouts the iron is made at this day
+of cinders, being the rough and offal thrown by in the Roman time;
+they then having only foot-blasts to melt the ironstone; but now, by
+the force of a great wheel that drives a pair of Bellows twenty feet
+long, all that iron is extracted out of the cinders which could not
+be forced from it by the Roman foot-blast. And in the Forest of Dean
+and thereabouts, and as high as Worcester, there ave great and
+infinite quantities of these cinders; some in vast mounts above
+ground, some under ground, which will supply the iron works some
+hundreds of years; and these cinders ave they which make the prime
+and best iron, and with much less charcoal than doth the
+ironstone."--A. YARRANTON, England's Improvement by Sea and Land.
+London, 1677.
+ ...]
+It is indeed matter of history, that about seventeen hundred years
+since (A.D. 120) the Romans had forges in the West of England, both
+in the Forest of Dean and in South Wales; and that they sent the
+metal from thence to Bristol, where it was forged and made into
+weapons for the use of the troops. Along the banks of the Wye, the
+ground is in many places a continuous bed of iron cinders, in which
+numerous remains have been found, furnishing unmistakeable proofs of
+the Roman furnaces. At the same time, the iron ores of Sussex were
+extensively worked, as appears from the cinder heaps found at
+Maresfield and several places in that county, intermixed with Roman
+pottery, coins, and other remains. In a bed of scoriae several acres
+in extent, at Old Land Farm in Maresfield, the Rev. Mr. Turner found
+the remains of Roman pottery so numerous that scarcely a barrow-load
+of cinders was removed that did not contain several fragments,
+together with coins of the reigns of Nero, Vespasian, and
+Dioclesian.*
+ [footnote...
+M. A. LOWER, Contributions to Literature, Historical, Antiquarian,
+and Metrical. London, 1854, pp. 88-9.
+ ...]
+In the turbulent infancy of nations it is to be expected that we
+should hear more of the Smith, or worker in iron, in connexion with
+war, than with more peaceful pursuits. Although he was a nail-maker
+and a horse-shoer--made axes, chisels, saws, and hammers for the
+artificer -- spades and hoes for the farmer--bolts and fastenings for
+the lord's castle-gates, and chains for his draw-bridge--it was
+principally because of his skill in armour-work that he was esteemed.
+He made and mended the weapons used in the chase and in war--the
+gavelocs, bills, and battle-axes; he tipped the bowmen's arrows, and
+furnished spear-heads for the men-at-arms; but, above all, he forged
+the mail-coats and cuirasses of the chiefs, and welded their swords,
+on the temper and quality of which, life, honour, and victory in
+battle depended. Hence the great estimation in which the smith was
+held in the Anglo-Saxon times. His person was protected by a double
+penalty. He was treated as an officer of the highest rank, and
+awarded the first place in precedency. After him ranked the maker of
+mead, and then the physician. In the royal court of Wales he sat in
+the great hall with the king and queen, next to the domestic
+chaplain; and even at that early day there seems to have been a hot
+spark in the smith's throat which needed much quenching; for he was
+"entitled to a draught of every kind of liquor that was brought into
+the hall."
+
+The smith was thus a mighty man. The Saxon Chronicle describes the
+valiant knight himself as a "mighty war-smith." But the smith was
+greatest of all in his forging of swords; and the bards were wont to
+sing the praises of the knight's "good sword " and of the smith who
+made it, as well as of the knight himself who wielded it in battle.
+The most extraordinary powers were attributed to the weapon of steel
+when first invented. Its sharpness seemed so marvellous when compared
+with one of bronze, that with the vulgar nothing but magic could
+account for it. Traditions, enshrined in fairy tales, still survive
+in most countries, illustrative of its magical properties. The weapon
+of bronze was dull; but that of steel was bright--the "white sword of
+light," one touch of which broke spells, liberated enchanted
+princesses, and froze giants' marrow. King Arthur's magic sword
+"Excalibur" was regarded as almost heroic in the romance of
+chivalry.*
+ [footnote...
+This famous sword was afterwards sent by Richard I. as a present to
+Tancred; and the value attached to the weapon may be estimated by the
+fact that the Crusader sent the English monarch, in return for it,
+"four great ships and fifteen galleys."
+ ...]
+So were the swords "Galatin" of Sir Gawain, and "Joyeuse" of
+Charlemague, both of which were reputed to be the work of Weland the
+Smith, about whose name clusters so much traditional glory as an
+ancient worker in metals.*
+ [footnote...
+Weland was the Saxon Vulcan. The name of Weland's or Wayland's Smithy
+is still given to a monument on Lambourn Downs in Wiltshire. The
+place is also known as Wayland Smith's Cave. It consists of a rude
+gallery of stones.
+ ...]
+The heroes of the Northmen in like manner wielded magic swords. Olave
+the Norwegian possessed the sword "Macabuin," forged by the dark
+smith of Drontheim, whose feats are recorded in the tales of the
+Scalds. And so, in like manner, traditions of the supernatural power
+of the blacksmith are found existing to this day all over the
+Scottish Highlands.*
+ [footnote...
+Among the Scythians the iron sword was a god. It was the image of
+Mars, and sacrifices were made to it. "An iron sword," says Mr.
+Campbell, really was once worshipped by a people with whom iron was
+rare. Iron is rare, while stone and bronze weapons are common, in
+British tombs, and the sword of these stories is a personage. It
+shines, it cries out -- the lives of men are bound up in it. And so
+this mystic sword may, perhaps, have been a god amongst the Celts, or
+the god of the people with whom the Celts contended somewhere on
+their long journey to the west. It is a fiction now, but it may be
+founded on fact, and that fact probably was the first use of iron."
+To this day an old horse-shoe is considered a potent spell in some
+districts against the powers of evil; and for want of a horse-shoe a
+bit of a rusty reaping-hook is supposed to have equal power, "Who
+were these powers of evil who could not resist iron--these fairies
+who shoot STONE arrows, and are of the foes to the human race? Is all
+this but a dim, hazy recollection of war between a people who had
+iron weapons and a race who had not--the race whose remains are found
+all over Europe? If these were wandering tribes, they had leaders; if
+they were warlike, they had weapons. There is a smith in the Pantheon
+of many nations. Vulcan was a smith; Thor wielded a hammer; even
+Fionn had a hammer, which was heard in Lochlann when struck in
+Eirinn. Fionn may have borrowed his hammer from Thor long ago, or
+both may have got theirs from Vulcan, or all three may have brought
+hammers with them from the land where some primeval smith wielded the
+first sledge-hammer; but may not all these 'smith-gods be the smiths
+who made iron weapons for those who fought with the skin-clad
+warriors who shot flint-arrows, and who are now bogles, fairies , and
+demons? In any case, tales about smiths seem to belong to mythology,
+and to be common property."--CAMPBELL, Popular Tales of the West
+Highlands, Preface, 74-6.
+ ...]
+When William the Norman invaded Britain, he was well supplied with
+smiths. His followers were clad in armour of steel, and furnished
+with the best weapons of the time. Indeed, their superiority in this
+respect is supposed to have been the principal cause of William's
+victory over Harold; for the men of both armies were equal in point
+of bravery. The Normans had not only smiths to attend to the arms of
+the knights, but farriers to shoe their horses. Henry de Femariis, or
+Ferrers, "prefectus fabrorum," was one of the principal officers
+entrusted with the supervision of the Conqueror's ferriery
+department; and long after the earldom was founded his descendants
+continued to bear on their coat of arms the six horse-shoes
+indicative of their origin.*
+ [footnote...
+BROOK, Discovery of Errors in the Catalogue of the Nobility, 198.
+ ...]
+William also gave the town of Northampton, with the hundred of
+Fackley, as a fief to Simon St. Liz, in consideration of his
+providing shoes for his horses.*
+ [footnote...
+MEYRICK, i. 11.
+ ...]
+But though the practice of horse-shoeing is said to have been
+introduced to this country at the time of the Conquest, it is
+probably of an earlier date; as, according to Dugdale, an old Saxon
+tenant in capite of Welbeck in Nottinghamshire, named Gamelbere, held
+two carucates of land by the service of shoeing the king's palfrey on
+all four feet with the king's nails, as oft as the king should lie at
+the neighbouring manor of Mansfield.
+
+Although we hear of the smith mostly in connexion with the
+fabrication of instruments of war in the Middle Ages, his importance
+was no less recognized in the ordinary affairs of rural and
+industrial life. He was, as it were, the rivet that held society
+together. Nothing could be done without him. Wherever tools or
+implements were wanted for building, for trade, or for husbandry, his
+skill was called into requisition. In remote places he was often the
+sole mechanic of his district; and, besides being a tool-maker, a
+farrier, and agricultural implement maker, he doctored cattle, drew
+teeth, practised phlebotomy, and sometimes officiated as parish clerk
+and general newsmonger; for the smithy was the very eye and tongue of
+the village. Hence Shakespeare's picture of the smith in King John:
+
+ "I saw a smith stand with his hammer, thus,
+ The whilst his iron did on the anvil cool,
+ With open mouth swallowing a tailor's news."
+
+The smith's tools were of many sorts; but the chief were his hammer,
+pincers, chisel, tongs, and anvil. It is astonishing what a variety
+of articles he turned out of his smithy by the help of these rude
+implements. In the tooling, chasing, and consummate knowledge of the
+capabilities of iron, he greatly surpassed the modern workman; for
+the mediaeval blacksmith was an artist as well as a workman. The
+numerous exquisite specimens of his handicraft which exist in our old
+gateways, church doors, altar railings, and ornamented dogs and
+andirons, still serve as types for continual reproduction. He was,
+indeed, the most "cunninge workman" of his time. But besides all
+this, he was an engineer. If a road had to be made, or a stream
+embanked, or a trench dug, he was invariably called upon to provide
+the tools, and often to direct the work. He was also the military
+engineer of his day, and as late as the reign of Edward III. we find
+the king repeatedly sending for smiths from the Forest of Dean to act
+as engineers for the royal army at the siege of Berwick.
+
+The smith being thus the earliest and most important of mechanics, it
+will readily be understood how, at the time when surnames were
+adopted, his name should have been so common in all European
+countries.
+
+ "From whence came Smith, all be he knight or squire,
+ But from the smith that forgeth in the fire?"*
+
+ [footnote...
+GILBERT, Cornwall.
+ ...]
+
+Hence the multitudinous family of Smiths in England, in some cases
+vainly disguised under the "Smythe" or "De Smijthe;" in Germany, the
+Schmidts; in Italy, the Fabri, Fabricii,or Fabbroni; in France, the
+Le Febres or Lefevres; in Scotland, the Gows, Gowans, or Cowans.
+We have also among us the Brownsmiths, or makers of brown bills; the
+Nasmyths, or nailsmiths; the Arrowsmiths, or makers of arrowheads;
+the Spearsmiths, or spear makers; the Shoosmiths, or horse shoers;
+the Goldsmiths, or workers in gold; and many more. The Smith proper
+was, however, the worker in iron--the maker of iron tools,
+implements, and arms--and hence this name exceeds in number that of
+all the others combined.
+
+In course of time the smiths of particular districts began to
+distinguish themselves for their excellence in particular branches of
+iron-work. From being merely the retainer of some lordly or religious
+establishment, the smith worked to supply the general demand, and
+gradually became a manufacturer. Thus the makers of swords, tools,
+bits, and nails, congregated at Birmingham; and the makers of knives
+and arrowheads at Sheffield. Chaucer speaks of the Miller of
+Trompington as provided with a Sheffield whittle: -
+
+ "A Shefeld thwytel bare he in his hose."*
+
+ [footnote...
+Before table-knives were invented, in the sixteenth century, the
+knife was a very important article; each guest at table bearing his
+own, and sharpening it at the whetstone hung up in the passage,
+before sitting down to dinner, Some even carried a whetstone as well
+as a knife; and one of Queen Elizabeth's presents to the Earl of
+Leicester was a whetstone tipped with gold.
+ ...]
+
+The common English arrowheads manufactured at Sheffield were long
+celebrated for their excellent temper, as Sheffield iron and steel
+plates are now. The battle of Hamildon, fought in Scotland in 1402,
+was won mainly through their excellence. The historian records that
+they penetrated the armour of the Earl of Douglas, which had been
+three years in making; and they were "so sharp and strong that no
+armour could repel them." The same arrowheads were found equally
+efficient against French armour on the fields of Crecy and Agincourt.
+
+Although Scotland is now one of the principal sources from which our
+supplies of iron are drawn, it was in ancient times greatly
+distressed for want of the metal. The people were as yet too little
+skilled to be able to turn their great mineral wealth to account.
+Even in the time of Wallace, they had scarcely emerged from the Stone
+period, and were under the necessity of resisting their iron-armed
+English adversaries by means of rude weapons of that material. To
+supply themselves with swords and spearheads, they imported steel
+from Flanders, and the rest they obtained by marauding incursions
+into England. The district of Furness in Lancashire--then as now an
+iron-producing district--was frequently ravaged with that object;
+and on such occasions the Scotch seized and carried off all the
+manufactured iron they could find, preferring it, though so heavy, to
+every other kind of plunder.*
+ [footnote...
+The early scarcity of iron in Scotland is confirmed by Froissart, who
+says,--"In Scotland you will never find a man of worth; they are like
+savages, who wish not to be acquainted with any one, are envious of
+the good fortune of others, and suspicious of losing anything
+themselves; for their country is very poor. When the English make
+inroads thither, as they have very frequently done, they order their
+provisions, if they wish to live, to follow close at their backs; for
+nothing is to be had in that country without great difficulty. There
+is neither iron to shoe horses, nor leather to make harness, saddles,
+or bridles: all these things come ready made from Flanders by sea;
+and should these fail, there is none to be had in the country.'
+ ...]
+About the same period, however, iron must have been regarded as
+almost a precious metal even in England itself; for we find that in
+Edward the Third's reign, the pots, spits, and frying-pans of the
+royal kitchen were classed among his Majesty's jewels.*
+ [footnote...
+PARKER'S English Home, 77
+ ...]
+
+The same famine of iron prevailed to a still greater extent in the
+Highlands, where it was even more valued, as the clans lived chiefly
+by hunting, and were in an almost constant state of feud. Hence the
+smith was a man of indispensable importance among the Highlanders,
+and the possession of a skilful armourer was greatly valued by the
+chiefs. The story is told of some delinquency having been committed
+by a Highland smith, on whom justice must be done; but as the chief
+could not dispense with the smith, he generously offered to hang two
+weavers in his stead!
+
+At length a great armourer arose in the Highlands, who was able to
+forge armour that would resist the best Sheffield arrow-heads, and to
+make swords that would vie with the best weapons of Toledo and Milan.
+This was the famous Andrea de Ferrara, whose swords still maintain
+their ancient reputation. This workman is supposed to have learnt his
+art in the Italian city after which he was called, and returned to
+practise it in secrecy among the Highland hills. Before him, no man
+in Great Britain is said to have known how to temper a sword in such
+a way as to bend so that the point should touch the hilt and spring
+back uninjured. The swords of Andrea de Ferrara did this, and were
+accordingly in great request; for it was of every importance to the
+warrior that his weapon should be strong and sharp without being
+unwieldy, and that it should not be liable to snap in the act of
+combat. This celebrated smith, whose personal identity*
+ [footnote...
+The precise time at which Andrea de Ferrara flourished cannot be
+fixed with accuracy; but Sir Waiter Scott, in one of the notes to
+Waverley, says he is believed to have been a foreign artist brought
+over by James IV. or V. of Scotland to instruct the Scots in the
+manufacture of sword-blades. The genuine weapons have a crown marked
+on the blades.
+ ...]
+has become merged in the Andrea de Ferrara swords of his manufacture,
+pursued his craft in the Highlands, where he employed a number of
+skilled workmen in forging weapons, devoting his own time principally
+to giving them their required temper. He is said to have worked in a
+dark cellar, the better to enable him to perceive the effect of the
+heat upon the metal, and to watch the nicety of the operation of
+tempering, as well as possibly to serve as a screen to his secret
+method of working.*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Parkes, in his Essay on the Manufacture of Edge Tools, says, "Had
+this ingenious artist thought of a bath of oil, he might have heated
+this by means of a furnace underneath it, and by the use of a
+thermometer, to the exact point which he found necessary; though it
+is inconvenient to have to employ a thermometer for every distinct
+operation. Or, if he had been in the possession of a proper bath of
+fusible metal, he would have attained the necessary certainty in his
+process, and need not have immured himself in a subterranean
+apartment.--PARKES' Essays, 1841, p. 495.
+ ...]
+Long after Andrea de Ferrara's time, the Scotch swords were famous
+for their temper; Judge Marshal Fatten, who accompanied the
+Protector's expedition into Scotland in 1547, observing that "the
+Scots came with swords all broad and thin, of exceeding good temper,
+and universally so made to slice that I never saw none so good, so I
+think it hard to devise a better." The quality of the steel used for
+weapons of war was indeed of no less importance for the effectual
+defence of a country then than it is now. The courage of the
+attacking and defending forces being equal, the victory would
+necessarily rest with the party in possession of the best weapons.
+
+England herself has on more than one occasion been supposed to be in
+serious peril because of the decay of her iron manufactures. Before
+the Spanish Armada, the production of iron had been greatly
+discouraged because of the destruction of timber in the smelting of
+the ore--the art of reducing it with pit coal not having yet been
+invented; and we were consequently mainly dependent upon foreign
+countries for our supplies of the material out of which arms were
+made. The best iron came from Spain itself, then the most powerful
+nation in Europe, and as celebrated for the excellence of its weapons
+as for the discipline and valour of its troops. The Spaniards prided
+themselves upon the superiority of their iron, and regarded its
+scarcity in England as an important element in their calculations of
+the conquest of the country by their famous Armada. "I have heard,"
+says Harrison, "that when one of the greatest peers of Spain espied
+our nakedness in this behalf, and did solemnly utter in no obscure
+place, that it would be an easy matter in short time to conquer
+England because it wanted armour, his words were not so rashly
+uttered as politely noted." The vigour of Queen Elizabeth promptly
+supplied a remedy by the large importations of iron which she caused
+to be made, principally from Sweden, as well as by the increased
+activity of the forges in Sussex and the Forest of Dean; "whereby,"
+adds Harrison, "England obtained rest, that otherwise might have been
+sure of sharp and cruel wars. Thus a Spanish word uttered by one man
+at one time, overthrew, or at the leastwise hindered sundry privy
+practices of many at another." *
+ [footnote...
+HOLINSHED, History of England. It was even said to have been one of
+the objects of the Spanish Armada to get the oaks of the Forest of
+Dean destroyed, in order to prevent further smelting of the iron.
+Thus Evelyn, in his Sylva, says, "I have heard that in the great
+expedition of 1588 it was expressly enjoined the Spanish Armada that
+if, when landed, they should not be able to subdue our nation and
+make good their conquest, they should yet be sure not to leave a tree
+standing in the Forest of Dean."--NICHOLS, History of the Forest of
+Dean, p. 22.
+ ...]
+Nor has the subject which occupied the earnest attention of
+politicians in Queen Elizabeth's time ceased to be of interest; for,
+after the lapse of nearly three hundred years, we find the smith and
+the iron manufacturer still uppermost in public discussions. It has
+of late years been felt that our much-prized "hearts of oak" are no
+more able to stand against the prows of mail which were supposed to
+threaten them, than the sticks and stones of the ancient tribes were
+able to resist the men armed with weapons of bronze or steel. What
+Solon said to Croesus, when the latter was displaying his great
+treasures of gold, still holds true: -- "If another comes that hath
+better iron than you, he will be master of all that gold." So, when
+an alchemist waited upon the Duke of Brunswick during the Seven
+Years' War, and offered to communicate the secret of converting iron
+into gold, the Duke replied: -- "By no means: I want all the iron I
+can find to resist my enemies: as for gold, I get it from England."
+Thus the strength and wealth of nations depend upon coal and iron,
+not forgetting Men, far more than upon gold.
+
+Thanks to our Armstrongs and Whitworths, our Browns and our Smiths,
+the iron defences of England, manned by our soldiers and our sailors,
+furnish the assurance of continued security for our gold and our
+wealth, and, what is infinitely more precious, for our industry and
+our liberty.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+EARLY ENGLISH IRON MANUFACTURE.
+
+"He that well observes it, and hath known the welds of Sussex, Surry,
+and Kent', the grand nursery especially of oake and beech, shal find
+such an alteration, within lesse than 30 yeeres, as may well strike a
+feare, lest few yeeres more, as pestilent as the former, will leave
+fewe good trees standing in those welds. Such a heate issueth out of
+the many forges and furnaces for the making of iron, and out of the
+glasse kilnes, as hath devoured many famous woods within the
+welds,"-- JOHN NORDEN, Surveyors' Dialogue (1607).
+
+
+Few records exist of the manufacture of iron in England in early
+times. After the Romans left the island, the British, or more
+probably the Teutonic tribes settled along the south coast, continued
+the smelting and manufacture of the metal after the methods taught
+them by the colonists. In the midst of the insecurity, however,
+engendered by civil war and social changes, the pursuits of industry
+must necessarily have been considerably interfered with, and the art
+of iron-forging became neglected. No notice of iron being made in
+Sussex occurs in Domesday Book, from which it would appear that the
+manufacture had in a great measure ceased in that county at the time
+of the Conquest, though it was continued in the iron-producing
+districts bordering on Wales. In many of the Anglo-Saxon graves which
+have been opened, long iron swords have been found, showing that
+weapons of that metal were in common use. But it is probable that
+iron was still scarce, as ploughs and other agricultural implements
+continued to be made of wood,--one of the Anglo-Saxon laws enacting
+that no man should undertake to guide a plough who could not make
+one; and that the cords with which it was bound should be of twisted
+willows. The metal was held in esteem principally as the material of
+war. All male adults were required to be provided with weapons, and
+honour was awarded to such artificers as excelled in the fabrication
+of swords, arms, and defensive armour.*
+ [footnote...
+WILKINS, Leges Sax. 25.
+ ...]
+
+Camden incidentally states that the manufacture of iron was continued
+in the western counties during the Saxon era, more particularly in
+the Forest of Dean, and that in the time of Edward the Confessor the
+tribute paid by the city of Gloucester consisted almost entirely of
+iron rods wrought to a size fit for making nails for the king's
+ships. An old religious writer speaks of the ironworkers of that day
+as heathenish in their manners, puffed up with pride, and inflated
+with worldly prosperity. On the occasion of St. Egwin's visit to the
+smiths of Alcester, as we are told in the legend, he found then given
+up to every kind of luxury; and when he proceeded to preach unto
+them, they beat upon their anvils in contempt of his doctrine so as
+completely to deafen him; upon which he addressed his prayers to
+heaven, and the town was immediately destroyed.*
+ [footnote...
+Life of St. Egwin, in Capgrave's Nova Legenda Anglioe. Alcester was,
+as its name indicates, an old Roman settlement (situated on the
+Icknild Street), where the art of working in iron was practised from
+an early period. It was originally called Alauna, being situated on
+the river Alne in Warwickshire. It is still a seat of the needle
+manufacture.
+ ...]
+
+But the first reception given to John Wesley by the miners of the
+Forest of Dean, more than a thousand years later, was perhaps
+scarcely more gratifying than that given to St. Egwin.
+
+That working in iron was regarded as an honourable and useful calling
+in the Middle Ages, is apparent from the extent to which it was
+followed by the monks, some of whom were excellent craftsmen. Thus
+St. Dunstan, who governed England in the time of Edwy the Fair, was a
+skilled blacksmith and metallurgist. He is said to have had a forge
+even in his bedroom, and it was there that his reputed encounter with
+Satan occurred, in which of course the saint came off the victor.
+
+There was another monk of St. Alban's, called Anketil, who flourished
+in the twelfth century, so famous for his skill as a worker in iron,
+silver, gold, jewelry, and gilding, that he was invited by the king
+of Denmark to be his goldsmith and banker. A pair of gold and silver
+candlesticks of his manufacture, presented by the abbot of St.
+Alban's to Pope Adrian IV., were so much esteemed for their exquisite
+workmanship that they were consecrated to St. Peter, and were the
+means of obtaining high ecclesiastical distinction for the abbey.
+
+We also find that the abbots of monasteries situated in the iron
+districts, among their other labours, devoted themselves to the
+manufacture of iron from the ore. The extensive beds of cinders still
+found in the immediate neighbourhood of Rievaulx and Hackness, in
+Yorkshire, show that the monks were well acquainted with the art of
+forging, and early turned to account the riches of the Cleveland
+ironstone. In the Forest of Dean also, the abbot of Flaxley was
+possessed of one stationary and one itinerant forge, by grant from
+Henry II, and he was allowed two oaks weekly for fuel,--a privilege
+afterwards commuted, in 1258, for Abbot's Wood of 872 acres, which
+was held by the abbey until its dissolution in the reign of Henry
+VIII. At the same time the Earl of Warwick had forges at work in his
+woods at Lydney; and in 1282, as many as 72 forges were leased from
+the Crown by various iron-smelters in the same Forest of Dean.
+
+There are numerous indications of iron-smelting having been conducted
+on a considerable scale at some remote period in the neighbourhood of
+Leeds, in Yorkshire. In digging out the foundations of houses in
+Briggate, the principal street of that town, many "bell pits" have
+been brought to light, from which ironstone has been removed. The new
+cemetery at Burmandtofts, in the same town, was in like manner found
+pitted over with these ancient holes. The miner seems to have dug a
+well about 6 feet in diameter, and so soon as he reached the mineral,
+he worked it away all round, leaving the bell-shaped cavities in
+question. He did not attempt any gallery excavations, but when the
+pit was exhausted, a fresh one was sunk. The ore, when dug, was
+transported, most probably on horses' backs, to the adjacent
+districts for the convenience of fuel. For it was easier to carry the
+mineral to the wood--then exclusively used for smelting'--than to
+bring the wood to the mineral. Hence the numerous heaps of scoriae
+found in the neighbourhood of Leeds,--at Middleton, Whitkirk, and
+Horsforth--all within the borough. At Horsforth, they are found in
+conglomerated masses from 30 to 40 yards long, and of considerable
+width and depth. The remains of these cinder-beds in various
+positions, some of them near the summit of the hill, tend to show,
+that as the trees were consumed, a new wind furnace was erected in
+another situation, in order to lessen the labour of carrying the
+fuel. There are also deposits of a similar kind at Kirkby Overblow, a
+village a few miles to the north-east of Leeds; and Thoresby states
+that the place was so called because it was the village of the "Ore
+blowers,"--hence the corruption of "Overblow." A discovery has
+recently been made among the papers of the Wentworth family, of a
+contract for supplying wood and ore for iron "blomes" at Kirskill
+near Otley, in the fourteenth century;*
+ [footnote...
+The following is an extract of this curious document, which is dated
+the 26th Dec. 1352: "Ceste endenture fait entre monsire Richard de
+Goldesburghe, chivaler,dune part, et Robert Totte, seignour, dautre
+tesmoigne qe le dit monsire Richard ad graunte et lesse al dit Robert
+deuz Olyveres contenaunz vynt quatre blomes de la feste seynt Piere
+ad vincula lan du regne le Roi Edward tierce apres le conqueste vynt
+sysme, en sun parke de Creskelde, rendant al dit monsire Richard
+chesqune semayn quatorzse soutz dargent duraunt les deux Olyvers
+avaunt dist; a tenir et avoir al avaunt dit Robert del avaunt dit
+monsire Richard de la feste seynt Piere avaunt dist, taunque le bois
+soit ars du dit parke a la volunte le dit monsire Richard saunz
+interrupcione [e le dicte monsieur Richard trovera a dit Robert urre
+suffisaunt pur lez ditz Olyvers pur le son donaunt: these words are
+interlined]. Et fait a savoir qe le dit Robert ne nule de soens
+coupard ne abatera nule manere darbre ne de boys put les deuz olyvers
+avaunt ditz mes par la veu et la lyvere le dit monsire Richard , ou
+par ascun autre par le dit monsire Richard assigne. En tesmoigaunz
+(sic) de quenx choses a cestes presentes endentures les parties
+enterchaungablement ount mys lour seals. Escript a Creskelde le
+meskerdy en le semayn de Pasque lan avaunt diste."
+
+It is probable that the "blomes" referred to in this agreement were
+the bloomeries or fires in which the iron was made; and that the
+"olyveres" were forges or erections, each of which contained so many
+bloomeries, but were of limited durability, and probably perished in
+the using.
+ ...]
+though the manufacture near that place has long since ceased.
+
+Although the making of iron was thus carried on in various parts of
+England in the Middle Ages, the quantity produced was altogether
+insufficient to meet the ordinary demand, as it appears from our
+early records to have long continued one of the principal articles
+imported from foreign countries. English iron was not only dearer,
+but it was much inferior in quality to that manufactured abroad; and
+hence all the best arms and tools continued to be made of foreign
+iron. Indeed the scarcity of this metal occasionally led to great
+inconvenience, and to prevent its rising in price Parliament enacted,
+in 1354, that no iron, either wrought or unwrought, should be
+exported, under heavy penalties. For nearly two hundred years--that
+is, throughout the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries--the English
+market was principally supplied with iron and steel from Spain and
+Germany; the foreign merchants of the Steelyard doing a large and
+profitable trade in those commodities. While the woollen and other
+branches of trade were making considerable progress, the manufacture
+of iron stood still. Among the lists of articles, the importation of
+which was prohibited in Edward IV.'s reign, with a view to the
+protection of domestic manufactures, we find no mention of iron,
+which was still, as a matter of necessity, allowed to come freely
+from abroad.
+
+The first indications of revival in the iron manufacture showed
+themselves in Sussex, a district in which the Romans had established
+extensive works, and where smelting operations were carried on to a
+partial extent in the neighbourhood of Lewes, in the thirteenth and
+fourteenth centuries, where the iron was principally made into nails
+and horse-shoes. The county abounds in ironstone, which is contained
+in the sandstone beds of the Forest ridge, lying between the chalk
+and oolite of the district, called by geologists the Hastings sand.
+The beds run in a north-westerly direction, by Ashburnham and
+Heathfield, to Crowborough and thereabouts. In early times the region
+was covered with wood, and was known as the Great Forest of Anderida.
+The Weald, or wild wood, abounded in oaks of great size, suitable for
+smelting ore; and the proximity of the mineral to the timber, as well
+as the situation of the district in the neighbourhood of the capital,
+sufficiently account for the Sussex iron-works being among the most
+important which existed in England previous to the discovery of
+smelting by pit-coal.
+
+The iron manufacturers of the south were especially busy during the
+fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Their works were established near
+to the beds of ore, and in places where water-power existed, or could
+be provided by artificial means. Hence the numerous artificial ponds
+which are still to be found all over the Sussex iron district. Dams
+of earth, called "pond-bays," were thrown across watercourses, with
+convenient outlets built of masonry, wherein was set the great wheel
+which worked the hammer or blew the furnace. Portions of the
+adjoining forest-land were granted or leased to the iron-smelters;
+and the many places still known by the name of "Chart" in the Weald,
+probably mark the lands chartered for the purpose of supplying the
+iron-works with their necessary fuel. The cast-iron tombstones and
+slabs in many Sussex churchyards,--the andirons and chimney backs*
+ [footnote...
+The back of a grate has recently been found, cast by Richard Leonard
+at Brede Furnace in 1636. It is curious as containing a
+representation of the founder with his dog and cups; a drawing of the
+furnace, with the wheelbarrow and other implements for the casting,
+and on a shield the pincers and other marks of the blacksmith.
+Leonard was tenant of the Sackville furnace at Little
+Udimore.--Sussex Archaeological Collections, vol.xii.
+ ...]
+still found in old Sussex mansions and farm-houses, and such names as
+Furnace Place, Cinder Hill, Forge Farm, and Hammer Pond, which are of
+very frequent occurrence throughout the county, clearly mark the
+extent and activity of this ancient branch of industry.*
+ [footnote ...
+For an interesting account of the early iron industry of Sussex see
+M. A. LOWER'S Contributions to Literature, Historical, Antiquarian,
+and Metrical. London, 1854.
+ ...]
+Steel was also manufactured at several places in the county, more
+particularly at Steel-Forge Land, Warbleton, and at Robertsbridge.
+The steel was said to be of good quality, resembling Swedish--both
+alike depending for their excellence on the exclusive use of charcoal
+in smelting the ore,--iron so produced maintaining its superiority
+over coal-smelted iron to this day.
+
+When cannon came to be employed in war, the nearness of Sussex to
+London and the Cinque Forts gave it a great advantage over the
+remoter iron-producing districts in the north and west of England,
+and for a long time the iron-works of this county enjoyed almost a
+monopoly of the manufacture. The metal was still too precious to be
+used for cannon balls, which were hewn of stone from quarries on
+Maidstone Heath. Iron was only available, and that in limited
+quantities, for the fabrication of the cannon themselves, and
+wrought-iron was chiefly used for the purpose. An old mortar which
+formerly lay on Eridge Green, near Frant, is said to have been the
+first mortar made in England;*
+ [footnote...
+Archaeologia, vol. x. 472.
+ ...]
+only the chamber was cast, while the tube consisted of bars
+strongly hooped together. Although the local distich says that
+
+ "Master Huggett and his man John
+ They did cast the first cannon,"
+
+there is every reason to believe that both cannons and mortars were
+made in Sussex before Huggett's time; the old hooped guns in the
+Tower being of the date of Henry VI. The first cast-iron cannons of
+English manufacture were made at Buxtead, in Sussex, in 1543, by
+Ralph Hogge, master founder, who employed as his principal assistant
+one Peter Baude, a Frenchman. Gun-founding was a French invention,
+and Mr. Lower supposes that Hogge brought over Baude from France to
+teach his workmen the method of casting the guns. About the same time
+Hogge employed a skilled Flemish gunsmith named Peter Van Collet,
+who, according to Stowe, "devised or caused to be made certain mortar
+pieces, being at the mouth from eleven to nine inches wide, for the
+use whereof the said Peter caused to be made certain hollow shot of
+cast-iron to be stuffed with fyrework, whereof the bigger sort for
+the same has screws of iron to receive a match to carry fyre for to
+break in small pieces the said hollow shot, whereof the smallest
+piece hitting a man would kill or spoil him." In short, Peter Van
+Collet here introduced the manufacture of the explosive shell in the
+form in which it continued to be used down to our own day.
+
+Baude, the Frenchman, afterwards set up business on his own account,
+making many guns, both of brass and iron, some of which are still
+preserved in the Tower.*
+ [footnote...
+One of these, 6 1/2 feet long, and of 2 1/2 inches bore, manufactured
+in 1543, bears the cast inscription of Petrus Baude Gallus operis
+artifex.
+ ...]
+Other workmen, learning the trade from him, also began to manufacture
+on their own account; one of Baude's servants, named John Johnson,
+and after him his son Thomas, becoming famous for the excellence of
+their cast-iron guns. The Hogges continued the business for several
+generations, and became a wealthy county family. Huggett was another
+cannon maker of repute; and Owen became celebrated for his brass
+culverins. Mr. Lower mentions, as a curious instance of the tenacity
+with which families continue to follow a particular vocation, that
+many persons of the name of Huggett still carry on the trade of
+blacksmith in East Sussex. But most of the early workmen at the
+Sussex iron-works, as in other branches of skilled industry in
+England during the sixteenth century, were foreigners-- Flemish and
+French--many of whom had taken refuge in this country from the
+religious persecutions then raging abroad, while others, of special
+skill, were invited over by the iron manufacturers to instruct their
+workmen in the art of metal-founding.*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Lower says," Many foreigners were brought over to carry on the
+works; which perhaps may account for the number of Frenchmen and
+Germans whose names appear in our parish registers about the middle of
+the sixteenth century ."-- Contributions to Literature, 108.
+ ...]
+
+As much wealth was gained by the pursuit of the revived iron
+manufacture in Sussex, iron-mills rapidly extended over the
+ore-yielding district. The landed proprietors entered with zeal into
+this new branch of industry, and when wood ran short, they did not
+hesitate to sacrifice their ancestral oaks to provide fuel for the
+furnaces. Mr. Lower says even the most ancient families, such as the
+Nevilles, Howards, Percys, Stanleys, Montagues, Pelhams, Ashburnhams,
+Sidneys, Sackvilles, Dacres, and Finches, prosecuted the manufacture
+with all the apparent ardour of Birmingham and Wolverhampton men in
+modern times. William Penn, the courtier Quaker, had iron-furnaces at
+Hawkhurst and other places in Sussex. The ruins of the Ashburnham
+forge, situated a few miles to the north-east of Battle, still serve
+to indicate the extent of the manufacture. At the upper part of the
+valley in which the works were situated, an artificial lake was
+formed by constructing an embankment across the watercourse
+descending from the higher ground,*
+ [footnote ...
+The embankment and sluices of the furnace-pond at the upper part of
+the valley continue to be maintained, the lake being used by the
+present Lord Ashburnham as a preserve for fish and water-fowl.
+ ...]
+and thus a sufficient fall of water was procured for the purpose of
+blowing the furnaces, the site of which is still marked by
+surrounding mounds of iron cinders and charcoal waste. Three quarters
+of a mile lower down the valley stood the forge, also provided with
+water-power for working the hammer; and some of the old buildings are
+still standing, among others the boring-house, of small size, now
+used as an ordinary labourer's cottage, where the guns were bored.
+The machine was a mere upright drill worked by the water-wheel, which
+was only eighteen inches across the breast. The property belonged, as
+it still does, to the Ashburnham family, who are said to have derived
+great wealth from the manufacture of guns at their works, which were
+among the last carried on in Sussex. The Ashburnham iron was
+distinguished for its toughness, and was said to be equal to the best
+Spanish or Swedish iron.
+
+Many new men also became enriched, and founded county families; the
+Fuller family frankly avowing their origin in the singular motto of
+Carbone et forcipibus--literally, by charcoal and tongs.*
+ [footnote...
+Reminding one of the odd motto assumed by Gillespie, the tobacconist
+of Edinburgh, founder of Gillespie's Hospital, on whose
+carriage-panels was emblazoned a Scotch mull, with the motto,
+
+ "Wha wad ha' thocht it,
+ That noses could ha' bought it!"
+
+It is just possible that the Fullers may have taken their motto from
+the words employed by Juvenal in describing the father of Demosthenes,
+who was a blacksmith and a sword-cutler --
+
+ "Quem pater ardentis massae fuligine lippus,
+ A carbone et forcipibus gladiosque parante
+ Incude et luteo Vulcano ad rhetora misit."
+
+ ...]
+
+Men then went into Sussex to push their fortunes at the forges, as
+they now do in Wales or Staffordshire; and they succeeded then, as
+they do now, by dint of application, industry, and energy. The Sussex
+Archaeological Papers for 1860 contain a curious record of such an
+adventurer, in the history of the founder of the Gale family. Leonard
+Gale was born in 1620 at Riverhead, near Sevenoaks, where his father
+pursued the trade of a blacksmith. When the youth had reached his
+seventeenth year, his father and mother, with five of their sons and
+daughters, died of the plague, Leonard and his brother being the only
+members of the family that survived. The patrimony of 200L. left them
+was soon spent; after which Leonard paid off his servants, and took
+to work diligently at his father's trade. Saving a little money, he
+determined to go down into Sussex, where we shortly find him working
+the St. Leonard's Forge, and afterwards the Tensley Forge near
+Crawley, and the Cowden Iron-works, which then bore a high
+reputation. After forty years' labour, he accumulated a good fortune,
+which he left to his son of the same name, who went on iron-forging,
+and eventually became a county gentleman, owner of the house and
+estate of Crabbett near Worth, and Member of Parliament for East
+Grinstead.
+
+Several of the new families, however, after occupying a high position
+in the county, again subsided into the labouring class, illustrating
+the Lancashire proverb of "Twice clogs, once boots," the sons
+squandering what the father's had gathered, and falling back into the
+ranks again. Thus the great Fowles family of Riverhall disappeared
+altogether from Sussex. One of them built the fine mansion of
+Riverhall, noble even in decay. Another had a grant of free warren
+from King James over his estates in Wadhurst, Frant, Rotherfield, and
+Mayfield. Mr. Lower says the fourth in descent from this person kept
+the turnpike-gate at Wadhurst, and that the last of the family, a
+day-labourer, emigrated to America in 1839, carrying with him, as the
+sole relic of his family greatness, the royal grant of free warren
+given to his ancestor. The Barhams and Mansers were also great
+iron-men, officiating as high sheriffs of the county at different
+times, and occupying spacious mansions. One branch of these families
+terminated, Mr. Lower says, with Nicholas Barham, who died in the
+workhouse at Wadhurst in 1788; and another continues to be
+represented by a wheelwright at Wadhurst of the same name.
+
+The iron manufacture of Sussex reached its height towards the close
+of the reign of Elizabeth, when the trade became so prosperous that,
+instead of importing iron, England began to export it in considerable
+quantities, in the shape of iron ordnance. Sir Thomas Leighton and
+Sir Henry Neville had obtained patents from the queen, which enabled
+them to send their ordnance abroad, the conseqnence of which was that
+the Spaniards were found arming their ships and fighting us with guns
+of our own manufacture. Sir Walter Raleigh, calling attention to the
+subject in the House of Commons, said, "I am sure heretofore one ship
+of Her Majesty's was able to beat ten Spaniards, but now, by reason
+of our own ordnance, we are hardly matcht one to one." Proclamations
+were issued forbidding the export of iron and brass ordnance, and a
+bill was brought into Parliament to put a stop to the trade; but, not
+withstanding these prohibitions, the Sussex guns long continued to be
+smuggled out of the country in considerable numbers. "It is almost
+incredible," says Camden, "how many guns are made of the iron in this
+county. Count Gondomar (the Spanish ambassador) well knew their
+goodness when he so often begged of King James the boon to export
+them." Though the king refused his sanction, it appears that Sir
+Anthony Shirley of Weston, an extensive iron-master, succeeded in
+forwarding to the King of Spain a hundred pieces of cannon.
+
+So active were the Sussex manufacturers, and so brisk was the trade
+they carried on, that during the reign of James I. it is supposed
+one-half of the whole quantity of iron produced in England was made
+there. Simon Sturtevant, in his 'Treatise of Metallica,' published in
+1612, estimates the whole number of iron-mills in England and Wales
+at 800, of which, he says, "there are foure hundred milnes in Surry,
+Kent, and Sussex, as the townsmen of Haslemere have testified and
+numbered unto me. But the townsmen of Haslemere must certainly have
+been exaggerating, unless they counted smiths' and farriers' shops in
+the number of iron-mills. About the same time that Sturtevant's
+treatise was published, there appeared a treatise entitled the
+'Surveyor's Dialogue,' by one John Norden, the object of which was to
+make out a case against the iron-works and their being allowed to
+burn up the timber of the country for fuel. Yet Norden does not make
+the number of iron-works much more than a third of Sturtevant's
+estimate. He says, "I have heard that there are or lately were in
+Sussex neere 140 hammers and furnaces for iron, and in it and Surrey
+adjoining three or four glasse-houses." Even the smaller number
+stated by Norden, however, shows that Sussex was then regarded as the
+principal seat of the iron-trade. Camden vividly describes the noise
+and bustle of the manufacture--the working of the heavy hammers,
+which, "beating upon the iron, fill the neighbourhood round about,
+day and night, with continual noise." These hammers were for the most
+part worked by the power of water, carefully stored in the artificial
+"Hammer-ponds" above described. The hammer-shaft was usually of ash,
+about 9 feet long, clamped at intervals with iron hoops. It was
+worked by the revolutions of the water-wheel, furnished with
+projecting arms or knobs to raise the hammer, which fell as each knob
+passed, the rapidity of its action of course depending on the
+velocity with which the water-wheel revolved. The forge-blast was
+also worked for the most part by water-power. Where the furnaces were
+small, the blast was produced by leather bellows worked by hand, or
+by a horse walking in a gin. The foot-blasts of the earlier
+iron-smelters were so imperfect that but a small proportion of the
+ore was reduced, so that the iron-makers of later times, more
+particularly in the Forest of Dean, instead of digging for ironstone,
+resorted to the beds of ancient scoriae for their principal supply of
+the mineral.
+
+Notwithstanding the large number of furnaces in blast throughout the
+county of Sussex at the period we refer to, their produce was
+comparatively small, and must not be measured by the enormous produce
+of modern iron-works; for while an iron-furnace of the present day
+will easily turn out 150 tons of pig per week, the best of the older
+furnaces did not produce more than from three to four tons. One of
+the last extensive contracts executed in Sussex was the casting of
+the iron rails which enclose St. Paul's Cathedral. The contract was
+thought too large for one iron-master to undertake, and it was
+consequently distributed amongst several contractors, though the
+principal part of the work was executed at Lamberhurst, near
+Tunbridge Wells. But to produce the comparatively small quantity of
+iron turned out by the old works, the consumption of timber was
+enormous; for the making of every ton of pig-iron required four loads
+of timber converted into charcoal fuel, and the making of every ton
+of bar-iron required three additional loads. Thus, notwithstanding
+the indispensable need of iron, the extension of the manufacture, by
+threatening the destruction of the timber of the southern counties,
+came to be regarded in the light of a national calamity. Up to a
+certain point, the clearing of the Weald of its dense growth of
+underwood had been of advantage, by affording better opportunities
+for the operations of agriculture. But the "voragious iron-mills"
+were proceeding to swallow up everything that would burn, and the old
+forest growths were rapidly disappearing. An entire wood was soon
+exhausted, and long time was needed before it grew again. At
+Lamberhurst alone, though the produce was only about five tons of
+iron a-week, the annual consumption of wood was about 200,000 cords!
+Wood continued to be the only material used for fuel generally--a
+strong prejudice existing against the use of sea-coal for domestic
+purposes.*
+ [footnote...
+It was then believed that sea or pit-coal was poisonous when burnt in
+dwellings, and that it was especially injurious to the human
+complexion. All sorts of diseases were attributed to its use, and at
+one time it was even penal to burn it. The Londoners only began to
+reconcile themselves to the use of coal when the wood within reach of
+the metropolis had been nearly all burnt up, and no other fuel was to
+be had.
+ ...]
+It therefore began to be feared that there would be no available fuel
+left within practicable reach of the metropolis; and the contingency
+of having to face the rigorous cold of an English winter without fuel
+naturally occasioning much alarm, the action of the Government was
+deemed necessary to remedy the apprehended evil.
+
+To check the destruction of wood near London, an Act was passed in
+1581 prohibiting its conversion into fuel for the making of iron
+within fourteen miles of the Thames, forbidding the erection of new
+ironworks within twenty-two miles of London, and restricting the
+number of works in Kent, Surrey, and Sussex, beyond the above limits.
+Similar enactments were made in future Parliaments with the same
+object, which had the effect of checking the trade, and several of
+the Sussex ironmasters were under the necessity of removing their
+works elsewhere. Some of them migrated to Glamorganshire, in South
+Wales, because of the abundance of timber as well as ironstone in
+that quarter, and there set up their forges, more particularly at
+Aberdare and Merthyr Tydvil. Mr. Llewellin has recently published an
+interesting account of their proceedings, with descriptions of their
+works,*
+ [footnote ...
+Archaeologia Cambrensis, 3rd Series, No. 34, April, 1863. Art.
+"Sussex Ironmasters in Glamorganshire."
+ ...]
+remains of which still exist at Llwydcoed, Pontyryns, and other
+places in the Aberdare valley. Among the Sussex masters who settled
+in Glamorganshire for the purpose of carrying on the iron
+manufacture, were Walter Burrell, the friend of John Ray, the
+naturalist, one of the Morleys of Glynde in Sussex, the Relfes from
+Mayfield, and the Cheneys from Crawley.
+
+Notwithstanding these migrations of enterprising manufacturers, the
+iron trade of Sussex continued to exist until the middle of the
+seventeenth century, when the waste of timber was again urged upon
+the attention of Parliament, and the penalties for infringing the
+statutes seem to have been more rigorously enforced. The trade then
+suffered a more serious check; and during the civil wars, a heavy
+blow was given to it by the destruction of the works belonging to all
+royalists, which was accomplished by a division of the army under Sir
+William Waller. Most of the Welsh ironworks were razed to the ground
+about the same time, and were not again rebuilt. And after the
+Restoration, in 1674, all the royal ironworks in the Forest of Dean
+were demolished, leaving only such to be supplied with ore as were
+beyond the forest limits; the reason alleged for this measure being
+lest the iron manufacture should endanger the supply of timber
+required for shipbuilding and other necessary purposes.
+
+From this time the iron manufacture of Sussex, as of England
+generally, rapidly declined. In 1740 there were only fifty-nine
+furnaces in all England, of which ten were in Sussex; and in 1788
+there were only two. A few years later, and the Sussex iron furnaces
+were blown out altogether. Farnhurst, in western, and Ashburnham, in
+eastern Sussex, witnessed the total extinction of the manufacture.
+The din of the iron hammer was hushed, the glare of the furnace
+faded, the last blast of the bellows was blown, and the district
+returned to its original rural solitude. Some of the furnace-ponds
+were drained and planted with hops or willows; others formed
+beautiful lakes in retired pleasure-grounds; while the remainder were
+used to drive flour-mills, as the streams in North Kent, instead of
+driving fulling-mills, were employed to work paper-mills. All that
+now remains of the old iron-works are the extensive beds of cinders
+from which material is occasionally taken to mend the Sussex roads,
+and the numerous furnace-ponds, hammer-posts, forges, and cinder
+places, which mark the seats of the ancient manufacture.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IRON-SMELTING BY PIT-COAL--DUD DUDLEY.
+
+"God of his Infinite goodness (if we will but take notice of his
+goodness unto this Nation) hath made this Country a very Granary for
+the supplying of Smiths with Iron, Cole, and Lime made with cole,
+which hath much supplied these men with Corn also of late; and from
+these men a great part, not only of this Island, but also of his
+Majestie's other Kingdoms and Territories, with Iron wares have their
+supply, and Wood in these parts almost exhausted, although it were of
+late a mighty woodland country."--DUDLEY's Metallum Martis, 1665.
+
+
+The severe restrictions enforced by the legislature against the use
+of wood in iron-smelting had the effect of almost extinguishing the
+manufacture. New furnaces ceased to be erected, and many of the old
+ones were allowed to fall into decay, until it began to be feared
+that this important branch of industry would become completely lost.
+The same restrictions alike affected the operations of the glass
+manufacture, which, with the aid of foreign artisans, had been
+gradually established in England, and was becoming a thriving branch
+of trade. It was even proposed that the smelting of iron should be
+absolutely prohibited: "many think," said a contemporary writer,
+"that there should be NO WORKS ANYWHERE--they do so devour the
+woods."
+
+The use of iron, however, could not be dispensed with. The very
+foundations of society rested upon an abundant supply of it, for
+tools and implements of peace, as well as for weapons of war. In the
+dearth of the article at home, a supply of it was therefore sought
+for abroad; and both iron and steel came to be imported in
+largely-increased quantities. This branch of trade was principally in
+the hands of the Steelyard Company of Foreign Merchants, established
+in Upper Thames Street, a little above London Bridge; and they
+imported large quantities of iron and steel from foreign countries,
+principally from Sweden, Germany, and Spain. The best iron came from
+Spain, though the Spaniards on their part coveted our English made
+cannons, which were better manufactured than theirs; while the best
+steel came from Germany and Sweden.*
+ [footnote...
+As late as 1790, long after the monopoly of the foreign merchants had
+been abolished, Pennant says, "The present Steelyard is the great
+repository of imported iron, which furnishes our metropolis with that
+necessary material. The quantity of bars that fills the yards and
+warehouses of this quarter strikes with astonishment the most
+indifferent beholder."--PENNANT, Account of London, 309.
+ ...]
+
+Under these circumstances, it was natural that persons interested in
+the English iron manufacture should turn their attention to some
+other description of fuel which should serve as a substitute for the
+prohibited article. There was known to be an abundance of coal in the
+northern and midland counties, and it occurred to some speculators
+more than usually daring, to propose it as a substitute for the
+charcoal fuel made from wood. But the same popular prejudice which
+existed against the use of coal for domestic purposes, prevented its
+being employed for purposes of manufacture; and they were thought
+very foolish persons indeed who first promulgated the idea of
+smelting iron by means of pit-coal. The old manufacturers held it to
+be impossible to reduce the ore in any other way than by means of
+charcoal of wood. It was only when the wood in the neighbourhood of
+the ironworks had been almost entirely burnt up, that the
+manufacturers were driven to entertain the idea of using coal as a
+substitute; but more than a hundred years passed before the practice
+of smelting iron by its means became general.
+
+The first who took out a patent for the purpose was one Simon
+Sturtevant, a German skilled in mining operations; the professed
+object of his invention being "to neale, melt, and worke all kind of
+metal oares, irons, and steeles with sea-coale, pit-coale,
+earth-coale, and brush fewell." The principal end of his invention,
+he states in his Treatise of Metallica,*
+ [footnote...
+STURTEVANT'S Metallica; briefly comprehending the Doctrine of Diverse
+New Metallical Inventions, &c. Reprinted and published at the Great
+Seal Patent Office, 1858.
+ ...]
+is to save the consumption and waste of the woods and timber of the
+country; and, should his design succeed, he holds that it "will prove
+to be the best and most profitable business and invention that ever
+was known or invented in England these many yeares." He says he has
+already made trial of the process on a small scale, and is confident
+that it will prove equally successful on a large one. Sturtevant was
+not very specific as to his process; but it incidentally appears to
+have been his purpose to reduce the coal by an imperfect combustion
+to the condition of coke, thereby ridding it of "those malignant
+proprieties which are averse to the nature of metallique substances."
+The subject was treated by him, as was customary in those days, as a
+great mystery, made still more mysterious by the multitude of learned
+words under which he undertook to describe his "Ignick Invention" All
+the operations of industry were then treated as secrets. Each trade
+was a craft, and those who followed it were called craftsmen. Even
+the common carpenter was a handicraftsman; and skilled artisans were
+"cunning men." But the higher branches of work were mysteries, the
+communication of which to others was carefully guarded by the
+regulations of the trades guilds. Although the early patents are
+called specifications, they in reality specify nothing. They are for
+the most part but a mere haze of words, from which very little
+definite information can be gleaned as to the processes patented. It
+may be that Sturtevant had not yet reduced his idea to any
+practicable method, and therefore could not definitely explain it.
+However that may be, it is certain that his process failed when tried
+on a large scale, and Sturtevant's patent was accordingly cancelled
+at the end of a year.
+
+
+The idea, however, had been fairly born, and repeated patents were
+taken out with the same object from time to time. Thus, immediately
+on Sturtevant's failure becoming known, one John Rovenzon, who had
+been mixed up with the other's adventure, applied for a patent for
+making iron by the same process, which was granted him in 1613. His
+'Treatise of Metallica'*
+ [footnote...
+Reprinted and published at the Great Seal Patent Office, 1858.
+ ...]
+shows that Rovenzon had a true conception of the method of
+manufacture. Nevertheless he, too, failed in carrying out the
+invention in practice, and his patent was also cancelled. Though
+these failures were very discouraging, like experiments continued to
+be made and patents taken out,--principally by Dutchmen and Germans,*
+ [footnote...
+Among the early patentees, besides the names of Sturtevant and
+Rovenzon, we find those of Jordens, Francke, Sir Phillibert Vernatt,
+and other foreigners of the above nations.
+ ...]
+--but no decided success seems to have attended their efforts until
+the year 1620, when Lord Dudley took out his patent "for melting iron
+ore, making bar-iron, &c., with coal, in furnaces, with bellows."
+This patent was taken out at the instance of his son Dud Dudley,
+whose story we gather partly from his treatise entitled 'Metallum
+Martis,' and partly from various petitions presented by him to the
+king, which are preserved in the State Paper Office, and it runs as
+follows: --
+
+Dud Dudley was born in 1599, the natural son of Edward Lord Dudley of
+Dudley Castle in the county of Worcester. He was the fourth of eleven
+children by the same mother, who is described in the pedigree of the
+family given in the Herald's visitation of the county of Stafford in
+the year 1663, signed by Dud Dudley himself, as "Elizabeth, daughter
+of William Tomlinson of Dudley, concubine of Edward Lord Dudley."
+Dud's eldest brother is described in the same pedigree as Robert
+Dudley, Squire, of Netherton Hall; and as his sisters mostly married
+well, several of them county gentlemen, it is obvious that the
+family, notwithstanding that the children were born out of wedlock,
+held a good position in their neighbourhood, and were regarded with
+respect. Lord Dudley, though married and having legitimate heirs at
+the time, seems to have attended to the up-bringing of his natural
+children; educating them carefully, and afterwards employing them in
+confidential offices connected with the management of his extensive
+property. Dud describes himself as taking great delight, when a
+youth, in his father's iron-works near Dudley, where he obtained
+considerable knowledge of the various processes of the manufacture.
+
+The town of Dudley was already a centre of the iron manufacture,
+though chiefly of small wares, such as nails, horse-shoes, keys,
+locks, and common agricultural tools; and it was estimated that there
+were about 20,000 smiths and workers in iron of various kinds living
+within a circuit of ten miles of Dudley Castle. But, as in the
+southern counties, the production of iron had suffered great
+diminution from the want of fuel in the district, "though formerly a
+mighty woodland country; and many important branches of the local
+trade were brought almost to a stand-still. Yet there was an
+extraordinary abundance of coal to be met with in the
+neighbourhood--coal in some places lying in seams ten feet
+thick--ironstone four feet thick immediately under the coal, with
+limestone conveniently adjacent to both. The conjunction seemed
+almost providential--"as if." observes Dud, "God had decreed the time
+when and how these smiths should be supplied, and this island also,
+with iron, and most especially that this cole and ironstone should
+give the first and just occasion for the invention of smelting iron
+with pit-cole;" though, as we have already seen, all attempts
+heretofore made with that object had practically failed.
+
+Dud was a special favourite of the Earl his father, who encouraged
+his speculations with reference to the improvement of the iron
+manufacture, and gave him an education calculated to enable him to
+turn his excellent practical abilities to account. He was studying at
+Baliol College, Oxford, in the year 1619, when the Earl sent for him
+to take charge of an iron furnace and two forges in the chase of
+Pensnet in Worcestershire. He was no sooner installed manager of the
+works, than, feeling hampered by the want of wood for fuel, his
+attention was directed to the employment of pit-coal as a substitute.
+He altered his furnace accordingly, so as to adapt it to the new
+process, and the result of the first trial was such as to induce him
+to persevere. It is nowhere stated in Dud Dudley's Treatise what was
+the precise nature of the method adopted by him; but it is most
+probable that, in endeavouring to substitute coal for wood as fuel,
+he would subject the coal to a process similar to that of
+charcoal-burning. The result would be what is called Coke; and as
+Dudley informs us that he followed up his first experiment with a
+second blast, by means of which he was enabled to produce good
+marketable iron, the presumption is that his success was also due to
+an improvement of the blast which he contrived for the purpose of
+keeping up the active combustion of the fuel. Though the quantity
+produced by the new process was comparatively small--not more than
+three tons a week from each furnace--Dudley anticipated that greater
+experience would enable him to increase the quantity; and at all
+events he had succeeded in proving the practicability of smelting
+iron with fuel made from pit-coal, which so many before him had tried
+in vain.
+
+Immediately after the second trial had been made with such good
+issue, Dud wrote to his father the Earl, then in London, informing
+him what he had done, and desiring him at once to obtain a patent for
+the invention from King James. This was readily granted, and the
+patent (No. 18), dated the 22nd February, 1620, was taken out in the
+name of Lord Dudley himself.
+
+Dud proceeded with the manufacture of iron at Pensnet, and also at
+Cradley in Staffordshire, where he erected another furnace; and a
+year after the patent was granted he was enabled to send up to the
+Tower, by the King's command, a considerable quantity of the new iron
+for trial. Many experiments were made with it: its qualities were
+fairly tested, and it was pronounced "good merchantable iron." Dud
+adds, in his Treatise, that his brother-in-law, Richard Parkshouse,
+of Sedgeley,*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Parkshouse was one of the esquires to Sir Ferdinando Dudley (the
+legitimate son of the Earl of Dudley) When he was made Knight of the
+Bath. Sir Ferdinando's only daughter Frances married Humble Ward, son
+and heir of William Ward, goldsmith and jeweller to Charles the
+First's queen. Her husband having been created a baron by the title
+of Baron Ward of Birmingham, and Frances becoming Baroness of Dudley
+in her own right on the demise of her father, the baronies of Dudley
+and Ward thus became united in their eldest son Edward in the year
+1697.
+ ...]
+"had a fowling-gun there made of the Pit-cole iron," which was "well
+approved." There was therefore every prospect of the new method of
+manufacture becoming fairly established, and with greater experience
+further improvements might with confidence be anticipated, when a
+succession of calamities occurred to the inventor which involved him
+in difficulties and put an effectual stop to the progress of his
+enterprise.
+
+The new works had been in successful operation little more than a
+year, when a flood, long after known as the "Great May-day Flood,"
+swept away Dudley's principal works at Cradley, and otherwise
+inflicted much damage throughout the district. "At the market town
+called Stourbridge," says Dud, in the course of his curious
+narrative, "although the author sent with speed to preserve the
+people from drowning, and one resolute man was carried from the
+bridge there in the day-time, the nether part of the town was so deep
+in water that the people had much ado to preserve their lives in the
+uppermost rooms of their houses." Dudley himself received very little
+sympathy for his losses. On the contrary, the iron-smelters of the
+district rejoiced exceedingly at the destruction of his works by the
+flood. They had seen him making good iron by his new patent process,
+and selling it cheaper than they could afford to do. They accordingly
+put in circulation all manner of disparaging reports about his iron.
+It was bad iron, not fit to be used; indeed no iron, except what was
+smelted with charcoal of wood, could be good. To smelt it with coal
+was a dangerous innovation, and could only result in some great
+public calamity. The ironmasters even appealed to King James to put a
+stop to Dud's manufacture, alleging that his iron was not
+merchantable. And then came the great flood, which swept away his
+works; the hostile ironmasters now hoping that there was an end for
+ever of Dudley's pit-coal iron.
+
+But Dud, with his wonted energy, forthwith set to work and repaired
+his furnaces and forges, though at great cost; and in the course of a
+short time the new manufacture was again in full progress. The
+ironmasters raised a fresh outcry against him, and addressed another
+strong memorial against Dud and his iron to King James. This seems to
+have taken effect; and in order to ascertain the quality of the
+article by testing it upon a large scale, the King commanded Dudley
+to send up to the Tower of London, with every possible speed,
+quantities of all the sorts of bar-iron made by him, fit for the
+"making of muskets, carbines, and iron for great bolts for shipping;
+which iron," continues Dud, "being so tried by artists and smiths,
+the ironmasters and iron-mongers were all silenced until the 21st
+year of King James's reign." The ironmasters then endeavoured to get
+the Dudley patent included in the monopolies to be abolished by the
+statute of that year; but all they could accomplish was the
+limitation of the patent to fourteen years instead of thirty-one; the
+special exemption of the patent from the operation of the statute
+affording a sufficient indication of the importance already attached
+to the invention. After that time Dudley "went on with his invention
+cheerfully, and made annually great store of iron, good and
+merchantable, and sold it unto diverse men at twelve pounds per ton."
+"I also," said he, "made all sorts of cast-iron wares, as brewing
+cisterns, pots, mortars, &c., better and cheaper than any yet made in
+these nations with charcoal, some of which are yet to be seen by any
+man (at the author's house in the city of Worcester) that desires to
+be satisfied of the truth of the invention."
+
+Notwithstanding this decided success, Dudley encountered nothing but
+trouble and misfortune. The ironmasters combined to resist his
+invention; they fastened lawsuit's upon him, and succeeded in getting
+him ousted from his works at Cradley. From thence he removed to
+Himley in the county of Stafford, where he set up a pit-coal furnace;
+but being without the means of forging the iron into bars, he was
+constrained to sell the pig-iron to the charcoal-ironmasters, "who
+did him much prejudice, not only by detaining his stock, but also by
+disparaging his iron." He next proceeded to erect a large new furnace
+at Hasco Bridge, near Sedgeley, in the same county, for the purpose
+of carrying out the manufacture on the most improved principles. This
+furnace was of stone, twenty-seven feet square, provided with
+unusually large bellows; and when in full work he says he was enabled
+to turn out seven tons of iron per week, "the greatest quantity of
+pit-coal iron ever yet made in Great Britain." At the same place he
+discovered and opened out new workings of coal ten feet thick, lying
+immediately over the ironstone, and he prepared to carry on his
+operations on a large scale; but the new works were scarcely finished
+when a mob of rioters, instigated by the charcoal-ironmasters, broke
+in upon them, cut in pieces the new bellows, destroyed the machinery,
+and laid the results of all his deep-laid ingenuity and persevering
+industry in ruins. From that time forward Dudley was allowed no rest
+nor peace: he was attacked by mobs, worried by lawsuits, and
+eventually overwhelmed by debts. He was then seized by his creditors
+and sent up to London, where he was held a prisoner in the Comptoir
+for several thousand pounds. The charcoal-iron men thus for a time
+remained masters of the field.
+
+Charles I. seems to have taken pity on the suffering inventor; and on
+his earnest petition, setting forth the great advantages to the
+nation of his invention, from which he had as yet derived no
+advantage, but only losses, sufferings, and persecution, the King
+granted him a renewal of his patent*
+ [footnote...
+Patent No. 117, Old Series, granted in 1638, to Sir George Horsey,
+David Ramsey, Roger Foulke, and Dudd Dudley.
+ ...]
+in the year 1638; three other gentlemen joining him as partners, and
+doubtless providing the requisite capital for carrying on the
+manufacture after the plans of the inventor. But Dud's evil fortune
+continued to pursue him. The patent had scarcely been securedere the
+Civil War broke out, and the arts of peace must at once perforce give
+place to the arts of war. Dud's nature would not suffer him to be
+neutral at such a time; and when the nation divided itself into two
+hostile camps, his predilections being strongly loyalist, he took the
+side of the King with his father. It would appear from a petition
+presented by him to Charles II. in 1660, setting forth his sufferings
+in the royal cause, and praying for restoral to certain offices which
+he had enjoyed under Charles I., that as early as the year 1637 he
+had been employed by the King on a mission into Scotland,*
+ [footnote...
+By his own account, given in Metallum Martis, while in Scotland in
+1637, he visited the Highlands as well as the Lowlands, spending the
+whole summer of that year "in opening of mines and making of
+discoveries;" spending part of the time with Sir James Hope of Lead
+Hills, near where, he says, "he got gold." It does not appear,
+however, that any iron forges existed in Scotland at the time: indeed
+Dudley expressly says that "Scotland maketh no iron;" and in his
+treatise of 1665 he urges that the Corporation of the Mines Royal
+should set him and his inventions at work to enable Scotland to enjoy
+the benefit of a cheap and abundant supply of the manufactured
+article.
+ ...]
+in the train of the Marquis of Hamilton, the King's Commissioner.
+Again in 1639, leaving his ironworks and partners, he accompanied
+Charles on his expedition across the Scotch border, and was present
+with the army until its discomfiture at Newburn near Newcastle in the
+following year.
+
+The sword was now fairly drawn, and Dud seems for a time to have
+abandoned his iron-works and followed entirely the fortunes of the
+king. He was sworn surveyor of the Mews or Armoury in 1640, but being
+unable to pay for the patent, another was sworn in in his place. Yet
+his loyalty did not falter, for in the beginning of 1642, when
+Charles set out from London, shortly after the fall of Strafford and
+Laud, Dud went with him.*
+ [footnote...
+The Journals of the House of Commons, of the 13th June, 1642, contain
+the resolution "that Captain Wolseley, Ensign Dudley, and John
+Lometon be forthwith sent for, as delinquents, by the
+Serjeant-at-Arms attending on the House, for giving interruption to
+the execution of the ordinance of the militia in the county of
+Leicester."
+ ...]
+He was present before Hull when Sir John Hotham shut its gates in the
+king's face; at York when the royal commissions of array were sent
+out enjoining all loyal subjects to send men, arms, money, and
+horses, for defence of the king and maintenance of the law; at
+Nottingham, where the royal standard was raised; at Coventry, where
+the townspeople refused the king entrance and fired upon his troops
+from the walls; at Edgehill, where the first great but indecisive
+battle was fought between the contending parties; in short, as Dud
+Dudley states in his petition, he was "in most of the battailes that
+year, and also supplyed his late sacred Majestie's magazines of
+Stafford, Worcester, Dudley Castle, and Oxford, with arms, shot,
+drakes, and cannon; and also, became major unto Sir Frauncis
+Worsley's regiment, which was much decaied."
+
+In 1643, according to the statement contained in his petition above
+referred to, Dud Dudley acted as military engineer in setting out the
+fortifications of Worcester and Stafford, and furnishing them with
+ordnance. After the taking of Lichfield, in which he had a share, he
+was made Colonel of Dragoons, and accompanied the Queen with his
+regiment to the royal head-quarters at Oxford. The year after we find
+him at the siege of Gloucester, then at the first battle of Newbury
+leading the forlorn hope with Sir George Lisle, afterwards marching
+with Sir Charles Lucas into the associate counties, and present at
+the royalist rout at Newport. That he was esteemed a valiant and
+skilful officer is apparent from the circumstance, that in 1645 he
+was appointed general of Prince Maurice's train of artillery, and
+afterwards held the same rank under Lord Ashley. The iron districts
+being still for the most part occupied by the royal armies, our
+military engineer turned his practical experience to account by
+directing the forging of drakes*
+ [footnote...
+Small pieces of artillery, specimens of which are still to be seen in
+the museum at Woolwich Arsenal and at the Tower. ...]
+ of bar-iron, which were found of great use, giving up his own
+dwelling-house in the city of Worcester for the purpose of carrying
+on the manufacture of these and other arms. But Worcester and the
+western towns fell before the Parliamentarian armies in 1646, and all
+the iron-works belonging to royalists, from which the principal
+supplies of arms had been drawn by the King's army, were forthwith
+destroyed.
+
+Dudley fully shared in the dangers and vicissitudes of that trying
+period, and bore his part throughout like a valiant soldier. For two
+years nothing was heard of him, until in 1648, when the king's party
+drew together again, and made head in different parts of the country,
+north and south. Goring raised his standard in Essex, but was driven
+by Fairfax into Colchester, where he defended himself for two months.
+While the siege was in progress, the royalists determined to make an
+attempt to raise it. On this Dud Dudley again made his appearance in
+the field, and, joining sundry other counties, he proceeded to raise
+200 men, mostly at his own charge. They were, however, no sooner
+mustered in Bosco Bello woods near Madeley, than they were attacked
+by the Parliamentarians, and dispersed or taken prisoners. Dud was
+among those so taken, and he was first carried to Hartlebury Castle
+and thence to Worcester, where he was imprisoned. Recounting the
+sufferings of himself and his followers on this occasion, in the
+petition presented to Charles II. in 1660,*
+ [footnote...
+State Paper Office, Dom. Charles II., vol. xi. 54.
+ ...]
+he says, "200 men were dispersed, killed, and some taken, namely,
+Major Harcourt, Major Elliotts, Capt. Long, and Cornet Hodgetts, of
+whom Major Harcourt was miserably burned with matches. The petitioner
+and the rest were stripped almost naked, and in triumph and scorn
+carried up to the city of Worcester (which place Dud had fortified
+for the king), and kept close prisoners, with double guards set upon
+the prison and the city."
+
+Notwithstanding this close watch and durance, Dudley and Major
+Elliotts contrived to break out of gaol, making their way over the
+tops of the houses, afterwards passing the guards at the city gates,
+and escaping into the open country. Being hotly pursued , they
+travelled during the night, and took to the trees during the daytime.
+They succeeded in reaching London, but only to drop again into the
+lion's mouth; for first Major Elliotts was captured, then Dudley, and
+both were taken before Sir John Warner, the Lord Mayor, who forthwith
+sent them before the "cursed committee of insurrection," as Dudley
+calls them. The prisoners were summarily sentenced to be shot to
+death, and were meanwhile closely imprisoned in the Gatehouse at
+Westminster, with other Royalists.
+
+The day before their intended execution, the prisoners formed a plan
+of escape. It was Sunday morning, the 20th August, 1648, when they
+seized their opportunity, "at ten of the cloeke in sermon time;" and,
+overpowering the gaolers, Dudley, with Sir Henry Bates, Major
+Elliotts, Captain South, Captain Paris, and six others, succeeded in
+getting away, and making again for the open country. Dudley had
+received a wound in the leg, and could only get along with great
+difficulty. He records that he proceeded on crutches, through
+Worcester, Tewkesbury, and Gloucester, to Bristol, having been "fed
+three weeks in private in an enemy's hay mow." Even the most
+lynx-eyed Parliamentarian must have failed to recognise the quondam
+royalist general of artillery in the helpless creature dragging
+himself along upon crutches; and he reached Bristol in safety.
+
+His military career now over, he found himself absolutely penniless.
+His estate of about 200L. per annum had been sequestrated and sold by
+the government;*
+ [footnote...
+The Journals of the House of Commons, on the 2nd Nov. 1652, have the
+following entry: "The House this day resumed the debate upon the
+additional Bill for sale of several lands and estates forfeited to
+the Commonwealth for treason, when it was resolved that the name of
+Dud Dudley of Green Lodge be inserted into this Bill."
+ ...]
+his house in Worcester had been seized and his sickly wife turned out
+of doors; and his goods, stock, great shop, and ironworks, which he
+himself valued at 2000L., were destroyed. He had also lost the
+offices of Serjeant-at-arms, Lieutenant of Ordnance, and Surveyor of
+the Mews, which he had held under the king; in a word, he found
+himself reduced to a state of utter destitution.
+
+Dudley was for some time under the necessity of living in great
+privacy at Bristol; but when the king had been executed, and the
+royalists were finally crushed at Worcester, Dud gradually emerged
+from his concealment. He was still the sole possessor of the grand
+secret of smelting iron with pit-coal, and he resolved upon one more
+commercial adventure, in the hope of yet turning it to good account.
+He succeeded in inducing Walter Stevens, linendraper, and John Stone,
+merchant, both of Bristol, to join him as partners in an ironwork,
+which they proceeded to erect near that city. The buildings were well
+advanced, and nearly 700L. had been expended, when a quarrel occurred
+between Dudley and his partners, which ended in the stoppage of the
+works, and the concern being thrown into Chancery. Dudley alleges
+that the other partners "cunningly drew him into a bond," and "did
+unjustly enter staple actions in Bristol of great value against him,
+because he was of the king's party;" but it would appear as if there
+had been some twist or infirmity of temper in Dudley himself, which
+prevented him from working harmoniously with such persons as he
+became associated with in affairs of business.
+
+In the mean time other attempts were made to smelt iron with
+pit-coal. Dudley says that Cromwell and the then Parliament granted a
+patent to Captain Buck for the purpose; and that Cromwell himself,
+Major Wildman, and various others were partners in the patent. They
+erected furnaces and works in the Forest of Dean;*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Mushet, in his 'Papers on Iron,' says, that "although he had
+carefully examined every spot and relic in Dean Forest likely to
+denote the site of Dud Dudley's enterprising but unfortunate
+experiment of making pig-iron with pit coal," it had been without
+success; neither could he find any traces of the like operations of
+Cromwell and his partners.
+ ...]
+but, though Cromwell and his officers could fight and win battles,
+they could not smelt and forge iron with pit-coal. They brought one
+Dagney, an Italian glass-maker, from Bristol, to erect a new furnace
+for them, provided with sundry pots of glass-house clay; but no
+success attended their efforts. The partners knowing of Dudley's
+possession of the grand secret, invited him to visit their works; but
+all they could draw from him was that they would never succeed in
+making iron to profit by the methods they were pursuing. They next
+proceeded to erect other works at Bristol, but still they failed.
+Major Wildman*
+ [footnote...
+Dudley says, "Major Wildman, more barbarous to me than a wild man,
+although a minister, bought the author's estate, near 200L. per
+annum, intending to compell from the author his inventions of making
+iron with pitcole, but afterwards passed my estate unto two barbarous
+brokers of London, that pulled down the author's two mantion houses,
+sold 500 timber trees off his land, and to this day are his houses
+unrepaired. Wildman himself fell under the grip of Cromwell. Being
+one of the chiefs of the Republican party, he was seized at Exton,
+near Marlborough, in l654, and imprisoned in Chepstow Castle.
+ ...]
+bought Dudley's sequestrated estate, in the hope of being able to
+extort his secret of making iron with pit-coal; but all their
+attempts proving abortive, they at length abandoned the enterprise in
+despair. In 1656, one Captain Copley obtained from Cromwell a further
+patent with a similar object; and erected works near Bristol, and
+also in the Forest of Kingswood. The mechanical engineers employed by
+Copley failed in making his bellows blow; on which he sent for
+Dudley, who forthwith "made his bellows to be blown feisibly;" but
+Copley failed, like his predecessors, in making iron, and at length
+he too desisted from further experiments.
+
+Such continued to be the state of things until the Restoration, when
+we find Dud Dudley a petitioner to the king for the renewal of his
+patent. He was also a petitioner for compensation in respect of the
+heavy losses he had sustained during the civil wars. The king was
+besieged by crowds of applicants of a similar sort, but Dudley was no
+more successful than the others. He failed in obtaining the renewal
+of his patent. Another applicant for the like privilege, probably
+having greater interest at court, proved more successful. Colonel
+Proger and three others*
+ [footnote...
+June 13, 1661. Petition of Col. Jas. Proger and three others to the
+king for a patent for the sole exercise of their invention of melting
+down iron and other metals with coal instead of wood, as the great
+consumption of coal [charcoal ?] therein causes detriment to
+shipping, &c. With reference thereon to Attorney-General Palmer, and
+his report, June 18, in favour of the petition,--State Papers,
+Charles II. (Dom. vol, xxxvii, 49.
+ ...]
+were granted a patent to make iron with coal; but Dudley knew the
+secret, which the new patentees did not; and their patent came to
+nothing.
+
+Dudley continued to address the king in importunate petitions, asking
+to be restored to his former offices of Serjeant-at-arms, Lieutenant
+of Ordnance, and Surveyor of the Mews or Armoury. He also petitioned
+to be appointed Master of the Charter House in Smithfield, professing
+himself willing to take anything, or hold any living.*
+ [footnote...
+In his second petition he prays that a dwelling-house situated in
+Worcester, and belonging to one Baldwin, "a known traitor," may be
+assigned to him in lieu of Alderman Nash's, which had reverted to
+that individual since his return to loyalty; Dudley reminding the
+king that his own house in that city had been given up by him for the
+service of his father Charles I., and turned into a factory for arms.
+It does not appear that this part of his petition was successful.
+ ...]
+We find him sending in two petitions to a similar effect in June,
+1660; and a third shortly after. The result was, that he was
+reappointed to the office of Serjeant-at-Arms; but the Mastership of
+the Charter-House was not disposed of until 1662, when it fell to the
+lot of one Thomas Watson.*
+ [footnote...
+State Papers, vol. xxxi. Doquet Book, p.89.
+ ...]
+In 1661, we find a patent granted to Wm. Chamberlaine and--Dudley,
+Esq., for the sole use of their new invention of plating steel, &c.,
+and tinning the said plates; but whether Dud Dudley was the person
+referred to, we are unable precisely to determine. A few years later,
+he seems to have succeeded in obtaining the means of prosecuting his
+original invention; for in his Metallum Martis, published in 1665, he
+describes himself as living at Green's Lodge, in Staffordshire; and
+he says that near it are four forges, Green's Forge, Swin Forge,
+Heath Forge, and Cradley Forge, where he practises his "perfect
+invention." These forges, he adds, "have barred all or most part of
+their iron with pit-coal since the authors first invention In 1618,
+which hath preserved much wood. In these four, besides many other
+forges, do the like [sic ]; yet the author hath had no benefit
+thereby to this present." From that time forward, Dud becomes lost to
+sight. He seems eventually to have retired to St. Helen's in
+Worcestershire, where he died in 1684, in the 85th year of his age.
+He was buried in the parish church there, and a monument, now
+destroyed, was erected to his memory, bearing the inscription partly
+set forth underneath.*
+ [footnote...
+
+ Pulvis et umbra sumus
+ Memento mori.
+
+Dodo Dudley chiliarchi nobilis Edwardi nuper domini de Dudley filius,
+patri charus et regiae Majestatis fidissimus subditus et servus in
+asserendo regein, in vindicartdo ecclesiam, in propugnando legem ac
+libertatem Anglicanam, saepe captus, anno 1648, semel condemnatus et
+tamen non decollatus, renatum denuo vidit diadaema hic inconcussa
+semper virtute senex.
+
+ Differt non aufert mortem longissima vita
+ Sed differt multam cras hodiere mori.
+ Quod nequeas vitare, fugis:
+ Nec formidanda est.
+
+Plot frequently alludes to Dudley in his Natural History of
+Staffordshire, and when he does so he describes him as the "worshipful
+Dud Dudley," showing the estimation in which he was held by his
+contemporaries.
+ ...]
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ANDREW YARRANTON.
+
+"There never have been wanting men to whom England's improvement by
+sea and land was one of the dearest thoughts of their lives, and to
+whom England's good was the foremost of their worldly considerations.
+And such, emphatically, was Andrew Yarranton, a true patriot in the
+best sense of the word."--DOVE, Elements of Political Science.
+
+
+That industry had a sore time of it during the civil wars will
+further appear from the following brief account of Andrew Yarranton,
+which may be taken as a companion memoir to that of Dud Dudley. For
+Yarranton also was a Worcester ironmaster and a soldier--though on
+the opposite side,--but more even than Dudley was he a man of public
+spirit and enterprise, an enlightened political economist (long
+before political economy had been recognised as a science), and in
+many respects a true national benefactor. Bishop Watson said that he
+ought to have had a statue erected to his memory because of his
+eminent public services; and an able modern writer has gone so far as
+to say of him that he was "the founder of English political economy,
+the first man in England who saw and said that peace was better than
+war, that trade was better than plunder, that honest industry was
+better than martial greatness, and that the best occupation of a
+government was to secure prosperity at home, and let other nations
+alone."*
+ [footnote...
+PATRICK EDWARD DOVE, Elements of Political Science. Edinburgh, 1854.
+ ...]
+Yet the name of Andrew Yarranton is scarcely remembered, or is at
+most known to only a few readers of half-forgotten books. The
+following brief outline of his history is gathered from his own
+narrative and from documents in the State Paper Office.
+
+Andrew Yarranton was born at the farmstead of Larford, in the parish
+of Astley, in Worcestershire, in the year 1616.*
+ [footnote...
+A copy of the entries in the parish register relating to the various
+members of the Yarranton family, kindly forwarded to us by the Rev.
+H. W. Cookes, rector of Astley, shows them to have resided in that
+parish for many generations. There were the Yarrantons of Yarranton,
+of Redstone, of Larford, of Brockenton, and of Longmore. With that
+disregard for orthography in proper names which prevailed some three
+hundred years since, they are indifferently designated as Yarran,
+Yarranton, and Yarrington. The name was most probably derived from
+two farms named Great and Little Yarranton, or Yarran (originally
+Yarhampton), situated in the parish of Astley. The Yarrantons
+frequently filled local offices in that parish, and we find several
+of them officiating at different periods as bailiffs of Bewdley.
+ ...]
+In his sixteenth year he was put apprentice to a Worcester
+linendraper, and remained at that trade for some years; but not
+liking it, he left it, and was leading a country life when the civil
+wars broke out. Unlike Dudley, he took the side of the Parliament,
+and joined their army, in which he served for some time as a soldier.
+His zeal and abilities commended him to his officers, and he was
+raised from one position to another, until in the course of a few
+years we find him holding the rank of captain. "While a soldier,"
+says he, "I had sometimes the honour and misfortune to lodge and
+dislodge an army;" but this is all the information he gives us of his
+military career. In the year 1648 he was instrumental in discovering
+and frustrating a design on the part of the Royalists to seize Doyley
+House in the county of Hereford, and other strongholds, for which he
+received the thanks of Parliament "for his ingenuity, discretion, and
+valour," and a substantial reward of 500L.*
+ [footnote...
+Journals of the House of Commons, lst July, 1648.
+ ...]
+He was also recommended to the Committee of Worcester for further
+employment. But from that time we hear no more of him in connection
+with the civil wars. When Cromwell assumed the supreme control of
+affairs, Yarranton retired from the army with most of the
+Presbyterians, and devoted himself to industrial pursuits.
+
+We then find him engaged in carrying on the manufacture of iron at
+Ashley, near Bewdley, in Worcestershire. "In the year 1652", says he,
+"I entered upon iron-works, and plied them for several years."*
+ [footnote...
+YARRANTON'S England's Improvement by Sea and Land. Part I. London,
+1677.
+ ...]
+He made it a subject of his diligent study how to provide employment
+for the poor, then much distressed by the late wars. With the help of
+his wife, he established a manufacture of linen, which was attended
+with good results. Observing how the difficulties of communication,
+by reason of the badness of the roads, hindered the development of
+the rich natural resources of the western counties,*
+ [footnote...
+There seems a foundation of truth in the old English distich --
+
+ The North for Greatness, the East for Health,
+ The South for Neatness, the West for Wealth.
+ ...]
+he applied himself to the improvement of the navigation of the larger
+rivers, making surveys of them at his own cost, and endeavouring to
+stimulate local enterprise so as to enable him to carry his plans
+into effect.
+
+While thus occupied, the restoration of Charles II. took place, and
+whether through envy or enmity Yarranton's activity excited the
+suspicion of the authorities. His journeys from place to place seemed
+to them to point to some Presbyterian plot on foot. On the 13th of
+November, 1660, Lord Windsor, Lord-Lieutenant of the county, wrote to
+the Secretary of State--"There is a quaker in prison for speaking
+treason against his Majesty, and a countryman also, and Captain
+Yarrington for refusing to obey my authority."*
+ [footnote...
+State Paper Office. Dom. Charles II. 1660-1. Yarranton afterwards
+succeeded in making a friend of Lord Windsor, as would appear from
+his dedication of England's Improvement to his Lordship, whom he
+thanks for the encouragement he had given to him in his survey of
+several rivers with a view to their being rendered navigable.
+ ...]
+It would appear from subsequent letters that Yarranton must have lain
+in prison for nearly two years, charged with conspiring against the
+king's authority, the only evidence against him consisting of some
+anonymous letter's. At the end of May, 1662, he succeeded in making
+his escape from the custody of the Provost Marshal. The High Sheriff
+scoured the country after him at the head of a party of horse, and
+then he communicated to the Secretary of State, Sir Edward Nicholas,
+that the suspected conspirator could not be found, and was supposed
+to have made his way to London. Before the end of a month Yarranton
+was again in custody, as appears from the communication of certain
+justices of Surrey to Sir Edward Nicholas.*
+ [footnote...
+The following is a copy of the document from the State Papers: --
+"John Bramfield, Geo. Moore, and Thos. Lee, Esqrs. and Justices of
+Surrey, to Sir Edw. Nicholas.--There being this day brought before us
+one Andrew Yarranton, and he accused to have broken prison, or at
+least made his escape out of the Marshalsea at Worcester, being there
+committed by the Deputy-Lieuts. upon suspicion of a plot in November
+last; we having thereupon examined him, he allegeth that his Majesty
+hath been sought unto on his behalf, and hath given order to yourself
+for his discharge, and a supersedeas against all persons and
+warrants, and thereupon hath desired to appeal unto you. The which we
+conceiving to be convenient and reasonable (there being no positive
+charge against him before us), have accordingly herewith conveyed
+him unto you by a safe hand, to be further examined or disposed of as
+you shall find meet.--S. P. O. Dom. Chas. II. 23rd June, 1662.
+ ...]
+As no further notice of Yarranton occurs in the State Papers, and as
+we shortly after find him publicly occupied in carrying out his plans
+for improving the navigation of the western rivers, it is probable
+that his innoceney of any plot was established after a legal
+investigation. A few years later he published in London a 4to. tract
+entitled 'A Full Discovery of the First Presbyterian Sham Plot,'
+which most probably contained a vindication of his conduct.*
+ [footnote...
+We have been unable to refer to this tract, there being no copy of it
+in the British Museum.
+ ...]
+
+Yarranton was no sooner at liberty than we find him again occupied
+with his plans of improved inland navigation. His first scheme was to
+deepen the small river Salwarp, so as to connect Droitwich with the
+Severn by a water communication, and thus facilitate the transport of
+the salt so abundantly yielded by the brine springs near that town.
+In 1665, the burgesses of Droitwich agreed to give him 750L. and
+eight salt vats in Upwich, valued at 80L. per annum, with
+three-quarters of a vat in Northwich, for twenty-one years, in
+payment for the work. But the times were still unsettled, and
+Yarranton and his partner Wall not being rich, the scheme was not
+then carried into effect.*
+ [footnote...
+NASH'S Worcestershire, i. 306.
+ ...]
+In the following year we find him occupied with a similar scheme to
+open up the navigation of the river Stour, passing by Stourport and
+Kidderminster, and connect it by an artificial cut with the river
+Trent. Some progress was made with this undertaking, so far in
+advance of the age, but, like the other, it came to a stand still for
+want of money, and more than a hundred years passed before it was
+carried out by a kindred genius--James Brindley, the great canal
+maker. Mr. Chambers says that when Yarranton's scheme was first
+brought forward, it met with violent opposition and ridicule. The
+undertaking was thought wonderfully bold, and, joined to its great
+extent, the sandy, spongy nature of the ground, the high banks
+necessary to prevent the inundation of the Stour on the canal,
+furnished its opponents, if not with sound argument, at least with
+very specious topics for opposition and laughter.*
+ [footnote...
+JOHN CHAMBERS, Biographical Illustrations of Worcestershire. London,
+1820.
+ ...]
+Yarranton's plan was to make the river itself navigable, and by
+uniting it with other rivers, open up a communication with the Trent;
+while Brindley's was to cut a canal parallel with the river, and
+supply it with water from thence. Yarranton himself thus accounts for
+the failure of his scheme in 'England's Improvement by Sea and
+Land': -- "It was my projection," he says, "and I will tell you the
+reason why it was not finished. The river Stour and some other rivers
+were granted by an Act of Parliament to certain persons of honor, and
+some progress was made in the work, but within a small while after
+the Act passed*
+ [footnote...
+The Act for making the Stour and Salwarp navigable originated in the
+Lords and was passed in the year 1661.
+ ...]
+it was let fall again; but it being a brat of my own, I was not
+willing it should be abortive, wherefore I made offers to perfect it,
+having a third part of the inheritance to me and my heirs for ever,
+and we came to an agreement, upon which I fell on, and made it
+completely navigable from Stourbridge to Kidderminster, and carried
+down many hundred tons of coal, and laid out near 1000L., and there
+it was obstructed for want of money."*
+ [footnote...
+Nash, in his Hist. of Worc., intimates that Lord Windsor subsequently
+renewed the attempt to make the Salwarp navigable. He constructed
+five out of the six locks, and then abandoned the scheme. Gough, in
+his edition of Camden's Brit. ii. 357, Lond. 1789, says, "It is not
+long since some of the boats made use of in Yarranton's navigation
+were found. Neither tradition nor our projector's account of the
+matter perfectly satisfy us why this navigation was neglected..... We
+must therefore conclude that the numerous works and glass-houses upon
+the Stour, and in the neighbourhood of Stourbridge, did not then
+exist, A.D. 1666. ....The navigable communication which now connects
+Trent and Severn, and which runs in the course of Yarranton's
+project, is already of general use.... The canal since executed under
+the inspection of Mr. Brindley, running parallel with the river....
+cost the proprietors 105,000L."
+ ...]
+
+Another of Yarranton's far-sighted schemes of a similar kind was one
+to connect the Thames with the Severn by means of an artificial cut,
+at the very place where, more than a century after his death, it was
+actually carried out by modern engineers. This canal, it appears, was
+twice surveyed under his direction by his son. He did, however,
+succeed in his own time in opening up the navigation. of the Avon,
+and was the first to carry barges upon its waters from Tewkesbury to
+Stratford.
+
+The improvement of agriculture, too, had a share of Yarranton's
+attention. He saw the soil exhausted by long tillage and constantly
+repeated crops of rye, and he urged that the land should have rest or
+at least rotation of crop. With this object he introduced
+clover-seed, and supplied it largely to the farmers of the western
+counties, who found their land doubled in value by the new method of
+husbandry, and it shortly became adopted throughout the country.
+Seeing how commerce was retarded by the small accommodation provided
+for shipping at the then principal ports, Yarranton next made surveys
+and planned docks for the city of London; but though he zealously
+advocated the subject, he found few supporters, and his plans proved
+fruitless. In this respect he was nearly a hundred and fifty years
+before his age, and the London importers continued to conduct their
+shipping business in the crowded tideway of the Thames down even to
+the beginning of the present century.
+
+While carrying on his iron works, it occurred to Yarranton that it
+would be of great national advantage if the manufacture of tin-plate
+could be introduced into England. Although the richest tin mines then
+known existed in this country, the mechanical arts were at so low an
+ebb that we were almost entirely dependent upon foreigners for the
+supply of the articles manufactured from the metal. The Saxons were
+the principal consumers of English tin, and we obtained from them in
+return nearly the whole of our tin-plates. All attempts made to
+manufacture them in England had hitherto failed; the beating out of
+the iron by hammers into laminae sufficiently thin and smooth, and
+the subsequent distribution and fixing of the film of tin over the
+surface of the iron, proving difficulties which the English
+manufacturers were unable to overcome. To master these difficulties
+the indefatigable Yarranton set himself to work. "Knowing," says he,
+"the usefulness of tin-plates and the goodness of our metals for that
+purpose, I did, about sixteen years since (i.e. about 1665),
+endeavour to find out the way for making thereof; whereupon I
+acquainted a person of much riches, and one that was very
+understanding in the iron manufacture, who was pleased to say that he
+had often designed to get the trade into England, but never could
+find out the way. Upon which it was agreed that a sum of monies
+should be advanced by several persons,*
+ [footnote...
+In the dedication of his book, entitled Englands Improvement by Sea
+and Land, Part I., Yarranton gives the names of the "noble patriots"
+who sent him on his journey of inquiry. They were Sir Waiter Kirtham
+Blount, Bart., Sir Samuel Baldwin and Sir Timothy Baldwin, Knights,
+Thomas Foley and Philip Foley, Esquires, and six other gentlemen. The
+father of the Foleys was himself supposed to have introduced the art
+of iron-splitting into England by an expedient similar to that
+adopted by Yarranton in obtaining a knowledge of the tin-plate
+manufacture (Self-Help, p.145). The secret of the silk-throwing
+machinery of Piedmont was in like manner introduced into England by
+Mr. Lombe of Derby, who shortly succeeded in founding a flourishing
+branch of manufacture. These were indeed the days of romance and
+adventure in manufactures.
+ ...]
+for the defraying of my charges of travelling to the place where
+these plates are made, and from thence to bring away the art of
+making them. Upon which, an able fire-man, that well understood the
+nature of iron, was made choice of to accompany me; and being fitted
+with an ingenious interpreter that well understood the language, and
+that had dealt much in that commodity, we marched first for Hamburgh,
+then to Leipsic, and from thence to Dresden, the Duke of Saxony's
+court, where we had notice of the place where the plates were made;
+which was in a large tract of mountainous land, running from a place
+called Seger-Hutton unto a town called Awe [Au], being in length
+about twenty miles."*
+ [footnote...
+The district is known as the Erzgebirge or Ore Mountains, and the
+Riesengebirge or Giant Mountains, MacCulloch says that upwards of 500
+mines are wrought in the former district, and that one-thirtieth of
+the entire population of Saxony to this day derive their subsistence
+from mining industry and the manufacture of metallic products.--
+Geographical Dict. ii. 643, edit. 1854.
+ ...]
+
+It is curious to find how much the national industry of England has
+been influenced by the existence from time to time of religious
+persecutions abroad, which had the effect of driving skilled
+Protestant artisans, more particularly from Flanders and France, into
+England, where they enjoyed the special protection of successive
+English Governments, and founded various important branches of
+manufacture. But it appears from the history of the tin manufactures
+of Saxony, that that country also had profited in like manner by the
+religious persecutions of Germany, and even of England itself. Thus
+we are told by Yarranton that it was a Cornish miner, a Protestant,
+banished out of England for his religion in Queen Mary's time, who
+discovered the tin mines at Awe, and that a Romish priest of Bohemia,
+who had been converted to Lutheranism and fled into Saxony for
+refuge, "was the chief instrument in the manufacture until it was
+perfected." These two men were held in great regard by the Duke of
+Saxony as well as by the people of the country; for their ingenuity
+and industry proved the source of great prosperity and wealth,
+"several fine cities," says Yarranton, "having been raised by the
+riches proceeding from the tin-works"--not less than 80,000 men
+depending upon the trade for their subsistence; and when Yarranton
+visited Awe, he found that a statue had been erected to the memory of
+the Cornish miner who first discovered the tin.
+
+Yarranton was very civilly received by the miners, and, contrary to
+his expectation, he was allowed freely to inspect the tin-works and
+examine the methods by which the iron-plates were rolled out, as well
+as the process of tinning them. He was even permitted to engage a
+number of skilled workmen, whom he brought over with him to England
+for the purpose of starting the manufacture in this country. A
+beginning was made, and the tin-plates manufactured by Yarranton's
+men were pronounced of better quality even than those made in Saxony.
+"Many thousand plates," Yarranton says, "were made from iron raised
+in the Forest of Dean, and were tinned over with Cornish tin; and the
+plates proved far better than the German ones, by reason of the
+toughness and flexibleness of our forest iron. One Mr. Bison, a
+tinman in Worcester, Mr. Lydiate near Fleet Bridge, and Mr. Harrison
+near the King's Bench, have wrought many, and know their goodness."
+As Yarranton's account was written and published during the lifetime
+of the parties, there is no reason to doubt the accuracy of his
+statement.
+
+Arrangements were made to carry on the manufacture upon a large
+scale; but the secret having got wind, a patent was taken out, or
+"trumpt up" as Yarranton calls it, for the manufacture, "the patentee
+being countenanced by some persons of quality," and Yarranton was
+precluded from carrying his operations further. It is not improbable
+that the patentee in question was William Chamberlaine, Dud Dudley's
+quondam partner in the iron manufacture.*
+ [footnote...
+Chamberlaine and Dudley's first licence was granted in 1661 for
+plating steel and tinning the said plates; and Chamberlaine's sole
+patent for "plating and tinning iron, copper, &c.," was granted in
+1673, probably the patent in question.
+ ...]
+"What with the patent being in our way," says Yarranton, "and the
+richest of our partners being afraid to offend great men in power,
+who had their eye upon us, it caused the thing to cool, and the
+making of the tin-plates was neither proceeded in by us, nor possibly
+could be by him that had the patent; because neither he that hath the
+patent, nor those that have countenanced him, can make one plate fit
+for use." Yarranton's labours were thus lost to the English public
+for a time; and we continued to import all our tin-plates from
+Germany until about sixty years later, when a tin-plate manufactory
+was established by Capel Hanbury at Pontypool in Monmouthshire, where
+it has since continued to be successfully carried on.
+
+We can only briefly refer to the subsequent history of Andrew
+Yarranton. Shortly after his journey into Saxony, he proceeded to
+Holland to examine the inland navigations of the Dutch, to inspect
+their linen and other manufactures, and to inquire into the causes of
+the then extraordinary prosperity of that country compared with
+England. Industry was in a very languishing state at home. "People
+confess they are sick," said Yarranton, "that trade is in a
+consumption, and the whole nation languishes." He therefore
+determined to ascertain whether something useful might not be learnt
+from the example of Holland. The Dutch were then the hardest working
+and the most thriving people in Europe. They were manufacturers and
+carriers for the world. Their fleets floated on every known sea; and
+their herring-busses swarmed along our coasts as far north as the
+Hebrides. The Dutch supplied our markets with fish caught within
+sight of our own shores, while our coasting population stood idly
+looking on. Yarranton regarded this state of things as most
+discreditable, and he urged the establishment of various branches of
+home industry as the best way of out-doing the Dutch without fighting
+them.
+
+Wherever he travelled abroad, in Germany or in Holland, he saw
+industry attended by wealth and comfort, and idleness by poverty and
+misery. The same pursuits, he held, would prove as beneficial to
+England as they were abundantly proved to have been to Holland. The
+healthy life of work was good for all--for individuals as for the
+whole nation; and if we would out-do the Dutch, he held that we must
+out-do them in industry. But all must be done honestly and by fair
+means. "Common Honesty," said Yarranton, "is as necessary and needful
+in kingdoms and commonwealths that depend upon Trade, as discipline
+is in an army; and where there is want of common Honesty in a kingdom
+or commonwealth, from thence Trade shall depart. For as the Honesty
+of all governments is, so shall be their Riches; and as their Honour,
+Honesty, and Riches are, so will be their Strength; and as their
+Honour, Honesty, Riches, and Strength are, so will be their Trade.
+These are five sisters that go hand in hand, and must not be parted."
+Admirable sentiments, which are as true now as they were two hundred
+years ago, when Yarranton urged them upon the attention of the
+English public.
+
+On his return from Holland, he accordingly set on foot various
+schemes of public utility. He stirred up a movement for the
+encouragement of the British fisheries. He made several journeys into
+Ireland for the purpose of planting new manufactures there. He
+surveyed the River Slade with the object of rendering it navigable,
+and proposed a plan for improving the harbour of Dublin. He also
+surveyed the Dee in England with a view to its being connected with
+the Severn. Chambers says that on the decline of his popularity in
+1677, he was taken by Lord Clarendon to Salisbury to survey the River
+Avon, and find out how that river might be made navigable, and also
+whether a safe harbour for ships could be made at Christchurch; and
+that having found where he thought safe anchorage might be obtained,
+his Lordship proceeded to act upon Yarranton's recommendations.*
+ [footnote...
+JOHN CHAMBERS, Biographical Illustrations of Worcestershire. London,
+1820.
+ ...]
+
+Another of his grand schemes was the establishment of the linen
+manufacture in the central counties of England, which, he showed,
+were well adapted for the growth of flax; and he calculated that if
+success attended his efforts, at least two millions of money then
+sent out of the country for the purchase of foreign linen would be
+retained at home, besides increasing the value of the land on which
+the flax was grown, and giving remunerative employment to our own
+people, then emigrating for want of work. " Nothing but Sloth or
+Envy," he said, "can possibly hinder my labours from being crowned
+with the wished for success; our habitual fondness for the one hath
+already brought us to the brink of ruin, and our proneness to the
+other hath almost discouraged all pious endeavours to promote our
+future happiness."
+
+In 1677 he published the first part of his England's Improvement by
+Sea and Land--a very remarkable book, full of sagacious insight as
+respected the future commercial and manufacturing greatness of
+England. Mr. Dove says of this book that Yarranton" chalks out in it
+the future course of Britain with as free a hand as if second-sight
+had revealed to him those expansions of her industrial career which
+never fail to surprise us, even when we behold them realized."
+Besides his extensive plans for making harbours and improving
+internal navigation with the object of creating new channels for
+domestic industry, his schemes for extending the iron and the woollen
+trades, establishing the linen manufacture, and cultivating the home
+fisheries, we find him throwing out various valuable suggestions with
+reference to the means of facilitating commercial transactions, some
+of winch have only been carried out in our own day. One of his
+grandest ideas was the establishment of a public bank, the credit of
+which, based upon the security of freehold land,*
+ [footnote...
+Yarranton's Land Bank was actually projected in 1695, and received
+the sanction of Parliament; though the Bank of England (founded in
+the preceding year) petitioned against it, and the scheme was
+dropped.
+ ...]
+should enable its paper "to go in trade equal with ready money." A
+bank of this sort formed one of the principal means by which the
+Dutch had been enabled to extend their commercial transactions, and
+Yarranton accordingly urged its introduction into England. Part of
+his scheme consisted of a voluntary register of real property, for
+the purpose of effecting simplicity of title, and obtaining relief
+from the excessive charges for law,*
+ [footnote...
+It is interesting to note in passing, that part of Yarranton's scheme
+has recently been carried into effect by the Act (25 and 26 Vict. c.
+53) passed in 1862 for the Registration of Real Estate.
+ ...]
+as well as enabling money to be readily raised for commercial
+purposes on security of the land registered.
+
+He pointed out very graphically the straits to which a man is put who
+is possessed of real property enough, but in a time of pressure is
+unable to turn himself round for want of ready cash. "Then," says he,
+"all his creditors crowd to him as pigs do through a hole to a bean
+and pease rick." "Is it not a sad thing," he asks, "that a
+goldsmith's boy in Lombard Street, who gives notes for the monies
+handed him by the merchants, should take up more monies upon his
+notes in one day than two lords, four knights, and eight esquires in
+twelve months upon all their personal securities? We are, as it were,
+cutting off our legs and arms to see who will feed the trunk. But we
+cannot expect this from any of our neighbours abroad, whose interest
+depends upon our loss."
+
+He therefore proposed his registry of property as a ready means of
+raising a credit for purposes of trade. Thus, he says, "I can both in
+England and Wales register my wedding, my burial, and my christening,
+and a poor parish clerk is entrusted with the keeping of the book;
+and that which is registered there is held good by our law. But I
+cannot register my lands, to be honest, to pay every man his own, to
+prevent those sad things that attend families for want thereof, and
+to have the great benefit and advantage that would come thereby. A
+register will quicken trade, and the land registered will be equal as
+cash in a man's hands, and the credit thereof will go and do in trade
+what ready money now doth." His idea was to raise money, when
+necessary, on the land registered, by giving security thereon after a
+form which be suggested. He would, in fact, have made land, as gold
+now is, the basis of an extended currency; and he rightly held that
+the value of land as a security must always be unexceptionable, and
+superior to any metallic basis that could possibly be devised.
+
+This indefatigable man continued to urge his various designs upon the
+attention of the public until he was far advanced in years. He
+professed that he was moved to do so (and we believe him) solely by
+an ardent love for his country, "whose future flourishing," said he,
+"is the only reward I ever hope to see of all my labours." Yarranton,
+however, received but little thanks for his persistency, while he
+encountered many rebuffs. The public for the most part turned a deaf
+ear to his entreaties; and his writings proved of comparatively small
+avail, at least during his own lifetime. He experienced the lot of
+many patriots, even the purest--the suspicion and detraction of his
+contemporaries. His old political enemies do not seem to have
+forgotten him, of which we have the evidence in certain rare
+"broadsides" still extant, twitting him with the failure of his
+schemes, and even trumping up false charges of disloyalty against
+him.*
+ [footnote...
+One of these is entitled 'A Coffee-house Dialogue, or a Discourse
+between Captain Y--and a Young Barrister of the Middle Temple; with
+some Reflections upon the Bill against the D. of Y.' In this
+broadside, of 3 1/2 pages folio, published about 1679, Yarranton is
+made to favour the Duke of York's exclusion from the throne, not only
+because he was a papist, but for graver reasons than he dare express.
+Another scurrilous pamphlet, entitled 'A Word Without Doors,' was
+also aimed at him. Yarranton, or his friends, replied to the first
+attack in a folio of two pages, entitled 'The Coffee-house Dialogue
+Examined and Refuted, by some Neighbours in the Country ,
+well-wishers to the Kingdom's interest.' The controversy was followed
+up by 'A Continuation of the Coffee-house Dialogue,' in which the
+chief interlocutor hits Yarranton rather hard for the miscarriage of
+his "improvements." "I know," says he, "when and where you undertook
+for a small charge to make a river navigable, and it has cost the
+proprietors about six times as much, and is not yet effective; nor
+can any man rationally predict when it will be. I know since you left
+it your son undertook it, and this winter shamefully left his
+undertaking." Yarrantons friends immediately replied in a four-page
+folio, entitled 'England's Improvements Justified; and the Author
+thereof, Captain Y., vindicated from the Scandals in a paper called a
+Coffee-house Dialogue; with some Animadversions upon the Popish
+Designs therein contained.' The writer says he writes without the
+privity or sanction of Yarranton, but declares the dialogue to be a
+forgery, and that the alleged conference never took place. "His
+innocence, when he heard of it, only provoked a smile, with this
+answer, Spreta vilescunt, falsehoods mu st perish, and are soonest
+destroyed by contempt; so that he needs no further vindication. The
+writer then proceeds at some length to vindicate the Captain's famous
+work and the propositions contained in it.
+ ...]
+
+In 1681 he published the second part of 'England's Improvement,'*
+ [footnote...
+This work (especially with the plates) is excessively rare. There is
+a copy of it in perfect condition in the Grenville Library, British
+Museum.
+ ...]
+in which he gave a summary account of its then limited growths and
+manufactures, pointing out that England and Ireland were the only
+northern kingdoms remaining unimproved; he re-urged the benefits and
+necessity of a voluntary register of real property; pointed out a
+method of improving the Royal Navy, lessening the growing power of
+France, and establishing home fisheries; proposed the securing and
+fortifying of Tangier; described a plan for preventing fires in
+London, and reducing the charge for maintaining the Trained Bands;
+urged the formation of a harbour at Newhaven in Sussex; and, finally,
+discoursed at considerable length upon the tin, iron, linen, and
+woollen trades, setting forth various methods for their improvement.
+In this last section, after referring to the depression in the
+domestic tin trade (Cornish tin selling so low as 70s. the cwt.), he
+suggested a way of reviving it. With the Cornish tin he would combine
+"the Roman cinders and iron-stone in the Forest of Dean, which makes
+the best iron for most uses in the world, and works up to the best
+advantage, with delight and pleasure to the workmen." He then
+described the history of his own efforts to import the manufacture of
+tin-plates into England some sixteen years before, in which he had
+been thwarted by Chamberlaine's patent, as above described,--and
+offered sundry queries as to the utility of patents generally, which,
+says he, "have the tendency to drive trade out of the kingdom."
+Appended to the chapter on Tin is an exceedingly amusing dialogue
+between a tin-miner of Cornwall, an iron-miner of Dean Forest, and a
+traveller (himself). From this we gather that Yarranton's business
+continued to be that of an iron-manufacturer at his works at Ashley
+near Bewdley. Thus the iron-miner says, "About 28 years since Mr.
+Yarranton found out a vast quantity of Roman cinders, near the walls
+of the city of Worcester, from whence he and others carried away many
+thousand tons or loads up the river Severn, unto their iron-furnaces,
+to be melted down into iron, with a mixture of the Forest of Dean
+iron-stone; and within 100 yards of the walls of the city of
+Worcester there was dug up one of the hearths of the Roman
+foot-blasts, it being then firm and in order, and was 7 foot deep in
+the earth; and by the side of the work there was found a pot of Roman
+coin to the quantity of a peck, some of which was presented to Sir
+[Wm.] Dugdale, and part thereof is now in the King's Closet."*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. Nash, in his History of Worcestershire, has thrown some doubts
+upon this story; but Mr. Green, in his Historical Antiquities of the
+city, has made a most able defence of Yarranton's statement (vol.i.
+9, in foot-note).
+ ...]
+
+In the same year (1681) in which the second part of 'England's
+Improvement' appeared, Yarranton proceeded to Dunkirk for the purpose
+of making a personal survey of that port, then belonging to England;
+and on his return he published a map of the town, harbour, and castle
+on the sea, with accompanying letterpress, in which he recommended,
+for the safety of British trade, the demolition of the fortifications
+of Dunkirk before they were completed, which he held would only be
+for the purpose of their being garrisoned by the French king. His
+'Full Discovery of the First Presbyterian Sham Plot' was published in
+the same year; and from that time nothing further is known of Andrew
+Yarranton. His name and his writings have been alike nearly
+forgotten; and, though Bishop Watson declared of him that he deserved
+to have a statue erected to his memory as a great public benefactor,
+we do not know that he was so much as honoured with a tombstone; for
+we have been unable, after careful inquiry, to discover when and
+where he died.
+
+Yarranton was a man whose views were far in advance of his age. The
+generation for whom he laboured and wrote were not ripe for their
+reception and realization; and his voice sounded among the people
+like that of one crying in the wilderness. But though his
+exhortations to industry and his large plans of national improvement
+failed to work themselves into realities in his own time, he broke
+the ground, he sowed the seed, and it may be that even at this day we
+are in some degree reaping the results of his labours. At all events,
+his books still live to show how wise and sagacious Andrew Yarranton
+was beyond his contemporaries as to the true methods of establishing
+upon solid foundations the industrial prosperity of England.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+COALBROOKDALE IRON WORKS--THE DARBYS AND REYNOLDSES.
+
+"The triumph of the industrial arts will advance the cause of
+civilization more rapidly than its warmest advocates could have
+hoped, and contribute to the permanent prosperity and strength of the
+country far move than the most splendid victories of successful
+war.--C. BABBAGE, The Exposition of 1851.
+
+
+Dud Dudley's invention of smelting iron with coke made of pit-coal
+was, like many others, born before its time. It was neither
+appreciated by the iron-masters nor by the workmen. All schemes for
+smelting ore with any other fuel than charcoal made from wood were
+regarded with incredulity. As for Dudley's Metallum Martis, as it
+contained no specification, it revealed no secret; and when its
+author died, his secret, whatever it might be, died with him. Other
+improvements were doubtless necessary before the invention could be
+turned to useful account. Thus, until a more powerful blowing-furace
+had been contrived, the production of pit-coal iron must necessarily
+have been limited. Dudley himself does not seem to have been able to
+make more on an average than five tons a-week, and seven tons at the
+outside. Nor was the iron so good as that made by charcoal; for it is
+admitted to have been especially liable to deterioration by the
+sulphureous fumes of the coal in the process of manufacture.
+
+Dr. Plot, in his 'History of Staffordshire,' speaks of an experiment
+made by one Dr. Blewstone, a High German, as "the last effort" made
+in that county to smelt iron-ore with pit-coal. He is said to have
+"built his furnace at Wednesbury, so ingeniously contrived (that only
+the flame of the coal should come to the ore, with several other
+conveniences), that many were of opinion he would succeed in it. But
+experience, that great baffler of speculation, showed it would not
+be; the sulphureous vitriolic steams that issue from the pyrites,
+which frequently, if not always, accompanies pit-coal, ascending with
+the flame, and poisoning the ore sufficiently to make it render much
+worse iron than that made with charcoal, though not perhaps so much
+worse as the body of the coal itself would possibly do."*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. PLOT, Natural History of Staffordshire, 2nd ed. 1686, p. 128.
+ ...]
+Dr. Plot does not give the year in which this "last effort" was made;
+but as we find that one Dr. Frederic de Blewston obtained a patent
+from Charles II. on the 25th October, 1677, for "a new and effectual
+way of melting down, forging, extracting, and reducing of iron and
+all metals and minerals with pit-coal and sea-coal, as well and
+effectually as ever hath yet been done by charcoal, and with much
+less charge;" and as Dr. Plot's History, in which he makes mention
+of the experiment and its failure, was published in 1686, it is
+obvious that the trial must have been made between those years.
+
+As the demand for iron steadily increased with the increasing
+population of the country, and as the supply of timber for smelting
+purposes was diminishing from year to year, England was compelled to
+rely more and more upon foreign countries for its supply of
+manufactured iron. The number of English forges rapidly dwindled, and
+the amount of the home production became insignificant in comparison
+with what was imported from abroad. Yarranton, writing in 1676,
+speaks of "the many iron-works laid down in Kent, Sussex, Surrey, and
+in the north of England, because the iron of Sweadland, Flanders, and
+Spain, coming in so cheap, it cannot be made to profit here." There
+were many persons, indeed, who held that it was better we should be
+supplied with iron from Spain than make it at home, in consequence of
+the great waste of wood involved by the manufacture; but against this
+view Yarranton strongly contended, and held, what is as true now as
+it was then, that the manufacture of iron was the keystone of
+England's industrial prosperity. He also apprehended great danger to
+the country from want of iron in event of the contingency of a
+foreign war. "When the greatest part of the iron-works are asleep,"
+said he, "if there should be occasion for great quantities of guns
+and bullets, and other sorts of iron commodities, for a present
+unexpected war, and the Sound happen to be locked up, and so prevent
+iron coming to us, truly we should then be in a fine case!"
+
+Notwithstanding these apprehended national perils arising from the
+want of iron, no steps seem to have been taken to supply the
+deficiency, either by planting woods on a large scale, as recommended
+by Yarranton, or by other methods; and the produce of English iron
+continued steadily to decline. In 1720-30 there were found only ten
+furnaces remaining in blast in the whole Forest of Dean, where the
+iron-smelters were satisfied with working up merely the cinders left
+by the Romans. A writer of the time states that we then bought
+between two and three hundred thousand pounds' worth of foreign iron
+yearly, and that England was the best customer in Europe for Swedish
+and Russian iron.*
+ [footnote...
+JOSHUA GEE, The Trade and Navigation of Great Britain considered,
+1731.
+ ...]
+By the middle of the eighteenth century the home manufacture had so
+much fallen off, that the total production of Great Britain is
+supposed to have amounted to not more than 18,000 tons a year;
+four-fifths of the iron used in the country being imported from
+Sweden.*
+ [footnote...
+When a bill was introduced into Parliament in 1750 with the object of
+encouraging the importation of iron from our American colonies, the
+Sheffield tanners petitioned against it, on the ground that, if it
+passed, English iron would be undersold; many forges would
+consequently be discontinued; in which case the timber used for fuel
+would remain uncut, and the tanners would thereby be deprived of bark
+for the purposes of their trade!
+ ...]
+
+The more that the remaining ironmasters became straitened for want of
+wood, the more they were compelled to resort to cinders and coke made
+from coal as a substitute. And it was found that under certain
+circumstances this fuel answered the purpose almost as well as
+charcoal of wood. The coke was made by burning the coal in heaps in
+the open air, and it was usually mixed with coal and peat in the
+process of smelting the ore. Coal by itself was used by the country
+smiths for forging whenever they could procure it for their smithy
+fires; and in the midland counties they had it brought to them,
+sometimes from great distances, slung in bags across horses'
+backs,--for the state of the roads was then so execrable as not to
+admit of its being led for any considerable distance in carts. At
+length we arrive at a period when coal seems to have come into
+general use, and when necessity led to its regular employment both in
+smelting the ore and in manufacturing the metal. And this brings us
+to the establishment of the Coalbrookdale works, where the smelting
+of iron by means of coke and coal was first adopted on a large scale
+as the regular method of manufacture.
+
+Abraham Darby, the first of a succession of iron manufacturers who
+bore the same name, was the son of a farmer residing at Wrensnest,
+near Dudley. He served an apprenticeship to a maker of malt-kilns
+near Birmingham, after which he married and removed to Bristol in
+1700, to begin business on his own account. Industry is of all
+politics and religions: thus Dudley was a Royalist and a Churchman,
+Yarranton was a Parliamentarian and a Presbyterian, and Abraham Darby
+was a Quaker. At Bristol he was joined by three partners of the same
+persuasion, who provided the necessary capital to enable him to set
+up works at Baptist Mills, near that city, where he carried on the
+business of malt-mill making, to which he afterwards added brass and
+iron founding.
+
+At that period cast-iron pots were in very general use, forming the
+principal cooking utensils of the working class. The art of casting
+had, however, made such small progress in England that the pots were
+for the most part imported from abroad. Darby resolved, if possible,
+to enter upon this lucrative branch of manufacture; and he proceeded
+to make a number of experiments in pot-making. Like others who had
+preceded him, he made his first moulds of clay; but they cracked and
+burst, and one trial failed after another. He then determined to find
+out the true method of manufacturing the pots, by travelling into the
+country from whence the best were imported, in order to master the
+grand secret of the trade. With this object he went over to Holland
+in the year 1706, and after diligent inquiry he ascertained that the
+only sure method of casting "Hilton ware," as such castings were then
+called, was in moulds of fine dry sand. This was the whole secret.
+
+Returning to Bristol, accompanied by some skilled Dutch workmen,
+Darby began the new manufacture, and succeeded to his satisfaction.
+The work was at first carried on with great secrecy, lest other
+makers should copy the art; and the precaution was taken of stopping
+the keyhole of the workshop-door while the casting was in progress.
+To secure himself against piracy, he proceeded to take out a patent
+for the process in the year 1708, and it was granted for the term of
+fourteen years. The recital of the patent is curious, as showing the
+backward state of English iron-founding at that time. It sets forth
+that "whereas our trusty and well-beloved Abraham Darby, of our city
+of Bristol, smith, hath by his petition humbly represented to us,
+that by his study, industry, and expense, he hath found out and
+brought to perfection a new way of casting iron bellied pots and
+other iron bellied ware in sand only, without loam or clay, by which
+such iron pots and other ware may be cast fine and with more ease and
+expedition, and may be afforded cheaper than they can be by the way
+commonly used; and in regard to their cheapness may be of great
+advantage to the poor of this our kingdom, who for the most part use
+such ware, and in all probability will prevent the merchants of
+England going to foreign markets for such ware, from whence great
+quantities are imported, and likewise may in time supply other
+markets with that manufacture of our dominions," &c..... grants the
+said Abraham Darby the full power and sole privilege to make and sell
+such pots and ware for and during the term of fourteen years thence
+ensuing."
+
+Darby proceeded to make arrangements for carrying on the manufacture
+upon a large scale at the Baptist Mills; but the other partners
+hesitated to embark more capital in the concern, and at length
+refused their concurrence. Determined not to be baulked in his
+enterprise, Darby abandoned the Bristol firm; and in the year 1709 he
+removed to Coalbrookdale in Shropshire, with the intention of
+prosecuting the enterprise on his own account. He took the lease of a
+little furnace which had existed at the place for more than a
+century, as the records exist of a "smethe" or "smeth-house" at
+Coalbrookdale in the time of the Tudors. The woods of oak and hazel
+which at that time filled the beautiful dingles of the dale, and
+spread in almost a continuous forest to the base of the Wrekin,
+furnished abundant fuel for the smithery. As the trade of the
+Coalbrookdale firm extended, these woods became cleared, until the
+same scarcity of fuel began to be experienced that had already
+desolated the forests of Sussex, and brought the manufacture of iron
+in that quarter to a stand-still.
+
+It appears from the 'Blast Furnace Memorandum Book' of Abraham Darby,
+which we have examined, that the make of iron at the Coalbrookdale
+foundry, in 1713, varied from five to ten tons a week. The principal
+articles cast were pots, kettles, and other "hollow ware," direct
+from the smelting-furnace; the rest of the metal was run into pigs.
+In course of time we find that other castings were turned out: a few
+grates, smoothing-irons, door-frames, weights, baking-plates,
+cart-bushes, iron pestles and mortars, and occasionally a tailor's
+goose. The trade gradually increased, until we find as many as 150
+pots and kettles cast in a week.
+
+The fuel used in the furnaces appears, from the Darby
+Memorandum-Book, to have been at first entirely charcoal; but the
+growing scarcity of wood seems to have gradually led to the use of
+coke, brays or small coke, and peat. An abundance of coals existed in
+the neighbourhood: by rejecting those of inferior quality, and coking
+the others with great care, a combustible was obtained better fitted
+even than charcoal itself for the fusion of that particular kind of
+ore which is found in the coal-measures. Thus we find Darby's most
+favourite charge for his furnaces to have been five baskets of coke,
+two of brays, and one of peat; next followed the ore, and then the
+limestone. The use of charcoal was gradually given up as the art of
+smelting with coke and brays improved, most probably aided by the
+increased power of the furnace-blast, until at length we find it
+entirely discontinued.
+
+The castings of Coalbrookdale gradually acquired a reputation, and
+the trade of Abraham Darby continued to increase until the date of
+his death, which occurred at Madeley Court in 1717. His sons were too
+young at the time to carry on the business which he had so
+successfully started, and several portions of the works were sold at
+a serious sacrifice. But when the sons had grown up to manhood, they
+too entered upon the business of iron-founding; and Abraham Darby's
+son and grandson, both of the same name, largely extended the
+operations of the firm, until Coalbrookdale, or, as it was popularly
+called, "Bedlam," became the principal seat of one of the most
+important branches of the iron trade.
+
+There seems to be some doubt as to the precise time when pit-coal was
+first regularly employed at Coalbrookdale in smelting the ore. Mr.
+Scrivenor says, "pit-coal was first used by Mr. Abraham Darby, in his
+furnace at Coalbrookdale, in 1713;"*
+ [footnote...
+History of the Iron Trade, p. 56.
+ ...]
+but we can find no confirmation of this statement in the records of
+the Company. It is probable that Mr. Darby used raw coal, as was done
+in the Forest of Dean at the same time,*
+ [footnote...
+See Mr. Powle's account of the Iron Works in the Forest of Dean
+(1677-8), in the Philosophical Transactions, vol. ii. p. 418, where
+he says, "After they have pounded their ore, their first work is to
+calcine it, which is done in kilns, much after the fashion of
+ordinary lime-kilns, These they fill up to the top with coal and ore,
+stratum super stratum, until it be full; and so setting fire to the
+bottom, they let it burn till the coal be wasted, and then renew the
+kilns with fresh ore and coal, in the same manner as before. This is
+done without fusion of the metal, and serves to consume the more
+drossy parts of the ore and to make it friable." The writer then
+describes the process of smelting the ore mixed with cinder in the
+furnaces, where, he says, the fuel is "always of charcoal." "Several
+attempts," he adds, "have been made to introduce the use of sea-coal
+in these works instead of charcoal, the former being to be had at an
+easier rate than the latter; but hitherto they have proved
+ineffectual, the workmen finding by experience that a sea-coal fire,
+how vehement soever, will not penetrate the most fixed parts of the
+ore, and so leaves much of the metal unmelted"
+ ...]
+in the process of calcining the ore; but it would appear from his own
+Memoranda that coke only was used in the process of smelting. We
+infer from other circumstances that pit-coal was not employed for the
+latter purpose until a considerably later period. The merit of its
+introduction, and its successful use in iron-smelting, is due to Mr.
+Richard Ford, who had married a daughter of Abraham Darby, and
+managed the Coalbrookdale works in 1747. In a paper by the Rev. Mr.
+Mason, Woodwardian Professor at Cambridge, given in the
+'Philosophical Transactions' for that year,*
+ [footnote...
+Phil. Trans. vol. xliv. 305.
+ ...]
+the first account of its successful
+employment is stated as follows: -- "Several attempts have been made
+to run iron-ore with pit-coal: he (Mr.Mason) thinks it has not
+succeeded anywhere, as we have had no account of its being practised;
+but Mr. Ford, of Coalbrookdale in Shropshire, from iron-ore and coal,
+both got in the same dale, makes iron brittle or tough as he pleases,
+there being cannon thus cast so soft as to bear turning like
+wrought-iron." Most probably, however, it was not until the time of
+Richard Reynolds, who succeeded Abraham Darby the second in the
+management of the works in 1757, that pit-coal came into large and
+regular use in the blasting-furnaces as well as the fineries of
+Coalbrookdale.
+
+Richard Reynolds was born at Bristol in 1735. His parents, like the
+Darbys, belonged to the Society of Friends, and he was educated in
+that persuasion. Being a spirited, lively youth, the "old Adam"
+occasionally cropped out in him; and he is even said, when a young
+man, to have been so much fired by the heroism of the soldier's
+character that he felt a strong desire to embrace a military career;
+but this feeling soon died out, and he dropped into the sober and
+steady rut of the Society. After serving an apprenticeship in his
+native town, he was sent to Coalbrookdale on a mission of business,
+where he became acquainted with the Darby family, and shortly after
+married Hannah, the daughter of Abraham the second. He then entered
+upon the conduct of the iron and coal works at Ketley and Horsehay,
+where he resided for six years, removing to Coalbrookdale in 1763, to
+take charge of the works there, on the death of his father-in-law.
+
+By the exertions and enterprise of the Darbys, the Coalbrookdale
+Works had become greatly enlarged, giving remunerative employment to
+a large and increasing population. The firm had extended their
+operations far beyond the boundaries of the Dale: they had
+established foundries at London, Bristol, and Liverpool, and agencies
+at Newcastle and Truro for the disposal of steam-engines and other
+iron machinery used in the deep mines of those districts. Watt had
+not yet perfected his steam-engine; but there was a considerable
+demand for pumping-engines of Newcomen's construction, many of which
+were made at the Coalbrookdale Works. The increasing demand for iron
+gave an impetus to coal-mining, which in its turn stimulated
+inventors in their improvement of the power of the steam-engine; for
+the coal could not be worked quickly and advantageously unless the
+pits could be kept clear of water. Thus one invention stimulates
+another; and when the steam-engine had been perfected by Watt, and
+enabled powerful-blowing apparatus to be worked by its agency, we
+shall find that the production of iron by means of pit-coal being
+rendered cheap and expeditious, soon became enormously increased.
+
+We are informed that it was while Richard Reynolds had charge of the
+Coalbrookdale works that a further important improvement was effected
+in the manufacture of iron by pit-coal. Up to this time the
+conversion of crude or cast iron into malleable or bar iron had been
+effected entirely by means of charcoal. The process was carried on in
+a fire called a finery, somewhat like that of a smith's forge; the
+iron being exposed to the blast of powerful bellows, and in constant
+contact with the fuel. In the first process of fusing the ironstone,
+coal had been used for some time with increasing success; but the
+question arose, whether coal might not also be used with effect in
+the second or refining stage. Two of the foremen, named Cranege,
+suggested to Mr. Reynolds that this might be performed in what is
+called a reverberatory furnace,*
+ [footnote...
+Reverberatory, so called because the flame or current of heated gases
+from the fuel is caused to be reverberated or reflected down upon the
+substance under operation before passing into the chimney. It is
+curious that Rovenson, in his Treatise of Metallica of 1613,
+describes a reverberatory furnace in which iron was to be smelted by
+pit-coal, though it does not appear that he succeeded in perfecting
+his invention. Dr. Percy, in his excellent work on Metallurgy, thus
+describes a reverberatory furnace: -- "It consists essentially of
+three parts--a fireplace at one end, a stack or chimney at the other,
+and a bed between both on which the matter is heated. The fireplace
+is separated from the bed by a low partition wall called the
+fire-bridge, and both are covered by an arched roof which rises from
+the end wall of the fireplace and gradually dips toward the furthest
+end of the bed connected with the stack. On one or both sides of the
+bed, or at the end near the stack, may be openings through which the
+ore spread over the surface of the bed may be stirred about and
+exposed to the action of the air. The matter is heated in such a
+furnace by flame, and is kept from contact with the solid fuel. The
+flame in its course from the fireplace to the stack is reflected
+downwards or REVERBERATED on the matter beneath, whence the name
+REVERBERATORY furnace."
+ ...]
+in which the iron should not mix with the coal, but be heated solely
+by the flame. Mr. Reynolds greatly doubted the feasibility of the
+operation, but he authorized the Cranege, to make an experiment of
+their process, the result of which will be found described in the
+following extract of a letter from Mr. Reynolds to Mr. Thomas Goldney
+of Bristol, dated "Coalbrookdale, 25th April, 1766 ": --
+
+.... "I come now to what I think a matter of very great consequence.
+It is some time since Thos. Cranege, who works at Bridgenorth Forge,
+and his brother George, of the Dale, spoke to me about a notion they
+had conceived of making bar iron without wood charcoal. I told them,
+consistent with the notion I had adopted in common with all others I
+had conversed with, that I thought it impossible, because the
+vegetable salts in the charcoal being an alkali acted as an absorbent
+to the sulphur of the iron, which occasions the red-short quality of
+the iron, and pit coal abounding with sulphur would increase it. This
+specious answer, which would probably have appeared conclusive to
+most, and which indeed was what I really thought, was not so to them.
+They replied that from the observations they had made, and repeated
+conversations together, they were both firmly of opinion that the
+alteration from the quality of pig iron into that of bar iron was
+effected merely by heat, and if I would give them leave, they would
+make a trial some day. I consented, but, I confess, without any great
+expectation of their success; and so the matter rested some weeks,
+when it happening that some repairs had to be done at Bridgenorth,
+Thomas came up to the Dale, and, with his brother, made a trial in
+Thos. Tilly's air-furnace with such success as I thought would
+justify the erection of a small air-furnace at the Forge for the more
+perfectly ascertaining the merit of the invention. This was
+accordingly done, and a trial of it has been made this week, and the
+success has surpassed the most sanguine expectations. The iron put
+into the furnace was old Bushes, which thou knowest are always made
+of hard iron, and the iron drawn out is the toughest I ever saw. A
+bar 1 1/4 inch square, when broke, appears to have very little cold
+short in it. I look upon it as one of the most important discoveries
+ever made, and take the liberty of recommending thee and earnestly
+requesting thou wouldst take out a patent for it immediately.... The
+specification of the invention will be comprised in a few words, as
+it will only set forth that a reverberatory furnace being built of a
+proper construction, the pig or cast iron is put into it, and without
+the addition of anything else than common raw pit coal, is converted
+into good malleable iron, and, being taken red-hot from the
+reverberatory furnace to the forge hammer, is drawn out into bars of
+various shapes and sizes, according to the will of the workmen."
+
+Mr. Reynolds's advice was implicitly followed. A patent was secured
+in the name of the brothers Cranege, dated the 17th June, 1766; and
+the identical words in the above letter were adopted in the
+specification as descriptive of the process. By this method of
+puddling, as it is termed, the manufacturer was thenceforward enabled
+to produce iron in increased quantity at a large reduction in price;
+and though the invention of the Craneges was greatly improved upon by
+Onions, and subsequently by Cort, there can be no doubt as to the
+originality and the importance of their invention. Mr. Tylor states
+that he was informed by the son of Richard Reynolds that the wrought
+iron made at Coalbrookdale by the Cranege process "was very good,
+quite tough, and broke with a long, bright, fibrous fracture: that
+made by Cort afterwards was quite different."*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. TYLOR on Metal Work--Reports on the Paris Exhibition of 1855.
+Part II. 182. We are informed by Mr. Reynolds of Coed-du, a grandson
+of Richard Reynolds, that "on further trials many difficulties arose.
+The bottoms of the furnaces were destroyed by the heat, and the
+quality of the iron varied. Still, by a letter dated May, 1767, it
+appears there had been sold of iron made in the new way to the value
+of 247L. 14s. 6d."
+ ...]
+Though Mr. Reynolds's generosity to the Craneges is apparent; in the
+course which he adopted in securing for them a patent for the
+invention in their own names, it does not appear to have proved of
+much advantage to them; and they failed to rise above the rank which
+they occupied when their valuable discovery was patented. This,
+however, was no fault of Richard Reynolds, but was mainly
+attributable to the circumstance of other inventions in a great
+measure superseding their process, and depriving them of the benefits
+of their ingenuity.
+
+Among the important improvements introduced by Mr. Reynolds while
+managing the Coalbrookdale Works, was the adoption by him for the
+first time of iron instead of wooden rails in the tram-roads along
+which coal and iron were conveyed from one part of the works to
+another, as well as to the loading-places along the river Severn. He
+observed that the wooden rails soon became decayed, besides being
+liable to be broken by the heavy loads passing over them, occasioning
+much loss of time, interruption to business, and heavy expenses in
+repairs. It occurred to him that these inconveniences would be
+obviated by the use of rails of cast-iron; and, having tried an
+experiment with them, it answered so well, that in 1767 the whole of
+the wooden rails were taken up and replaced by rails of iron. Thus
+was the era of iron railroads fairly initiated at Coalbrookdale, and
+the example of Mr. Reynolds was shortly after followed on all the
+tramroads throughout the Country.
+
+It is also worthy of note that the first iron bridge ever erected was
+cast and made at the Coalbrookdale Works--its projection as well as
+its erection being mainly due to the skill and enterprise of Abraham
+Darby the third. When but a young man, he showed indications of that
+sagacity and energy in business which seemed to be hereditary in his
+family. One of the first things he did on arriving at man's estate
+was to set on foot a scheme for throwing a bridge across the Severn
+at Coalbrookdale, at a point where the banks were steep and slippery,
+to accommodate the large population which had sprung up along both
+banks of the river. There were now thriving iron, brick, and pottery
+works established in the parishes of Madeley and Broseley; and the
+old ferry on the Severn was found altogether inadequate for ready
+communication between one bank and the other. The want of a bridge
+had long been felt, and a plan of one had been prepared during the
+life time of Abraham Darby the second; but the project was suspended
+at his death. When his son came of age, he resolved to take up his
+father's dropped scheme, and prosecute it to completion, which he
+did. Young Mr. Darby became lord of the manor of Madeley in 1776, and
+was the owner of one-half of the ferry in right of his lordship. He
+was so fortunate as to find the owner of the other or Broseley half
+of the ferry equally anxious with himself to connect the two banks of
+the river by means of a bridge. The necessary powers were accordingly
+obtained from Parliament, and a bridge was authorized to be built "of
+cast-iron, stone, brick, or timber." A company was formed for the
+purpose of carrying out the project, and the shares were taken by the
+adjoining owners, Abraham Darby being the principal subscriber.*
+ [footnote...
+Among the other subscribers were the Rev. Mr. Harris, Mr. Jennings,
+and Mr. John Wilkinson, an active promoter of the scheme, who gave
+the company the benefit of his skill and experience when it was
+determined to construct the bridge of iron. For an account of John
+Wilkinson see Lives of the Engineers, vol. ii. 337, 356. In the
+description of the first iron bridge given in that work we have, it
+appears, attributed rather more credit to Mr. Wilkinson than he is
+entitled to. Mr. Darby was the most active promoter of the scheme,
+and had the principal share in the design. Wilkinson nevertheless was
+a man of great energy and originality. Besides being the builder of
+the first iron ship, he was the first to invent, for James Watt, a
+machine that would bore a tolerably true cylinder. He afterwards
+established iron works in France, and Arthur Young says, that "until
+that well-known English manufacturer arrived, the French knew nothing
+of the art of casting cannon solid and then boring them" (Travels in
+France, 4to. ed. London, 1792, p.90). Yet England had borrowed her
+first cannon-maker from France in the person of Peter Baude, as
+described in chap. iii. Wilkinson is also said to have invented a
+kind of hot-blast, in respect of which various witnesses gave
+evidence on the trial of Neilson's patent in 1839; but the invention
+does not appear to have been perfected by him.
+ ...]
+
+The construction of a bridge of iron was an entirely new idea. An
+attempt had indeed been made at Lyons, in France, to construct such a
+bridge more than twenty years before; but it had entirely failed, and
+a bridge of timber was erected instead. It is not known whether the
+Coalbrookdale masters had heard of that attempt; but, even if they
+had, it could have been of no practical use to them.
+
+Mr. Pritchard, an architect of Shrewsbury, was first employed to
+prepare a design of the intended structure, which is still preserved.
+Although Mr. Pritchard proposed to introduce cast-iron in the arch of
+the bridge, which was to be of 120 feet span, it was only as a sort
+of key, occupying but a few feet at the crown of the arch. This
+sparing use of cast iron indicates the timidity of the architect in
+dealing with the new material--his plan exhibiting a desire to effect
+a compromise between the tried and the untried in
+bridge-construction. But the use of iron to so limited an extent, and
+in such a part of the structure, was of more than questionable
+utility; and if Mr. Pritchard's plan had been adopted, the problem of
+the iron bridge would still have remained unsolved.
+
+The plan, however, after having been duly considered, was eventually
+set aside, and another, with the entire arch of cast-iron, was
+prepared under the superintendence of Abraham Darby, by Mr. Thomas
+Gregory, his foreman of pattem-makers. This plan was adopted, and
+arrangements were forthwith made for carrying it into effect. The
+abutments of the bridge were built in 1777-8, during which the
+castings were made at the foundry, and the ironwork was successfully
+erected in the course of three months. The bridge was opened for
+traffic in 1779, and proved a most serviceable structure. In 1788 the
+Society of Arts recognised Mr. Darby's merit as its designer and
+erector by presenting him with their gold medal; and the model of the
+bridge is still to be seen in the collection of the Society. 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."*
+ [footnote...
+Encyclopaedia Britannica, 8th ed. Art. "Iron Bridges."
+ ...]
+Mr. Stephenson adds that from a defect in the construction the
+abutments were thrust inwards at the approaches and the ribs
+partially fractured. We are, however, informed that this is a
+mistake, though it does appear that the apprehension at one time
+existed that such an accident might possibly occur.
+
+To remedy the supposed defect, two small land arches were, in the
+year 1800, substituted for the stone approach on the Broseley side of
+the bridge. While the work was in progress, Mr. Telford, the
+well-known engineer, carefully examined the bridge, and thus spoke of
+its condition at the time: -- "The great improvement of erecting upon
+a navigable river a bridge of cast-iron of one arch only was first
+put in practice near Coalbrookdale. The bridge was executed in 1777
+by Mr. Abraham Darby, and the ironwork is now quite as perfect as
+when it was first put up. Drawings of this bridge have long been
+before the public, and have been much and justly admired."*
+ [footnote...
+PLYMLEY, General View of the Agriculture of Shropshire.
+ ...]
+A Coalbrookdale correspondent, writing in May, 1862, informs us that
+"at the present time the bridge is undergoing repair; and, special
+examination having been made, there is no appearance either that the
+abutments have moved, or that the ribs have been broken in the centre
+or are out of their proper right line. There has, it is true, been a
+strain on the land arches, and on the roadway plates, which, however,
+the main arch has been able effectually to resist."
+
+The bridge has now been in profitable daily use for upwards of eighty
+years, and has during that time proved of the greatest convenience to
+the population of the district. So judicious was the selection of its
+site, and so great its utility, that a thriving town of the name of
+Ironbridge has grown up around it upon what, at the time of its
+erection, was a nameless part of "the waste of the manor of Madeley."
+And it is probable that the bridge will last for centuries to come.
+Thus, also, was the use of iron as an important material in
+bridge-building fairly initiated at Coalbrookdale by Abraham Darby,
+as the use of iron rails was by Richard Reynolds. We need scarcely
+add that since the invention and extensive adoption of railway
+locomotion, the employment of iron in various forms in railway and
+bridge structures has rapidly increased, until iron has come to be
+regarded as the very sheet-anchor of the railway engineer.
+
+In the mean time the works at Coalbrookdale had become largely
+extended. In 1784, when the government of the day proposed to levy a
+tax on pit-coal, Richard Reynolds strongly urged upon Mr. Pitt, then
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, as well as on Lord Gower, afterwards
+Marquis of Stafford, the impolicy of such a tax. To the latter he
+represented that large capitals had been invested in the iron trade,
+which was with difficulty carried on in the face of the competition
+with Swedish and Russian iron. At Coalbrookdale, sixteen "fire
+engines," as steam engines were first called, were then at work,
+eight blast-furnaces and nine forges, besides the air furnaces and
+mills at the foundry, which, with the levels, roads, and more than
+twenty miles of iron railways, gave employment to a very large number
+of people. "The advancement of the iron trade within these few
+years," said he, "has been prodigious. It was thought, and justly,
+that the making of pig-iron with pit coal was a great acquisition to
+the country by saving the wood and supplying a material to
+manufactures, the production of which, by the consumption of all the
+wood the country produced, was formerly unequal to the demand, and
+the nail trade, perhaps the most considerable of any one article of
+manufactured iron, would have been lost to this country had it not
+been found practicable to make nails of iron made with pit coal. We
+have now another process to attempt, and that is to make BAR IRON
+with pit coal; and it is for that purpose we have made, or rather are
+making, alterations at Donnington Wood, Ketley, and elsewhere, which
+we expect to complete in the present year, but not at a less expense
+than twenty thousand pounds, which will be lost to us, and gained by
+nobody, if this tax is laid upon our coals." He would not, however,
+have it understood that he sought for any PROTECTION for the homemade
+iron, notwithstanding the lower prices of the foreign article. "From
+its most imperfect state as pig-iron," he observed to Lord Sheffield,
+"to its highest finish in the regulating springs of a watch, we have
+nothing to fear if the importation into each country should be
+permitted without duty." We need scarcely add that the subsequent
+history of the iron trade abundantly justified these sagacious
+anticipations of Richard Reynolds.
+
+He was now far advanced in years. His business had prospered, his
+means were ample, and he sought retirement. He did not desire to
+possess great wealth, which in his opinion entailed such serious
+responsibilities upon its possessor; and he held that the
+accumulation of large property was more to be deprecated than
+desired. He therefore determined to give up his shares in the
+ironworks at Ketley to his sons William and Joseph, who continued to
+carry them on. William was a man of eminent ability, well versed in
+science, and an excellent mechanic. He introduced great improvements
+in the working of the coal and iron mines, employing new machinery
+for the purpose, and availing himself with much ingenuity of the
+discoveries then being made in the science of chemistry. He was also
+an inventor, having been the first to employ (in 1788) inclined
+planes, consisting of parallel railways, to connect and work canals
+of different levels,--an invention erroneously attributed to Fulton,
+but which the latter himself acknowledged to belong to William
+Reynolds. In the first chapter of his 'Treatise on Canal Navigation,'
+published in 1796, Fulton says: -- "As local prejudices opposed the
+Duke of Bridgewater's canal in the first instance, prejudices equally
+strong as firmly adhered to the principle on which it was
+constructed; and it was thought impossible to lead one through a
+country, or to work it to any advantage, unless by locks and boats of
+at least twenty-five tons, till the genius of Mr. William Reynolds,
+of Ketley, in Shropshire, stepped from the accustomed path,
+constructed the first inclined plane, and introduced boats of five
+tons. This, like the Duke's canal, was deemed a visionary project,
+and particularly by his Grace, who was partial to locks; yet this is
+also introduced into practice, and will in many instances supersede
+lock canals." Telford, the engineer, also gracefully acknowledged the
+valuable assistance he received from William Reynolds in planning the
+iron aqueduct by means of which the Ellesmere Canal was carried over
+the Pont Cysylltau, and in executing the necessary castings for the
+purpose at the Ketley foundry.
+
+The future management of his extensive ironworks being thus placed in
+able hands, Richard Reynolds finally left Coalbrookdale in 1804, for
+Bristol, his native town, where he spent the remainder of his life in
+works of charity and mercy. Here we might leave the subject, but
+cannot refrain from adding a few concluding words as to the moral
+characteristics of this truly good man. Though habitually religious,
+he was neither demure nor morose, but cheerful, gay, and humorous. He
+took great interest in the pleasures of the young people about him,
+and exerted himself in all ways to promote their happiness. He was
+fond of books, pictures, poetry, and music, though the indulgence of
+artistic tastes is not thought becoming in the Society to which he
+belonged. His love for the beauties of nature amounted almost to a
+passion, and when living at The Bank, near Ketley, it was his great
+delight in the summer evenings to retire with his pipe to a rural
+seat commanding a full view of the Wrekin, the Ercall Woods, with
+Cader Idris and the Montgomeryshire hills in the distance, and watch
+the sun go down in the west in his glory. Once in every year he
+assembled a large party to spend a day with him on the Wrekin, and
+amongst those invited were the principal clerks in the company's
+employment, together with their families. At Madeley, near
+Coalbrookdale, where he bought a property, he laid out, for the
+express use of the workmen, extensive walks through the woods on
+Lincoln Hill, commanding beautiful views. They were called "The
+Workmen's Walks," and were a source of great enjoyment to them and
+their families, especially on Sunday afternoons.
+
+When Mr. Reynolds went to London on business, he was accustomed to
+make a round of visits, on his way home, to places remarkable for
+their picturesque beauty, such as Stowe, Hagley Park, and the
+Leasowes. After a visit to the latter place in 1767, he thus, in a
+letter to his friend John Maccappen, vindicated his love for the
+beautiful in nature: -- "I think it not only lawful but expedient to
+cultivate a disposition to be pleased with the beauties of nature, by
+frequent indulgences for that purpose. The mind, by being continually
+applied to the consideration of ways and means to gain money,
+contracts an indifferency if not an insensibility to the profusion of
+beauties which the benevolent Creator has impressed upon every part
+of the material creation. A sordid love of gold, the possession of
+what gold can purchase, and the reputation of being rich, have so
+depraved the finer feelings of some men, that they pass through the
+most delightful grove, filled with the melody of nature, or listen to
+the murmurings of the brook in the valley, with as little pleasure
+and with no more of the vernal delight which Milton describes, than
+they feel in passing through some obscure alley in a town."
+
+When in the prime of life, Mr. Reynolds was an excellent rider,
+performing all his journeys on horseback. He used to give a ludicrous
+account of a race he once ran with another youth, each having a lady
+seated on a pillion behind him; Mr. Reynolds reached the goal first,
+but when he looked round he found that he had lost his fair
+companion, who had fallen off in the race! On another occasion he had
+a hard run with Lord Thurlow during a visit paid by the latter to the
+Ketley Iron-Works. Lord Thurlow pulled up his horse first, and
+observed, laughing, "I think, Mr. Reynolds, this is probably the
+first time that ever a Lord Chancellor rode a race with a Quaker!"
+But a stranger rencontre was one which befel Mr. Reynolds on
+Blackheath. Though he declined Government orders for cannon, he seems
+to have had a secret hankering after the "pomp and circumstance" of
+military life. At all event's he was present on Blackheath one day
+when George III. was reviewing some troops. Mr. Reynold's horse, an
+old trooper, no sooner heard the sound of the trumpet than he started
+off at full speed, and made directly for the group of officers before
+whom the troops were defiling. Great was the surprise of the King
+when he saw the Quaker draw up alongside of him, but still greater,
+perhaps, was the confusion of the Quaker at finding himself in such
+company.
+
+During the later years of his life, while living at Bristol, his hand
+was in every good work; and it was often felt where it was not seen.
+For he carefully avoided ostentation, and preferred doing his good in
+secret. He strongly disapproved of making charitable bequests by
+will, which he observed in many cases to have been the foundation of
+enormous abuses, but held it to be the duty of each man to do all the
+possible good that he could during his lifetime. Many were the
+instances of his princely, though at the time unknown, munificence.
+Unwilling to be recognised as the giver of large sums, he employed
+agents to dispense his anonymous benefactions. He thus sent 20,000L.
+to London to be distributed during the distress of 1795. He had four
+almoners constantly employed in Bristol, finding out cases of
+distress, relieving them, and presenting their accounts to him
+weekly, with details of the cases relieved. He searched the debtors'
+prisons, and where, as often happened, deserving but unfortunate men
+were found confined for debt, he paid the claims against them and
+procured their release. Such a man could not fail to be followed with
+blessings and gratitude; but these he sought to direct to the Giver
+of all Good. "My talent," said he to a friend, "is the meanest of all
+talents--a little sordid dust; but as the man in the parable who had
+but one talent was held accountable, I also am accountable for the
+talent that I possess, humble as it is, to the great Lord of all." On
+one occasion the case of a poor orphan boy was submitted to him,
+whose parents, both dying young, had left him destitute, on which Mr.
+Reynolds generously offered to place a sum in the names of trustees
+for his education and maintenance until he could be apprenticed to a
+business. The lady who represented the case was so overpowered by the
+munificence of the act that she burst into tears, and, struggling to
+express her gratitude, concluded with--"and when the dear child is
+old enough, I will teach him to thank his benefactor." "Thou must
+teach him to look higher," interrupted Reynolds: "Do we thank the
+clouds for rain? When the child grows up, teach him to thank Him who
+sendeth both the clouds and the rain." Reynolds himself deplored his
+infirmity of temper, which was by nature hasty; and, as his
+benevolence was known, and appeals were made to him at all times,
+seasonable and unseasonable, he sometimes met them with a sharp word,
+which, however, he had scarcely uttered before he repented of it: and
+he is known to have followed a poor woman to her home and ask
+forgiveness for having spoken hastily in answer to her application
+for help.
+
+This "great good man" died on the l0th of September, 1816, in the
+81st year of his age. At his funeral the poor of Bristol were the
+chief mourners. The children of the benevolent societies which he had
+munificently supported during his lifetime, and some of which he had
+founded, followed his body to the grave. The procession was joined by
+the clergy and ministers of all denominations, and by men of all
+classes and persuasions. And thus was Richard Reynolds laid to his
+rest, leaving behind him a name full of good odour, which will long
+be held in grateful remembrance by the inhabitants of Bristol.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+INVENTION OF CAST STEEL--BENJAMIN HUNTSMAN.
+
+"It may be averred that as certainly as the age of iron superseded
+that of bronze, so will the age of steel reign triumphant over
+iron."-- HENRY BESSEMER.
+
+"Aujourd'hui la revolution que devait amener en Grande-Bretagne la
+memorable decouverte de Benjamin Huntsman est tout a fait
+accomplie, et chaque jour les consequetces sen feront plus vivement
+sentir sur le confinent."--LE PLAY, Sur la Fabricatio n de l' Acier
+en Yorkshire.
+
+
+Iron, besides being used in various forms as bar and cast iron, is
+also used in various forms as bar and cast steel; and it is
+principally because of its many admirable qualities in these latter
+forms that iron maintains its supremacy over all the other metals.
+
+The process of converting iron into steel had long been known among
+the Eastern nations before it was introduced into Europe. The Hindoos
+were especially skilled in the art of making steel, as indeed they
+are to this day; and it is supposed that the tools with which the
+Egyptians covered their obelisks and temples of porphyry and syenite
+with hieroglyphics were made of Indian steel, as probably no other
+metal was capable of executing such work. The art seems to have been
+well known in Germany in the Middle Ages, and the process is on the
+whole very faithfully described by Agricola in his great work on
+Metallurgy.*
+ [footnote...
+AGRICOLA, De Re Metallica. Basle, 1621.
+ ...]
+England then produced very little steel, and was mainly dependent for
+its supply of the article upon the continental makers.
+
+From an early period Sheffield became distinguished for its
+manufacture of iron and steel into various useful articles. We find
+it mentioned in the thirteenth century as a place where the best
+arrowheads were made,--the Earl of Richmond owing his success at the
+battle of Bosworth partly to their superior length, sharpness, and
+finish. The manufactures of the town became of a more pacific
+character in the following centuries, during which knives, tools, and
+implements of husbandry became the leading articles.
+
+Chaucer's reference to the 'Sheffield thwytel' (or case-knife) in his
+Canterbury Tales, written about the end of the fourteenth century,
+shows that the place had then become known for its manufacture of
+knives. In 1575 we find the Earl of Shrewsbury presenting to his
+friend Lord Burleigh "a case of Hallamshire whittells, being such
+fruites as his pore cuntrey affordeth with fame throughout the
+realme." Fuller afterwards speaks of the Sheffield knives as "for
+common use of the country people," and he cites an instance of a
+knave who cozened him out of fourpence for one when it was only worth
+a penny.
+
+In 1600 Sheffield became celebrated for its tobacco-boxes and
+Jew's-harps. The town was as yet of small size and population; for
+when a survey of it was made in 1615 it was found to contain not more
+than 2207 householders, of whom one-third, or 725, were "not able to
+live without the charity of their neighbours: these are all Begging
+poor."*
+ [footnote...
+The Rev. JOSEPH HUNTER, History of Hallamshire.
+ ...]
+It must, however, have continued its manufacture of knives; for we
+find that the knife with which Felton stabbed the Duke of Buckingham
+at Portsmouth in 1628 was traced to Sheffield. The knife was left
+sticking in the duke's body, and when examined was found to bear the
+Sheffield corporation mark. It was ultimately ascertained to have
+been made by one Wild, a cutler, who had sold the knife for tenpence
+to Felton when recruiting in the town. At a still later period, the
+manufacture of clasp or spring knives was introduced into Sheffield
+by Flemish workmen. Harrison says this trade was begun in 1650. The
+clasp-knife was commonly known in the North as a jocteleg. Hence
+Burns, describing the famous article treasured by Captain Grose the
+antiquarian, says that--
+
+ "It was a faulding jocteleq,
+ Or lang-kail gully;"
+
+the word being merely a corruption of Jacques de Liege, a famous
+foreign cutler, whose knives were as well known throughout Europe as
+those of Rogers or Mappin are now. Scythes and sickles formed other
+branches of manufacture introduced by the Flemish artisans, the
+makers of the former principally living in the parish of Norton,
+those of the latter in Eckington.
+
+Many improvements were introduced from time to time in the material
+of which these articles were made. Instead of importing the German
+steel, as it was called, the Sheffield manufacturers began to make it
+themselves, principally from Dannemora iron imported from Sweden. The
+first English manufacturer of the article was one Crowley, a
+Newcastle man; and the Sheffield makers shortly followed his example.
+We may here briefly state that the ordinary method of preparing this
+valuable material of manufactures is by exposing iron bars, placed in
+contact with roughly-granulated charcoal, to an intense heat,--the
+process lasting for about a week, more or less, according to the
+degree of carbonization required. By this means, what is called
+BLISTERED STEEL is produced, and it furnishes the material out of
+which razors, files, knives, swords, and various articles of hardware
+are manufactured. A further process is the manufacture of the metal
+thus treated into SHEAR STEEL, by exposing a fasciculus of the
+blistered steel rods, with sand scattered over them for the purposes
+of a flux, to the heat of a wind-furnace until the whole mass becomes
+of a welding heat, when it is taken from the fire and drawn out under
+a forge-hammer,--the process of welding being repeated, after which
+the steel is reduced to the required sizes. The article called FAGGOT
+steel is made after a somewhat similar process.
+
+But the most valuable form in which steel is now used in the
+manufactures of Sheffield is that of cast-steel, in which iron is
+presented in perhaps its very highest state of perfection. Cast-steel
+consists of iron united to carbon in an elastic state together with a
+small portion of oxygen; whereas crude or pig iron consists of iron
+combined with carbon in a material state.*
+ [footnote...
+MUSHET, Papers On Iron and Steel.
+ ...]
+chief merits of cast-steel consist in its possessing great cohesion
+and closeness of grain, with an astonishing degree of tenacity and
+flexibility,-- qualities which render it of the highest value in all
+kinds of tools and instruments where durability, polish, and fineness
+of edge are essential requisites. It is to this material that we are
+mainly indebted for the exquisite cutting instrument of the surgeon,
+the chisel of the sculptor, the steel plate on which the engraver
+practises his art, the cutting tools employed in the various
+processes of skilled handicraft, down to the common saw or the axe
+used by the backwoodsman in levelling the primeval forest.
+
+The invention of cast-steel is due to Benjamin Huntsman, of
+Attercliffe, near Sheffield. M. Le Play, Professor of Metallurgy in
+the Royal School of Mines of France, after making careful inquiry and
+weighing all the evidence on the subject, arrived at the conclusion
+that the invention fairly belongs to Huntsman. The French professor
+speaks of it as a "memorable discovery," made and applied with
+admirable perseverance; and he claims for its inventor the
+distinguished merit of advancing the steel manufactures of Yorkshire
+to the first rank, and powerfully contributing to the establishment
+on a firm foundation of the industrial and commercial supremacy of
+Great Britain. It is remarkable that a French writer should have been
+among the first to direct public attention to the merits of this
+inventor, and to have first published the few facts known as to his
+history in a French Government Report,--showing the neglect which men
+of this class have heretofore received at home, and the much greater
+esteem in which they are held by scientific foreigners.*
+ [footnote...
+M. Le Play's two elaborate and admirable reports on the manufacture
+of steel, published in the Annales des Mines, vols. iii. and ix., 4th
+series, are unique of their kind, and have as yet no counterpart in
+English literature. They are respectively entitled 'Memoire sur la
+Fabrication de l'Acier en Yorkshire,' and 'Memoire sur le
+Fabrication et le Commerce des Fers a Acier dans le Nord de
+l'Europe.'
+ ...]
+Le Play, in his enthusiastic admiration of the discoverer of so
+potent a metal as cast-steel, paid a visit to Huntsman's grave in
+Atterclifle Churchyard, near Sheffield, and from the inscription on
+his tombstone recites the facts of his birth, his death, and his
+brief history. With the assistance of his descendants, we are now
+enabled to add the following record of the life and labours of this
+remarkable but almost forgotten man.
+
+Benjamin Huntsman was born in Lincolnshire in the year 1704. His
+parents were of German extraction, and had settled in this country
+only a few years previous to his birth. The boy being of an ingenious
+turn, was bred to a mechanical calling; and becoming celebrated for
+his expertness in repairing clocks, he eventually set up in business
+as a clock maker and mender in the town of Doncaster. He also
+undertook various other kinds of metal work, such as the making and
+repairing of locks, smoke-jacks, roasting-jacks, and other articles
+requiring mechanical skill. He was remarkably shrewd, observant,
+thoughtful, and practical; so much so that he came to be regarded as
+the "wise man" of his neighbourhood, and was not only consulted as to
+the repairs of machinery, but also of the human frame. He practised
+surgery with dexterity, though after an empirical fashion, and was
+held in especial esteem as an oculist. His success was such that his
+advice was sought in many surgical diseases, and he was always ready
+to give it, but declined receiving any payment in return.
+
+In the exercise of his mechanical calling, he introduced several
+improved tools, but was much hindered by the inferior quality of the
+metal supplied to him, which was common German steel. He also
+experienced considerable difficulty in finding a material suitable
+for the springs and pendulums of his clocks. These circumstances
+induced him to turn his attention to the making of a better kind of
+steel than was then procurable, for the purposes of his trade. His
+first experiments were conducted at Doncaster;*
+ [footnote...
+There are several clocks still in existence in the neighbourhood of
+Doncaster made by Benjamin Huntsman; and there is one in the
+possession of his grandson, with a pendulum made of cast-steel. The
+manufacture of a pendulum of such a material at that early date is
+certainly curious; its still perfect spring and elasticity showing
+the scrupulous care with which it had been made.
+ ...]
+but as fuel was difficult to be had at that place, he determined, for
+greater convenience, to remove to the neighbourhood of Sheffield,
+which he did in 1740. He first settled at Handsworth, a few miles to
+the south of that town, and there pursued his investigations in
+secret. Unfortunately, no records have been preserved of the methods
+which he adopted in overcoming the difficulties he had necessarily to
+encounter. That they must have been great is certain, for the process
+of manufacturing cast-steel of a first-rate quality even at this day
+is of a most elaborate and delicate character, requiring to be
+carefully watched in its various stages. He had not only to discover
+the fuel and flux suitable for his purpose, but to build such a
+furnace and make such a crucible as should sustain a heat more
+intense than any then known in metallurgy. Ingot-moulds had not yet
+been cast, nor were there hoops and wedges made that would hold them
+together, nor, in short, were any of those materials at his disposal
+which are now so familiar at every melting-furnace.
+
+Huntsman's experiments extended over many years before the desired
+result was achieved. Long after his death, the memorials of the
+numerous failures through which he toilsomely worked his way to
+success, were brought to light in the shape of many hundredweights of
+steel, found buried in the earth in different places about his
+manufactory. From the number of these wrecks of early experiments, it
+is clear that he had worked continuously upon his grand idea of
+purifying the raw steel then in use, by melting it with fluxes at an
+intense heat in closed earthen crucibles. The buried masses were
+found in various stages of failure, arising from imperfect melting,
+breaking of crucibles, and bad fluxes; and had been hid away as so
+much spoiled steel of which nothing could be made. At last his
+perseverance was rewarded, and his invention perfected; and though a
+hundred years have passed since Huntsman's discovery, the description
+of fuel (coke) which he first applied for the purpose of melting the
+steel, and the crucibles and furnaces which he used, are for the most
+part similar to those in use at the present day. Although the making
+of cast-steel is conducted with greater economy and dexterity, owing
+to increased experience, it is questionable whether any maker has
+since been able to surpass the quality of Huntsman's manufacture.
+
+The process of making cast-steel, as invented by Benjamin Huntsman,
+may be thus summarily described. The melting is conducted in clay
+pots or crucibles manufactured for the purpose, capable of holding
+about 34 lbs. each. Ten or twelve of such crucibles are placed in a
+melting-furnace similar to that used by brass founders; and when the
+furnace and pots are at a white heat, to which they are raised by a
+coke fire, they are charged with bar steel reduced to a certain
+degree of hardness, and broken into pieces of about a pound each.
+When the pots are all thus charged with steel, lids are placed over
+them, the furnace is filled with coke, and the cover put down. Under
+the intense heat to which the metal is exposed, it undergoes an
+apparent ebullition. When the furnace requires feeding, the workmen
+take the opportunity of lifting the lid of each crucible and judging
+how far the process has advanced. After about three hours' exposure
+to the heat, the metal is ready for "teeming." The completion of the
+melting process is known by the subsidence of all ebullition, and by
+the clear surface of the melted metal, which is of a dazzling
+brilliancy like the sun when looked at with the naked eye on a clear
+day. The pots are then lifted out of their place, and the liquid
+steel is poured into ingots of the shape and size required. The pots
+are replaced, filled again, and the process is repeated; the red-hot
+pots thus serving for three successive charges, after which they are
+rejected as useless.
+
+When Huntsman had perfected his invention, it would naturally occur
+to him that the new metal might be employed for other purposes
+besides clock-springs and pendulums. The business of clock-making was
+then of a very limited character, and it could scarcely have been
+worth his while to pursue so extensive and costly a series of
+experiments merely to supply the requirements of that trade. It is
+more probable that at an early stage of his investigations he
+shrewdly foresaw the extensive uses to which cast-steel might be
+applied in the manufacture of tools and cutlery of a superior kind;
+and we accordingly find him early endeavouring to persuade the
+manufacturers of Sheffield to employ it in the manufacture of knives
+and razors. But the cutlers obstinately refused to work a material so
+much harder than that which they had been accustomed to use; and for
+a time he gave up all hopes of creating a demand in that quarter.
+Foiled in his endeavours to sell his steel at home, Huntsman turned
+his attention to foreign markets; and he soon found he could readily
+sell abroad all that he could make. The merit of employing cast-steel
+for general purposes belongs to the French, always so quick to
+appreciate the advantages of any new discovery, and for a time the
+whole of the cast-steel that Huntsman could manufacture was exported
+to France. When he had fairly established his business with that
+country, the Sheffield cutlers became alarmed at the reputation which
+cast-steel was acquiring abroad; and when they heard of the
+preference displayed by English as well as French consumers for the
+cutlery manufactured of that metal, they readily apprehended the
+serious consequences that must necessarily result to their own trade
+if cast-steel came into general use. They then appointed a deputation
+to wait upon Sir George Savile, one of the members for the county of
+York, and requested him to use his influence with the government to
+obtain an order to prohibit the exportation of cast-steel. But on
+learning from the deputation that the Sheffield manufacturers
+themselves would not make use of the new steel, he positively
+declined to comply with their request. It was indeed fortunate for
+the interests of the town that the object of the deputation was
+defeated, for at that time Mr. Huntsman had very pressing and
+favourable offers from some spirited manufacturers in Birmingham to
+remove his furnaces to that place; and it is extremely probable that
+had the business of cast-steel making become established there, one
+of the most important and lucrative branches of its trade would have
+been lost to the town of Sheffield.
+
+The Sheffield makers were therefore under the necessity of using the
+cast-steel, if they would retain their trade in cutlery against
+France; and Huntsman's home trade rapidly increased. And then began
+the efforts of the Sheffield men to wrest his secret from him. For
+Huntsman had not taken out any patent for his invention, his only
+protection being in preserving his process as much a mystery as
+possible. All the workmen employed by him were pledged to inviolable
+secrecy; strangers were carefully excluded from the works; and the
+whole of the steel made was melted during the night. There were many
+speculations abroad as to Huntsman's process. It was generally
+believed that his secret consisted in the flux which he employed to
+make the metal melt more readily; and it leaked out amongst the
+workmen that he used broken bottles for the purpose. Some of the
+manufacturers, who by prying and bribing got an inkling of the
+process, followed Huntsman implicitly in this respect; and they would
+not allow their own workmen to flux the pots lest they also should
+obtain possession of the secret. But it turned out eventually that no
+such flux was necessary, and the practice has long since been
+discontinued. A Frenchman named Jars, frequently quoted by Le Play in
+his account of the manufacture of steel in Yorkshire,*
+ [footnote...
+Annales des Mines, vols. iii. and ix., 4th Series.
+ ...]
+paid a visit to Sheffield towards the end of last century, and
+described the process so far as he was permitted to examine it.
+According to his statement all kinds of fragments of broken steel
+were used; but this is corrected by Le Play, who states that only the
+best bar steel manufactured of Dannemora iron was employed. Jars adds
+that "the steel is put into the crucible with A FLUX, the composition
+of which is kept secret;" and he states that the time then occupied
+in the conversion was five hours.
+
+It is said that the person who first succeeded in copying Huntsman's
+process was an ironfounder named Walker, who carried on his business
+at Greenside near Sheffield, and it was certainly there that the
+making of cast-steel was next begun. Walker adopted the "ruse" of
+disguising himself as a tramp, and, feigning great distress and
+abject poverty, he appeared shivering at the door of Huntsman's
+foundry late one night when the workmen were about to begin their
+labours at steel-casting, and asked for admission to warm himself by
+the furnace fire. The workmen's hearts were moved, and they permitted
+him to enter. We have the above facts from the descendants of the
+Huntsman family; but we add the traditional story preserved in the
+neighbourhood, as given in a well-known book on metallurgy : --
+
+"One cold winter's night, while the snow was falling in heavy flakes,
+and the manufactory threw its red glared light over the
+neighbourhood, a person of the most abject appearance presented
+himself at the entrance, praying for permission to share the warmth
+and shelter which it afforded. The humane workmen found the appeal
+irresistible, and the apparent beggar was permitted to take up his
+quarters in a warm corner of the building. A careful scrutiny would
+have discovered little real sleep in the drowsiness which seemed to
+overtake the stranger; for he eagerly watched every movement of the
+workmen while they went through the operations of the newly
+discovered process. He observed, first of all, that bars of blistered
+steel were broken into small pieces, two or three inches in length,
+and placed in crucibles of fire clay. When nearly full, a little
+green glass broken into small fragments was spread over the top, and
+the whole covered over with a closely-fitting cover. The crucibles
+were then placed in a furnace previously prepared for them, and after
+a lapse of from three to four hours, during which the crucibles were
+examined from time to time to see that the metal was thoroughly
+melted and incorporated, the workmen proceeded to lift the crucible
+from its place on the furnace by means of tongs, and its molten
+contents, blazing, sparkling, and spurting, were poured into a mould
+of cast-iron previously prepared: here it was suffered to cool, while
+the crucibles were again filled, and the process repeated. When cool,
+the mould was unscrewed, and a bar of cast-steel presented itself,
+which only required the aid of the hammerman to form a finished bar
+of cast-steel. How the unauthorized spectator of these operations
+effected his escape without detection tradition does not say; but it
+tells us that, before many months had passed, the Huntsman
+manufactory was not the only one where cast-steel was produced."*
+ [footnote...
+The Useful Metals and their Alloys (p. 348), an excellent little
+work, in which the process of cast-steel making will be found fully
+described.
+ ...]
+
+However the facts may be, the discovery of the elder Huntsman proved
+of the greatest advantage to Sheffield; for there is scarcely a
+civilized country where Sheffield steel is not largely used, either
+in its most highly finished forms of cutlery, or as the raw material
+for some home manufacture. In the mean time the demand for Huntsman's
+steel steadily increased, and in l770, for the purpose of obtaining
+greater scope for his operations, he removed to a large new
+manufactory which he erected at Attercliffe, a little to the north of
+Sheffield, more conveniently situated for business purposes. There he
+continued to flourish for six years more, making steel and practising
+benevolence; for, like the Darbys and Reynoldses of Coalbrookdale, he
+was a worthy and highly respected member of the Society of Friends.
+He was well versed in the science of his day, and skilled in
+chemistry, which doubtless proved of great advantage to him in
+pursuing his experiments in metallurgy.*
+ [footnote...
+We are informed that a mirror is still preserved at Attercliffe, made
+by Huntsman in the days of his early experiments.
+ ...]
+That he was possessed of great perseverance will be obvious from the
+difficulties he encountered and overcame in perfecting his valuable
+invention. He was, however, like many persons of strong original
+character, eccentric in his habits and reserved in his manner. The
+Royal Society wished to enrol him as a member in acknowledgment of
+the high merit of his discovery of cast-steel, as well as because of
+his skill in practical chemistry; but as this would have drawn him in
+some measure from his seclusion, and was also, as he imagined,
+opposed to the principles of the Society to which he belonged, he
+declined the honour. Mr. Huntsman died in 1776, in his seventy-second
+year, and was buried in the churchyard at Attercliffe, where a
+gravestone with an inscription marks his resting-place.
+
+His son continued to carry on the business, and largely extended its
+operations. The Huntsman mark became known throughout the civilised
+world. Le Play the French Professor of Metallurgy, in his Memoire of
+1846, still speaks of the cast-steel bearing the mark of "Huntsman
+and Marshall" as the best that is made, and he adds, "the buyer of
+this article, who pays a higher price for it than for other sorts, is
+not acting merely in the blind spirit of routine, but pays a logical
+and well-deserved homage to all the material and moral qualities of
+which the true Huntsman mark has been the guarantee for a century."*
+ [footnote...
+Annales des Mines, vol. ix., 4th Series, 266.
+ ...]
+
+Many other large firms now compete for their share of the trade; and
+the extent to which it has grown, the number of furnaces constantly
+at work, and the quantity of steel cast into ingots, to be tilted or
+rolled for the various purposes to which it is applied, have rendered
+Sheffield the greatest laboratory in the world of this valuable
+material. Of the total quantity of cast-steel manufactured in
+England, not less than five-sixths are produced there; and the
+facilities for experiment and adaptation on the spot have enabled the
+Sheffield steel-makers to keep the lead in the manufacture, and
+surpass all others in the perfection to which they have carried this
+important branch of our national industry. It is indeed a remarkable
+fact that this very town, which was formerly indebted to Styria for
+the steel used in its manufactures, now exports a material of its own
+conversion to the Austrian forges and other places on the Continent
+from which it was before accustomed to draw its own supplies.
+
+Among the improved processes invented of late years for the
+manufacture of steel are those of Heath, Mushet, and Bessemer. The
+last promises to effect before long an entire revolution in the iron
+and steel trade. By it the crude metal is converted by one simple
+process, directly as it comes from the blast-furnace. This is
+effected by driving through it, while still in a molten state,
+several streams of atmospheric air, on which the carbon of the crude
+iron unites with the oxygen of the atmosphere, the temperature is
+greatly raised, and a violent ebullition takes place, during which,
+if the process be continued, that part of the carbon which appears to
+be mechanically mixed and diffused through the crude iron is entirely
+consumed. The metal becomes thoroughly cleansed, the slag is ejected
+and removed, while the sulphur and other volatile matters are driven
+off; the result being an ingot of malleable iron of the quality of
+charcoal iron. An important. feature in the process is, that by
+stopping it at a particular stage, immediately following the boil,
+before the whole of the carbon has been abstracted by the oxygen, the
+crude iron will be found to have passed into the condition of
+cast-steel of ordinary quality. By continuing the process, the metal
+losing its carbon, it passes from hard to soft steel, thence to
+steely iron, and last of all to very soft iron; so that by
+interrupting the process at any stage, or continuing it to the end,
+almost any quality of iron and steel may be obtained. One of the most
+valuable forms of the metal is described by Mr. Bessemer as
+"semi-steel," being in hardness about midway between ordinary
+cast-steel and soft malleable iron. The Bessemer processes are now in
+full operation in England as well as abroad, both for converting
+crude into malleable iron, and for producing steel; and the results
+are expected to prove of the greatest practical utility in all cases
+where iron and steel are extensively employed.
+
+Yet, like every other invention, this of Mr. Bessemer had long been
+dreamt of, if not really made. We are informed in Warner's Tour
+through the Northern. Counties of England, published at Bath in l80L,
+that a Mr. Reed of Whitehaven had succeeded at that early period in
+making steel direct from the ore; and Mr. Mushet clearly alludes to
+the process in his "Papers on Iron and Steel." Nevertheless, Mr.
+Bessemer is entitled to the merit of working out the idea, and
+bringing the process to perfection, by his great skill and
+indomitable perseverance. In the Heath process, carburet of manganese
+is employed to aid the conversion of iron into steel, while it also
+confers on the metal the property of welding and working more soundly
+under the hammer--a fact discovered by Mr. Heath while residing in
+India. Mr. Mushet's process is of a similar character. Another
+inventor, Major Uchatius, an Austrian engineer, granulates crude iron
+while in a molten state by pouring it into water, and then subjecting
+it to the process of conversion. Some of the manufacturers still
+affect secrecy in their operations; but as one of the Sanderson
+firm--famous for the excellence of their steel--remarked to a visitor
+when showing him over their works, "the great secret is to have the
+courage to be honest--a spirit to purchase the best material, and the
+means and disposition to do justice to it in the manufacture."
+
+It remains to be added, that much of the success of the Sheffield
+manufactures is attributable to the practical skill of the workmen,
+who have profited by the accumulated experience treasured up by their
+class through many generations. The results of the innumerable
+experiments conducted before their eyes have issued in a most
+valuable though unwritten code of practice, the details of which are
+known only to themselves. They are also a most laborious class; and
+Le Play says of them, when alluding to the fact of a single workman
+superintending the operations of three steel-casting furnaces--"I
+have found nowhere in Europe, except in England, workmen able for an
+entire day, without any interval of rest, to undergo such toilsome
+and exhausting labour as that performed by these Sheffield workmen."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE INVENTIONS OF HENRY CORT.
+
+"I have always found it in mine own experience an easier matter to
+devise manie and profitable inventions, than to dispose of one of
+them to the good of the author himself."--Sir Hugh Platt, 1589.
+
+
+Henry Cort was born in 1740 at Lancaster, where his father carried on
+the trade of a builder and brickmaker. Nothing is known as to Henry's
+early history; but he seems to have raised himself by his own efforts
+to a respectable position. In 1765 we find him established in Surrey
+Street, Strand, carrying on the business of a navy agent, in which he
+is said to have realized considerable profits. It was while
+conducting this business that he became aware of the inferiority of
+British iron compared with that obtained from foreign countries. The
+English wrought iron was considered so bad that it was prohibited
+from all government supplies, while the cast iron was considered of
+too brittle a nature to be suited for general use.*
+ [footnote...
+Life of Brunel, p. 60.
+ ...]
+Indeed the Russian government became so
+persuaded that the English nation could not carry on their
+manufactures without Russian iron, that in 1770 they ordered the
+price to be raised from 70 and 80 copecs per pood to 200 and 220
+copecs per pood.*
+ [footnote...
+SCRIVENOR, History of the Iron Trade, 169.
+ ...]
+
+Such being the case, Cort's attention became directed to the subject
+in connection with the supply of iron to the Navy, and he entered on
+a series of experiments with the object of improving the manufacture
+of English iron. What the particular experiments were, and by what
+steps he arrived at results of so much importance to the British iron
+trade, no one can now tell. All that is known is, that about the year
+1775 he relinquished his business as a navy agent, and took a lease
+of certain premises at Fontley, near Fareham, at the north-western
+corner of Portsmouth Harbour, where he erected a forge and an iron
+mill. He was afterwards joined in partnership by Samuel Jellicoe (son
+of Adam Jellicoe, then Deputy-Paymaster of Seamen's Wages), which
+turned out, as will shortly appear, a most unfortunate connection for
+Cort.
+
+As in the case of other inventions, Cort took up the manufacture of
+iron at the point to which his predecessors had brought it, carrying
+it still further, and improving upon their processes. We may here
+briefly recite the steps by which the manufacture of bar-iron by
+means of pit-coal had up to this time been advanced. In 1747, Mr.
+Ford succeeded at Coalbrookdale in smelting iron ore with pit-coal,
+after which it was refined in the usual way by means of coke and
+charcoal. In 1762, Dr. Roebuck (hereafter to be referred to) took out
+a patent for melting the cast or pig iron in a hearth heated with
+pit-coal by the blast of bellows, and then working the iron until it
+was reduced to nature, or metallized, as it was termed; after which
+it was exposed to the action of a hollow pit-coal fire urged by a
+blast, until it was reduced to a loop and drawn out into bar-iron
+under a common forge-hammer. Then the brothers Cranege, in 1766,
+adopted the reverberatory or air furnace, in which they placed the
+pig or cast iron, and without blast or the addition of anything more
+than common raw pit-coal, converted the same into good malleable
+iron, which being taken red hot from the reverberatory furnace to the
+forge hammer, was drawn into bars according to the will of the
+workman. Peter Onions of Merthyr Tydvil, in 1783, carried the
+manufacture a stage further, as described by him in his patent of
+that year. Having charged his furnace ("bound with iron work and well
+annealed") with pig or fused cast iron from the smelting furnace, it
+was closed up and the doors were luted with sand. The fire was urged
+by a blast admitted underneath, apparently for the purpose of keeping
+up the combustion of the fuel on the grate. Thus Onions' furnace was
+of the nature of a puddling furnace, the fire of which was urged by a
+blast. The fire was to be kept up until the metal became less fluid,
+and "thickened into a kind of froth, which the workman, by opening
+the door, must turn and stir with a bar or other iron instrument, and
+then close the aperture again, applying the blast and fire until
+there was a ferment in the metal." The patent further describes that
+"as the workman stirs the metal," the scoriae will separate, "and the
+particles of iron will adhere, which particles the workman must
+collect or gather into a mass or lump." This mass or lump was then to
+be raised to a white heat, and forged into malleable iron at the
+forge-hammer.
+
+Such was the stage of advance reached in the manufacture of bar-iron,
+when Henry Cort published his patents in 1783 and 1784. In dispensing
+with a blast, he had been anticipated by the Craneges, and in the
+process of puddling by Onions; but he introduced so many improvements
+of an original character, with which he combined the inventions of
+his predecessors, as to establish quite a new era in the history of
+the iron manufacture, and, in the course of a few years, to raise it
+to the highest state of prosperity. As early as 1786, Lord Sheffield
+recognised the great national importance of Cort's improvements in
+the following words: - If Mr. Cort's very ingenious and meritorious
+improvements in the art of making and working iron, the steam-engine
+of Boulton and Watt, and Lord Dundonald's discovery of making coke at
+half the present price, should all succeed, it is not asserting too
+much to say that the result will be more advantageous to Great
+Britain than the possession of the thirteen colonies (of America);
+for it will give the complete command of the iron trade to this
+country, with its vast advantages to navigation." It is scarcely
+necessary here to point out how completely the anticipations of Lord
+Sheffield have been fulfilled, sanguine though they might appear to
+be when uttered some seventy-six years ago.*
+ [footnote...
+Although the iron manufacture had gradually been increasing since the
+middle of the century, it was as yet comparatively insignificant in
+amount. Thus we find, from a statement by W. Wilkinson, dated Dec.
+25, 1791, contained in the memorandum-book of Wm. Reynolds of
+Coalbrookdale, that the produce in England and Scotland was then
+estimated to be
+
+ Coke Furnaces. Charcoal Furnaces.
+
+ In England ......73 producing 67,548 tons 20 producing 8500 tons
+ In Scotland......12 " 12,480 " 2 " 1000 "
+ ---- ------ -- ----
+ 85 " 80,028 " 22 " 9500 "
+
+
+At the same time the annual import of Oregrounds iron from Sweden
+amounted to about 20,000 tons, and of bars and slabs from Russia
+about 50,000 tons, at an average cost of 35L. a ton!
+ ...]
+
+We will endeavour as briefly as possible to point out the important
+character of Mr. Cort's improvements, as embodied in his two patents
+of 1783 and 1784. In the first he states that, after "great study,
+labour, and expense, in trying a variety of experiments, and making
+many discoveries, he had invented and brought to perfection a
+peculiar method and process of preparing, welding, and working
+various sorts of iron, and of reducing the same into uses by
+machinery: a furnace, and other apparatus, adapted and applied to the
+said process." He first describes his method of making iron for
+"large uses," such as shanks, arms, rings, and palms of anchors, by
+the method of piling and faggoting, since become generally practised,
+by laying bars of iron of suitable lengths, forged on purpose, and
+tapering so as to be thinner at one end than the other, laid over one
+another in the manner of bricks in buildings, so that the ends should
+everywhere overlay each other. The faggots so prepared, to the amount
+of half a ton more or less, were then to be put into a common air or
+balling furnace, and brought to a welding heat, which was
+accomplished by his method in a much shorter time than in any hollow
+fire; and when the heat was perfect, the faggots were then brought
+under a forge-hammer of great size and weight, and welded into a
+solid mass. Mr. Cort alleges in the specification that iron for
+"larger uses" thus finished, is in all respect's possessed of the
+highest degree of perfection; and that the fire in the balling
+furnace is better suited, from its regularity and penetrating
+quality, to give the iron a perfect welding heat throughout its whole
+mass, without fusing in any part, than any fire blown by a blast.
+Another process employed by Mr. Cort for the purpose of cleansing the
+iron and producing a metal of purer grain, was that of working the
+faggots by passing them through rollers. "By this simple process,"
+said he, "all the earthy particles are pressed out and the iron
+becomes at once free from dross, and what is usually called cinder,
+and is compressed into a fibrous and tough state." The objection has
+indeed been taken to the process of passing the iron through rollers,
+that the cinder is not so effectually got rid of as by passing it
+under a tilt hammer, and that much of it is squeezed into the bar and
+remains there, interrupting its fibre and impairing its strength.
+
+It does not appear that there was any novelty in the use of rollers
+by Cort; for in his first specification he speaks of them as already
+well known.*
+ [footnote...
+"It is material to observe", says Mr. Webster, "that Cort, in this
+specification, speaks of the rollers, furnaces, and separate
+processes, as well known. There is no claim to any of them
+separately; the claim is to the reducing of the faggots of piled iron
+into bars, and the welding of such bars by rollers instead of by
+forge-hammers."--Memoir of Henry Cort, in Mechanic's Magazine, 15
+July, 1859, by Thomas Webster, M.A., F.R.S.
+ ...]
+His great merit consisted in apprehending the value of certain
+processes, as tested by his own and others' experience, and combining
+and applying them in a more effective practical form than had ever
+been done before. This power of apprehending the best methods, and
+embodying the details in one complete whole, marks the practical,
+clear-sighted man, and in certain cases amounts almost to a genius.
+The merit of combining the inventions of others in such forms as that
+they shall work to advantage, is as great in its way as that of the
+man who strikes out the inventions themselves, but who, for want of
+tact and experience, cannot carry them into practical effect.
+
+It was the same with Cort's second patent, in which he described his
+method of manufacturing bar-iron from the ore or from cast-iron. All
+the several processes therein described had been practised before his
+time; his merit chiefly consisting in the skilful manner in which he
+combined and applied them. Thus, like the Craneges, he employed the
+reverberatory or air furnace, without blast, and, like Onions, he
+worked the fused metal with iron bars until it was brought into
+lumps, when it was removed and forged into malleable iron. Cort,
+however, carried the process further, and made it more effectual in
+all respects. His method may be thus briefly described: the bottom of
+the reverberatory furnace was hollow, so as to contain the fluid
+metal, introduced into it by ladles; the heat being kept up by
+pit-coal or other fuel. When the furnace was charged, the doors were
+closed until the metal was sufficiently fused, when the workman
+opened an aperture and worked or stirred about the metal with iron
+bars, when an ebullition took place, during the continuance of which
+a bluish flame was emitted, the carbon of the cast-iron was burned
+off, the metal separated from the slag, and the iron, becoming
+reduced to nature, was then collected into lumps or loops of sizes
+suited to their intended uses, when they were drawn out of the doors
+of the furnace. They were then stamped into plates, and piled or
+worked in an air furnace, heated to a white or welding heat, shingled
+under a forge hammer, and passed through the grooved rollers after
+the method described in the first patent.
+
+The processes described by Cort in his two patents have been followed
+by iron manufacturers, with various modifications, the results of
+enlarged experience, down to the present time. After the lapse of
+seventy-eight years, the language employed by Cort continues on the
+whole a faithful description of the processes still practised: the
+same methods of manufacturing bar from cast-iron, and of puddling,
+piling, welding, and working the bar-iron through grooved
+rollers--all are nearly identical with the methods of manufacture
+perfected by Henry Cort in 1784. It may be mentioned that the
+development of the powers of the steam-engine by Watt had an
+extraordinary effect upon the production of iron. It created a
+largely increased demand for the article for the purposes of the
+shafting and machinery which it was employed to drive; while at the
+same time it cleared pits of water which before were unworkable, and
+by being extensively applied to the blowing of iron-furnaces and the
+working of the rolling-mills, it thus gave a still further impetus to
+the manufacture of the metal. It would be beside our purpose to enter
+into any statistical detail on the subject; but it will be sufficient
+to state that the production of iron, which in the early part of last
+century amounted to little more than 12,000 tons, about the middle of
+the century to about 18,000 tons, and at the time of Cort's
+inventions to about 90,000 tons, was found, in 1820, to have
+increased to 400,000 tons; and now the total quantity produced is
+upwards of four millions of tons of pig-iron every year, or more than
+the entire production of all other European countries. There is
+little reason to doubt that this extraordinary development of the
+iron manufacture has been in a great measure due to the inventions of
+Henry Cort. It is said that at the present time there are not fewer
+than 8200 of Cort's furnaces in operation in Great Britain alone.*
+ [footnote...
+Letter by Mr. Truran in Mechanic's Magazine.
+ ...]
+
+Practical men have regarded Cort's improvement of the process of
+rolling the iron as the most valuable of his inventions. A competent
+authority has spoken of Cort's grooved rollers as of "high
+philosophical interest, being scarcely less than the discovery of a
+new mechanical Power, in reversing the action of the wedge, by the
+application of force to four surfaces, so as to elongate a mass,
+instead of applying force to a mass to divide the four surfaces." One
+of the best authorities in the iron trade of last century, Mr.
+Alexander Raby of Llanelly, like many others, was at first entirely
+sceptical as to the value of Cort's invention; but he had no sooner
+witnessed the process than with manly candour he avowed his entire
+conversion to his views.
+
+We now return to the history of the chief author of this great branch
+of national industry. As might naturally be expected, the principal
+ironmasters, when they heard of Cort's success, and the rapidity and
+economy with which he manufactured and forged bar-iron, visited his
+foundry for the purpose of examining his process, and, if found
+expedient, of employing it at their own works. Among the first to try
+it were Richard Crawshay of Cyfartha, Samuel Homfray of Penydarran
+(both in South Wales), and William Reynolds of Coalbrookdale. Richard
+Crawshay was then (in 1787) forging only ten tons of bar-iron weekly
+under the hammer; and when he saw the superior processes invented by
+Cort he readily entered into a contract with him to work under his
+patents at ten shillings a ton royalty, In 1812 a letter from Mr.
+Crawshay to the Secretary of Lord Sheffield was read to the House of
+Commons, descriptive of his method of working iron, in which he said,
+"I took it from a Mr. Cort, who had a little mill at Fontley in
+Hampshire: I have thus acquainted you with my method, by which I am
+now making more than ten thousand tons of bar-iron per annum." Samuel
+Homfray was equally prompt in adopting the new process. He not only
+obtained from Cort plans of the puddling-furnaces and patterns of the
+rolls, but borrowed Cort's workmen to instruct his own in the
+necessary operations; and he soon found the method so superior to
+that invented by Onions that he entirely confined himself to
+manufacturing after Cort's patent. We also find Mr. Reynolds inviting
+Cort to conduct a trial of his process at Ketley, though it does not
+appear that it was adopted by the firm at that time.*
+ [footnote...
+In the memorandum-book of Wm. Reynolds appears the following entry on
+the subject: --
+ "Copy of a paper given to H. Cort, Esq.
+"W. Reynolds saw H. C. in a trial which he made at Ketley,
+Dec. 17, 1784, produce from the same pig both cold short and tough iron
+by a variation of the process used in reducing them from the state of
+cast-iron to that of malleable or bar-iron; and in point of yield his
+processes were quite equal to those at Pitchford, which did not
+exceed the proportion of 31 cwt. to the ton of bars. The experiment
+was made by stamping and potting the blooms or loops made in his
+furnace, which then produced a cold short iron; but when they were
+immediately shingled and drawn, the iron was of a black tough."
+
+The Coalbrookdale ironmasters are said to have been deterred from
+adopting the process because of what was considered an excessive
+waste of the metal--about 25 per cent,--though, with greater
+experience, this waste was very much diminished.
+ ...]
+
+The quality of the iron manufactured by the new process was found
+satisfactory; and the Admiralty having, by the persons appointed by
+them to test it in 1787, pronounced it to be superior to the best
+Oregrounds iron, the use of the latter was thenceforward
+discontinued, and Cort's iron only was directed to be used for the
+anchors and other ironwork in the ships of the Royal Navy. The merits
+of the invention seem to have been generally conceded, and numerous
+contracts for licences were entered into with Cort and his partner by
+the manufacturers of bar-iron throughout the country.*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Webster, in the 'Case of Henry Cort,' published in the Mechanic's
+Magazine (2 Dec. 1859), states that "licences were taken at royalties
+estimated to yield 27,500L. to the owners of the patents." ...]
+Cort himself made arrangements for carrying on the manufacture on a
+large scale, and with that object entered upon the possession of a
+wharf at Gosport, belonging to Adam Jellicoe, his partner's father,
+where he succeeded in obtaining considerable Government orders for
+iron made after his patents. To all ordinary eyes the inventor now
+appeared to be on the high road to fortune; but there was a fatal
+canker at the root of this seeming prosperity, and in a few years the
+fabric which he had so laboriously raised crumbled into ruins. On the
+death of Adam Jellicoe, the father of Cort's partner, in August,
+1789,*
+ [footnote...
+In the 'Case of Henry Cort,' by Mr. Webster, above referred to
+(Mechanic's Magazine, 2 Dec. 1859), it is stated that Adam Jellicoe
+"committed suicide under the pressure of dread of exposure," but this
+does not appear to be confirmed by the accounts in the newspapers of
+the day. He died at his private dwelling-house, No.14, Highbury
+Place, Islingtonn, on the 30th August,1789, after a fortnight's
+illness.
+ ...]
+defalcations were discovered in his public accounts to the extent of
+39,676l., and his books and papers were immediately taken possession
+of by the Government. On examination it was found that the debts due
+to Jellicoe amounted to 89,657l, included in which was a sum of not
+less than 54,853l. owing to him by the Cort partnership. In the
+public investigation which afterwards took place, it appeared that
+the capital possessed by Cort being insufficient to enable him to
+pursue his experiments, which were of a very expensive character,
+Adam Jellicoe had advanced money from time to time for the purpose,
+securing himself by a deed of agreement entitling him to one-half the
+stock and profits of all his contracts; and in further consideration
+of the capital advanced by Jellicoe beyond his equal share, Cort
+subsequently assigned to him all his patent rights as collateral
+security. As Jellicoe had the reputation of being a rich man, Cort
+had not the slightest suspicion of the source from which he obtained
+the advances made by him to the firm, nor has any connivance whatever
+on the part of Cort been suggested. At the same time it must be
+admitted that the connexion was not free from suspicion, and, to say
+the least, it was a singularly unfortunate one. It was found that
+among the moneys advanced by Jellicoe to Cort there was a sum of
+27,500L. entrusted to him for the payment of seamen's and officers'
+wages. How his embarrassments had tempted him to make use of the
+public funds for the purpose of carrying on his speculations, appears
+from his own admissions. In a memorandum dated the 11th November,
+l782, found in his strong box after his death, he set forth that he
+had always had much more than his proper balance in hand, until his
+engagement, about two years before, with Mr. Cort, "which by degrees
+has so reduced me, and employed so much more of my money than I
+expected, that I have been obliged to turn most of my Navy bills into
+cash, and at the same time, to my great concern, am very deficient in
+my balance. This gives me great uneasiness, nor shall I live or die
+in peace till the whole is restored." He had, however, made the first
+false step, after which the downhill career of dishonesty is rapid.
+His desperate attempts to set himself right only involved him the
+deeper; his conscious breach of trust caused him a degree of daily
+torment which he could not bear; and the discovery of his
+defalcations, which was made only a few days before his death,
+doubtless hastened his end.
+
+The Government acted with promptitude, as they were bound to do in
+such a case. The body of Jellicoe was worth nothing to them, but they
+could secure the property in which he had fraudulently invested the
+public moneys intrusted to him. With this object the them Paymaster
+of the Navy proceeded to make an affidavit in the Exchequer that
+Henry Cort was indebted to His Majesty in the sum of 27,500L. and
+upwards, in respect of moneys belonging to the public treasury, which
+"Adam Jellicoe had at different times lent and advanced to the said
+Henry Cort, from whom the same now remains justly due and owing; and
+the deponent saith he verily believes that the said Henry Cort is
+much decayed in his credit and in very embarrassed circumstances; and
+therefore the deponent verily believes that the aforesaid debt so due
+and owing to His Majesty is in great danger of being lost if some
+more speedy means be not taken for the recovery than by the ordinary
+process of the Court." Extraordinary measures were therefore adopted.
+The assignments of Cort's patents, which had been made to Jellicoe in
+consideration of his advances, were taken possession of; but Samuel
+Jellicoe, the son of the defaulter, singular to say, was put in
+possession of the properties at Fontley and Gosport, and continued to
+enjoy them, to Cort's exclusion, for a period of fourteen years. It
+does not however appear that any patent right was ever levied by the
+assignees, and the result of the proceeding was that the whole
+benefit of Cort's inventions was thus made over to the ironmasters
+and to the public. Had the estate been properly handled, and the
+patent rights due under the contracts made by the ironmasters with
+Cort been duly levied, there is little reason to doubt that the whole
+of the debt owing to the Government would have been paid in the
+course of a few years. "When we consider," says Mr. Webster, "how
+very simple was the process of demanding of the contracting
+ironmasters the patent due (which for the year 1789 amounted to
+15,000L., in 1790 to 15,000L., and in 1791 to 25,000L.), and which
+demand might have been enforced by the same legal process used to
+ruin the inventor, it is not difficult to surmise the motive for
+abstaining." The case, however, was not so simple as Mr. Webster puts
+it; for there was such a contingency as that of the ironmasters
+combining to dispute the patent right, and there is every reason to
+believe that they were prepared to adopt that course.*
+ [footnote...
+This is confirmed by the report of a House of Commons Committee on
+the subject Mr. Davies Gilbert chairman), in which they say, "Your
+committee have not been able to satisfy themselves that either of the
+two inventions, one for subjecting cast-iron to an operation termed
+puddling during its conversion to malleable iron, and the other for
+passing it through fluted or grooved rollers, were so novel in their
+principle or their application as fairly to entitle the petitioners
+[Mr. Cort's survivors] to a parliamentary reward." It is, however,
+stated by Mr. Mushet that the evidence was not fairly taken by the
+committee--that they were overborne by the audacity of Mr. Samuel
+Homfray, one of the great Welsh ironmasters, whose statements were
+altogether at variance with known facts--and that it was under his
+influence that Mr. Gilbert drew up the fallacious report of the
+committee. The illustrious James Watt, writing to Dr. Black in 1784,
+as to the iron produced by Cort's process, said, "Though I cannot
+perfectly agree with you as to its goodness, yet there is much
+ingenuity in the idea of forming the bars in that manner, which is
+the only part of his process which has any pretensions to novelty....
+Mr. Cort has, as you observe, been most illiberally treated by the
+trade: they are ignorant brutes; but he exposed himself to it by
+showing them the process before it was perfect, and seeing his
+ignorance of the common operations of making iron, laughed at and
+despised him; yet they will contrive by some dirty evasion to use his
+process, or such parts as they like, without acknowledging him in it.
+I shall be glad to be able to be of any use to him. Watts
+fellow-feeling was naturally excited in favour of the plundered
+inventor, he himself having all his life been exposed to the attacks
+of like piratical assailants.
+ ...]
+
+Although the Cort patents expired in 1796 and 1798 respectively, they
+continued the subject of public discussion for some time after, more
+particularly in connection with the defalcations of the deceased Adam
+Jellicoe. It does not appear that more than 2654l. was realised by
+the Government from the Cort estate towards the loss sustained by the
+public, as a balance of 24,846l. was still found standing to the
+debit of Jellicoe in 1800, when the deficiencies in the naval
+account's became matter of public inquiry. A few years later, in
+1805, the subject was again revived in a remarkable manner. In that
+year, the Whigs, Perceiving the bodily decay of Mr. Pitt, and being
+too eager to wait for his removal by death, began their famous series
+of attacks upon his administration. Fearing to tackle the popular
+statesman himself, they inverted the ordinary tactics of an
+opposition, and fell foul of Dundas, Lord Melville, then Treasurer of
+the Navy, who had successfully carried the country through the great
+naval war with revolutionary France. They scrupled not to tax him
+with gross peculation, and exhibited articles of impeachment against
+him, which became the subject of elaborate investigation, the result
+of which is matter of history. In those articles, no reference
+whatever was made to Lord Melville's supposed complicity with
+Jellicoe; nor, on the trial that followed, was any reference made to
+the defalcations of that official. But when Mr. Whitbread, on the 8th
+of April, 1805, spoke to the "Resolutions" in the Commons for
+impeaching the Treasurer of the Navy, he thought proper to intimate
+that he "had a strong suspicion that Jellicoe was in the same
+partnership with Mark Sprott, Alexander Trotter, and Lord Melville.
+He had been suffered to remain a public debtor for a whole year after
+he was known to be in arrears upwards of 24,000L. During next year
+11,000L. more had accrued. It would not have been fair to have turned
+too short on an old companion. It would perhaps, too, have been
+dangerous, since unpleasant discoveries might have met the public
+eye. It looked very much as if, mutually conscious of criminality,
+they had agreed to be silent, and keep their own secrets."
+
+In making these offensive observations Whitbread was manifestly
+actuated by political enmity. They were utterly unwarrantable. In the
+first place, Melville had been formally acquitted of Jellicoe's
+deficiency by a writ of Privy Seal, dated 31st May, 1800; and
+secondly, the committee appointed in that very year (1805) to
+reinvestigate the naval accounts, had again exonerated him, but
+intimated that they were of opinion there was remissness on his part
+in allowing Jellicoe to remain in his office after the discovery of
+his defalcations.
+
+the report made by the commissioners to the Houses of Parliament in
+1805,*
+ [footnote...
+Tenth Report of the Commissioners of Naval Inquiry. See also Report
+of Select Committee on the 10th Naval Report. May, 1805.
+ ...]
+ the value of Corts patents was estimated at only 100L. Referring to
+the schedule of Jellicoe's alleged assets, they say "Many of the
+debts are marked as bad; and we apprehend that the debt from Mr.
+Henry Cort, not so marked, of 54,000L. and upwards, is of that
+description." As for poor bankrupt Henry Cort, these discussions
+availed nothing. On the death of Jellicoe, he left his iron works,
+feeling himself a ruined man. He made many appeals to the Government
+of the day for restoral of his patents, and offered to find security
+for payment of the debt due by his firm to the Crown, but in vain. In
+1794, an appeal was made to Mr. Pitt by a number of influential
+members of Parliament, on behalf of the inventor and his destitute
+family of twelve children, when a pension of 200L. a-year was granted
+him. This Mr. Cort enjoyed until the year 1800, when he died, broken
+in health and spirit, in his sixtieth year. He was buried in
+Hampstead Churchyard, where a stone marking the date of his death is
+still to be seen. A few years since it was illegible, but it has
+recently been restored by his surviving son.
+
+Though Cort thus died in comparative poverty, he laid the foundations
+of many gigantic fortunes. He may be said to have been in a great
+measure the author of our modern iron aristocracy, who still
+manufacture after the processes which he invented or perfected, but
+for which they never paid him a shilling of royalty. These men of
+gigantic fortunes have owed much--we might almost say everything-- to
+the ruined projector of "the little mill at Fontley." Their wealth
+has enriched many families of the older aristocracy, and has been the
+foundation of several modern peerages. Yet Henry Cort, the rock from
+which they were hewn, is already all but forgotten; and his surviving
+children, now aged and infirm, are dependent for their support upon
+the slender pittance wrung by repeated entreaty and expostulation
+from the state.
+
+The career of Richard Crawshay, the first of the great ironmasters
+who had the sense to appreciate and adopt the methods of
+manufacturing iron invented by Henry Cort, is a not unfitting
+commentary on the sad history we have thus briefly described. It
+shows how, as respects mere money-making, shrewdness is more potent
+than invention, and business faculty than manufacturing skill.
+Richard Crawshay was born at Normanton near Leeds, the son of a small
+Yorkshire farmer. When a youth, he worked on his father's farm, and
+looked forward to occupying the same condition in life; but a
+difference with his father unsettled his mind, and at the age of
+fifteen he determined to leave his home, and seek his fortune
+elsewhere. Like most unsettled and enterprising lads, he first made
+for London, riding to town on a pony of his own, which, with the
+clothes on his back, formed his entire fortune. It took him a
+fortnight to make the journey, in consequence of the badness of the
+roads. Arrived in London, he sold his pony for fifteen pounds, and
+the money kept him until he succeeded in finding employment. He was
+so fortunate as to be taken upon trial by a Mr. Bicklewith, who kept
+an ironmonger's shop in York Yard, Upper Thames Street; and his first
+duty there was to clean out the office, put the stools and desks in
+order for the other clerks, run errands, and act as porter when
+occasion required. Young Crawshay was very attentive, industrious,
+and shrewd; and became known in the office as "The Yorkshire Boy."
+Chiefly because of his "cuteness," his master appointed him to the
+department of selling flat irons. The London washerwomen of that day
+were very sharp and not very honest, and it used to be said of them
+that where they bought one flat iron they generally contrived to
+steal two. Mr. Bicklewith thought he could not do better than set the
+Yorkshireman to watch the washerwomen, and, by way of inducement to
+him to be vigilant, he gave young Crawshay an interest in that branch
+of the business, which was soon found to prosper under his charge.
+After a few more years, Mr. Bicklewith retired, and left to Crawshay
+the cast-iron business in York Yard. This he still further increased,
+There was not at that time much enterprise in the iron trade, but
+Crawshay endeavoured to connect himself with what there was of it.
+The price of iron was then very high, and the best sorts were still
+imported from abroad; a good deal of the foreign iron and steel being
+still landed at the Steelyard on the Thames, in the immediate
+neighbourhood of Crawshay's ironmongery store.
+
+It seems to have occurred to some London capitalists that money was
+then to be made in the iron trade, and that South Wales was a good
+field for an experiment. The soil there was known to be full of coal
+and ironstone, and several small iron works had for some time been
+carried on, which were supposed to be doing well. Merthyr Tydvil was
+one of the places at which operations had been begun, but the place
+being situated in a hill district, of difficult access, and the
+manufacture being still in a very imperfect state, the progress made
+was for some time very slow. Land containing coal and iron was deemed
+of very little value, as maybe inferred from the fact that in the
+year 1765, Mr. Anthony Bacon, a man of much foresight, took a lease
+from Lord Talbot, for 99 years, of the minerals under forty square
+miles of country surrounding the then insignificant hamlet of Merthyr
+Tydvil, at the trifling rental of 200L. a-year. There he erected iron
+works, and supplied the Government with considerable quantities of
+cannon and iron for different purposes; and having earned a
+competency, he retired from business in 1782, subletting his mineral
+tract in four divisions--the Dowlais, the Penydarran, the Cyfartha,
+and the Plymouth Works, north, east, west, and south, of Merthyr
+Tydvil.
+
+Mr. Richard Crawshay became the lessee of what Mr. Mushet has called
+"the Cyfartha flitch of the great Bacon domain." There he proceeded
+to carry on the works established by Mr. Bacon with increased spirit;
+his son William, whom he left in charge of the ironmongery store in
+London, supplying him with capital to put into the iron works as
+fast. as he could earn it by the retail trade. In 1787, we find
+Richard Crawshay manufacturing with difficulty ten tons of bar-iron
+weekly, and it was of a very inferior character,*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Mushet says of the early manufacture of iron at Merthyr Tydvil
+that "A modification of the charcoal refinery, a hollow fire, was
+worked with coke as a substitute for charcoal, but the bar-iron
+hammered from the produce was very inferior." The pit-coal cast-iron
+was nevertheless found of a superior quality for castings, being more
+fusible and more homogeneous than charcoal-iron. Hence it was well
+adapted for cannon, which was for some time the principal article of
+manufacture at the Welsh works.
+ ...]
+-- the means not having yet been devised at Cyfartha for
+malleableizing the pit-coal cast-iron with economy or good effect.
+Yet Crawshay found a ready market for all the iron he could make, and
+he is said to have counted the gains of the forge-hammer close by his
+house at the rate of a penny a stroke. In course of time he found it
+necessary to erect new furnaces, and, having adopted the processes
+invented by Henry Cort, he was thereby enabled greatly to increase
+the production of his forges, until in 1812 we find him stating to a
+committee of the House of Commons that he was making ten thousand
+tons of bar-iron yearly, or an average produce of two hundred tons a
+week. But this quantity, great though it was, has since been largely
+increased, the total produce of the Crawshay furnaces of Cyfartha,
+Ynysfach, and Kirwan, being upwards of 50,000 tons of bar-iron
+yearly.
+
+The distance of Merthyr from Cardiff, the nearest port, being
+considerable, and the cost of carriage being very great by reason of
+the badness of the roads, Mr. Crawshay set himself to overcome this
+great impediment to the prosperity of the Merthyr Tydvil district;
+and, in conjunction with Mr. Homfray of the Penydarran Works, he
+planned and constructed the canal*
+ [footnote...
+It may be worthy of note that the first locomotive run upon a
+railroad was that constructed by Trevithick for Mr. Homfray in 1803,
+which was employed to bring down metal from the furnaces to the Old
+Forge. The engine was taken off the road because the tram-plates were
+found too weak to bear its weight without breaking.
+ ...]
+to Cardiff, the opening of which, in 1795, gave an immense impetus to
+the iron trade of the neighbourhood. Numerous other extensive iron
+works became established there, until Merthyr Tydvil attained the
+reputation of being at once the richest and the dirtiest district in
+all Britain. Mr. Crawshay became known in the west of England as the
+"Iron King," and was quoted as the highest authority in all questions
+relating to the trade. Mr. George Crawshay, recently describing the
+founder of the family at a social meeting at Newcastle, said,--"In
+these days a name like ours is lost in the infinity of great
+manufacturing firms which exist through out the land; but in those
+early times the man who opened out the iron district of Wales stood
+upon an eminence seen by all the world. It is preserved in the
+traditions of the family that when the 'Iron King' used to drive from
+home in his coach-and-four into Wales, all the country turned out to
+see him, and quite a commotion took place when he passed through
+Bristol on his way to the works. My great grandfather was succeeded
+by his son, and by his grandson; the Crawshays have followed one
+another for four generations in the iron trade in Wales, and there
+they still stand at the head of the trade." The occasion on which
+these words were uttered was at a Christmas party, given to the men,
+about 1300 in number, employed at the iron works of Messrs. Hawks,
+Crawshay, and Co., at Newcastle-upon-Tyne. These works were founded
+in 1754 by William Hawks, a blacksmith, whose principal trade
+consisted in making claw-hammers for joiners. He became a thriving
+man, and eventually a large manufacturer of bar-iron. Partners joined
+him, and in the course of the changes wrought by time, one of the
+Crawshays, in 1842, became a principal partner in the firm.
+
+Illustrations of a like kind might be multiplied to any extent,
+showing the growth in our own time of an iron aristocracy of great
+wealth and influence, the result mainly of the successful working of
+the inventions of the unfortunate and unrequited Henry Cort. He has
+been the very Tubal Cain of England--one of the principal founders of
+our iron age. To him we mainly owe the abundance of wrought-iron for
+machinery, for steam-engines, and for railways, at one-third the
+price we were before accustomed to pay to the foreigner. We have by
+his invention, not only ceased to be dependent upon other nations for
+our supply of iron for tools, implements, and arms, but we have
+become the greatest exporters of iron, producing more than all other
+European countries combined. In the opinion of Mr. Fairbairn of
+Manchester, the inventions of Henry Cort have already added six
+hundred millions sterling to the wealth of the kingdom, while they
+have given employment to some six hundred thousand working people
+during three generations. And while the great ironmasters, by freely
+availing themselves of his inventions, have been adding estate to
+estate, the only estate secured by Henry Cort was the little domain
+of six feet by two in which he lies interred in Hampstead Churchyard.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SCOTCH IRON MANUFACTURE - Dr. ROEBUCK DAVID MUSHET.
+
+"Were public benefactors to be allowed to pass away, like hewers of
+wood and drawers of water, without commemoration, genius and
+enterprise would be deprived of their most coveted distinction."--Sir
+Henry Englefield.
+
+
+The account given of Dr. Roebuck in a Cyclopedia of Biography,
+recently published in Glasgow, runs as follows: -- "Roebuck, John, a
+physician and experimental chemist, born at Sheffield, 1718; died,
+after ruining himself by his projects, 1794. Such is the short shrift
+which the man receives who fails. Had Dr. Roebuck wholly succeeded in
+his projects, he would probably have been esteemed as among the
+greatest of Scotland's benefactors. Yet his life was not altogether a
+failure, as we think will sufficiently appear from the following
+brief account of his labours: --
+
+At the beginning of last century, John Roebuck's father carried on
+the manufacture of cutlery at Sheffield,*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. Roebuck's grandson, John Arthur Roebuck, by a singular
+coincidence, at present represents Sheffield in the British
+Parliament.
+ ...]
+in the course of which he realized a competency. He intended his son
+to follow his own business, but the youth was irresistibly attracted
+to scientific pursuits, in which his father liberally encouraged him;
+and he was placed first under the care of Dr. Doddridge, at
+Northampton, and afterwards at the University of Edinburgh, where he
+applied himself to the study of medicine, and especially of
+chemistry, which was then attracting considerable attention at the
+principal seats of learning in Scotland. While residing at Edinburgh
+young Roebuck contracted many intimate friendships with men who
+afterwards became eminent in literature, such as Hume and Robertson
+the historians, and the circumstance is supposed to have contributed
+not a little to his partiality in favour of Scotland, and his
+afterwards selecting it as the field for his industrial operations.
+
+After graduating as a physician at Leyden, Roebuck returned to
+England, and settled at Birmingham in the year 1745 for the purpose
+of practising his profession. Birmingham was then a principal seat of
+the metal manufacture, and its mechanics were reputed to be among the
+most skilled in Britain. Dr. Roebuck's attention was early drawn to
+the scarcity and dearness of the material in which the mechanics
+worked, and he sought by experiment to devise some method of smelting
+iron otherwise than by means of charcoal. He had a laboratory fitted
+up in his house for the purpose of prosecuting his inquiries, and
+there he spent every minute that he could spare from his professional
+labours. It was thus that he invented the process of smelting iron by
+means of pit-coal which he afterwards embodied in the patent
+hereafter to be referred to. At the same time he invented new methods
+of refining gold and silver, and of employing them in the arts, which
+proved of great practical value to the Birmingham trades-men, who
+made extensive use of them in their various processes of manufacture.
+
+Dr. Roebuck's inquiries had an almost exclusively practical
+direction, and in pursuing them his main object was to render them
+subservient to the improvement of the industrial arts. Thus he sought
+to devise more economical methods of producing the various chemicals
+used in the Birmingham trade, such as ammonia, sublimate, and several
+of the acids; and his success was such as to induce him to erect a
+large laboratory for their manufacture, which was conducted with
+complete success by his friend Mr. Garbett. Among his inventions of
+this character, was the modern process of manufacturing vitriolic
+acid in leaden vessels in large quantities, instead of in glass
+vessels in small quantities as formerly practised. His success led
+him to consider the project of establishing a manufactory for the
+purpose of producing oil of vitriol on a large scale; and, having
+given up his practice as a physician, he resolved, with his partner
+Mr. Garbett, to establish the proposed works in the neighbourhood of
+Edinburgh. He removed to Scotland with that object, and began the
+manufacture of vitriol at Prestonpans in the year 1749. The
+enterprise proved eminently lucrative, and, encouraged by his
+success, Roebuck proceeded to strike out new branches of manufacture.
+He started a pottery for making white and brown ware, which
+eventually became established, and the manufacture exists in the same
+neighbourhood to this day.
+
+The next enterprise in which he became engaged was one of still
+greater importance, though it proved eminently unfortunate in its
+results as concerned himself. While living at Prestonpans, he made
+the friendship of Mr. William Cadell, of Cockenzie, a gentleman who
+had for some time been earnestly intent on developing the industry of
+Scotland, then in a very backward condition. Mr. Cadell had tried,
+without success, to establish a manufactory of iron; and, though he
+had heretofore failed, he hoped that with the aid of Dr. Roebuck he
+might yet succeed. The Doctor listened to his suggestions with
+interest, and embraced the proposed enterprise with zeal. He
+immediately proceeded to organize a company, in which he was joined
+by a number of his friends and relatives. His next step was to select
+a site for the intended works, and make the necessary arrangements
+for beginning the manufacture of iron. After carefully examining the
+country on both sides of the Forth, he at length made choice of a
+site on the banks of the river Carron, in Stirlingshire, where there
+was an abundant supply of wafer, and an inexhaustible supply of iron,
+coal, and limestone in the immediate neighbourhood, and there Dr.
+Roebuck planted the first ironworks in Scotland,
+
+In order to carry them on with the best chances of success, he
+brought a large number of skilled workmen from England, who formed a
+nucleus of industry at Carron, where their example and improved
+methods of working served to train the native labourers in their art.
+At a subsequent period, Mr. Cadell, of Carronpark, also brought a
+number of skilled English nail-makers into Scotland, and settled them
+in the village of Camelon, where, by teaching others, the business
+has become handed down to the present day.
+
+The first furnace was blown at Carron on the first day of January,
+1760; and in the course of the same year the Carron Iron Works turned
+out 1500 tons of iron, then the whole annual produce of Scotland.
+Other furnaces were shortly after erected on improved plans, and the
+production steadily increased. Dr. Roebuck was indefatigable in his
+endeavours to improve the manufacture, and he was one of the first,
+as we have said, to revive the use of pit-coal in refining the ore,
+as appears from his patent of 1762. He there describes his new
+process as follows: -- "I melt pig or any kind of cast-iron in a
+hearth heated with pit-coal by the blast of bellows, and work the
+metal until it is reduced to nature, which I take out of the fire and
+separate to pieces; then I take the metal thus reduced to nature and
+expose it to the action of a hollow pit-coal fire, heated by the
+blast of bellows, until it is reduced to a loop, which I draw out
+under a common forge hammer into bar-iron." This method of
+manufacture was followed with success, though for some time, as
+indeed to this day, the principal production of the Carron Works was
+castings, for which the peculiar quality of the Scotch iron admirably
+adapts it. The well-known Carronades,*
+ [footnote...
+The carronade was invented by General Robert Melville [Mr. Nasmyth
+says it was by Miller of Dalswinton], who proposed it for discharging
+68 lb, shot with low charges of powder, in order to produce the
+increased splintering or SMASHING effects which were known to result
+from such practice. The first piece of the kind was cast at the
+Carron Foundry, in 1779, and General Melville's family have now in
+their possession a small model of this gun, with the inscription: --
+"Gift of the Carron Company to Lieutenant-general Melville, inventor
+of the smashers and lesser carronades, for solid, ship, shell, and
+carcass shot, &c. First used against French ships in 1779."
+ ...]
+or "Smashers," as they were named, were cast in large numbers at the
+Carron Works. To increase the power of his blowing apparatus,
+Dr.Roebuck called to his aid the celebrated Mr. Smeaton, the
+engineer, who contrived and erected for him at Carron the most
+perfect apparatus of the kind then in existence. It may also be
+added, that out of the Carron enterprise, in a great measure, sprang
+the Forth and Clyde Canal, the first artificial navigation in
+Scotland. The Carron Company, with a view to securing an improved
+communication with Glasgow, themselves surveyed a line, which was
+only given up in consequence of the determined opposition of the
+landowners; but the project was again revived through their means,
+and was eventually carried out after the designs of Smeaton and
+Brindley.
+
+While the Carron foundry was pursuing a career of safe prosperity,
+Dr. Roebuck's enterprise led him to embark in coal-mining, with the
+object of securing an improved supply of fuel for the iron works. He
+became the lessee of the Duke of Hamilton's extensive coal-mines at
+Boroughstoness, as well as of the salt-pans which were connected with
+them. The mansion of Kinneil went with the lease,and there Dr.
+Roebuck and his family took up their abode. Kinneil House was
+formerly a country seat of the Dukes of Hamilton, and is to this day
+a stately old mansion, reminding one of a French chateau. Its
+situation is of remarkable beauty, its windows overlooking the broad
+expanse of the Firth of Forth, and commanding an extensive view of
+the country along its northern shores. The place has become in a
+measure classical, Kinneil House having been inhabited, since Dr.
+Roebuck's time, by Dugald Stewart, who there wrote his Philosophical
+Essays.*
+ [footnote...
+Wilkie the painter once paid him a visit there while in Scotland
+studying the subject of his "Penny Wedding;" and Dugald Stewart found
+for him the old farm-house with the cradle-chimney, which he
+introduced in that picture. But Kinneil House has had its imaginary
+inhabitants as well as its real ones, the ghost of a Lady Lilburn,
+once an occupant of the place, still "haunting" some of the
+unoccupied chambers. Dugald Stewart told Wilkie one night, as he was
+going to bed, of the unearthly wailings which he himself had heard
+proceeding from the ancient apartments; but to him at least they had
+been explained by the door opening out upon the roof being blown in
+on gusty nights, when a jarring and creaking noise was heard all over
+the house. One advantage derived from the house being "haunted" was,
+that the garden was never broken into, and the winter apples and
+stores were at all times kept safe from depredation in the apartments
+of the Lady Lilburn.
+ ...]
+When Dr. Roebuck began to sink for coal at the new mines, he found it
+necessary to erect pumping-machinery of the most powerful kind that
+could be contrived, in order to keep the mines clear of water. For
+this purpose the Newcomen engine, in its then state, was found
+insufficient; and when Dr. Roebuck's friend, Professor Black, of
+Edinburgh, informed him of a young man of his acquaintance, a
+mathematical instrument maker at Glasgow, having invented a
+steam-engine calculated to work with increased power, speed, and
+economy, compared with Newcomen's; Dr. Roebuck was much interested,
+and shortly after entered into a correspondence with James Watt, the
+mathematical instrument maker aforesaid on the subject. The Doctor
+urged that Watt, who, up to that time, had confined himself to
+models, should come over to Kinneil House, and proceed to erect a
+working; engine in one of the outbuildings. The English workmen whom
+he had brought; to the Carron works would, he justly thought, give
+Watt a better chance of success with his engine than if made by the
+clumsy whitesmiths and blacksmiths of Glasgow, quite unaccustomed as
+they were to first-class work; and he proposed himself to cast the
+cylinders at Carron previous to Watt's intended visit to him at
+Kinneil.
+
+Watt paid his promised visit in May, 1768, and Roebuck was by this
+time so much interested in the invention, that the subject of his
+becoming a partner with Watt, with the object of introducing the
+engine into general use, was seriously discussed. Watt had been
+labouring at his invention for several years, contending with many
+difficulties, but especially with the main difficulty of limited
+means. He had borrowed considerable sums of money from Dr. Black to
+enable him to prosecute his experiments, and he felt the debt to hang
+like a millstone round his neck. Watt was a sickly, fragile man, and
+a constant sufferer from violent headaches; besides he was by nature
+timid, desponding, painfully anxious, and easily cast down by
+failure. Indeed, he was more than once on the point of abandoning his
+invention in despair. On the other hand, Dr. Roebuck was accustomed
+to great enterprises, a bold and undaunted man, and disregardful of
+expense where he saw before him a reasonable prospect of success. His
+reputation as a practical chemist and philosopher, and his success as
+the founder of the Prestonpans Chemical Works and of the Carron Iron
+Works, justified the friends of Watt in thinking that he was of all
+men the best calculated to help him at this juncture, and hence they
+sought to bring about a more intimate connection between the two. The
+result was that Dr. Roebuck eventually became a partner to the extent
+of two-thirds of the invention, took upon him the debt owing by Watt
+to Dr. Black amounting to about 1200L., and undertook to find the
+requisite money to protect the invention by means of a patent. The
+necessary steps were taken accordingly and the patent right was
+secured by the beginning of 1769, though the perfecting of his model
+cost Watt much further anxiety and study.
+
+It was necessary for Watt occasionally to reside with Dr. Roebuck at
+Kinneil House while erecting his first engine there. It had been
+originally intended to erect it in the neighbouring town of
+Boroughstoness, but as there might be prying eyes there, and Watt
+wished to do his work in privacy, determined "not to puff," he at
+length fixed upon an outhouse still standing, close behind the
+mansion, by the burnside in the glen, where there was abundance of
+water and secure privacy. Watt's extreme diffidence was often the
+subject of remark at Dr. Roebuck's fireside. To the Doctor his
+anxiety seemed quite painful, and he was very much disposed to
+despond under apparently trivial difficulties. Roebuck's hopeful
+nature was his mainstay throughout. Watt himself was ready enough to
+admit this; for, writing to his friend Dr.Small, he once said, "I
+have met with many disappointments; and I must have sunk under the
+burthen of them if I had not been supported by the friendship of Dr.
+Roebuck."
+
+But more serious troubles were rapidly accumulating upon Dr. Roebuck
+himself; and it was he, and not Watt, that sank under the burthen.
+The progress of Watt's engine was but slow, and long before it could
+be applied to the pumping of Roebuck's mines, the difficulties of the
+undertaking on which he had entered overwhelmed him. The opening out
+of the principal coal involved a very heavy outlay, extending over
+many years, during which he sank not only his own but his wife's
+fortune, and--what distressed him most of all--large sums borrowed
+from his relatives and friends, which he was unable to repay. The
+consequence was, that he was eventually under the necessity of
+withdrawing his capital from the refining works at Birmingham, and
+the vitriol works at Prestonpans. At the same time, he transferred to
+Mr. Boulton of Soho his entire interest in Watt's steam-engine, the
+value of which, by the way, was thought so small that it was not even
+included among the assets; Roebuck's creditors not estimating it as
+worth one farthing. Watt sincerely deplored his partner's
+misfortunes, but could not help him. "He has been a most sincere and
+generous friend," said Watt, "and is a truly worthy man." And again,
+"My heart bleeds for him, but I can do nothing to help him: I have
+stuck by him till I have much hurt myself; I can do so no longer; my
+family calls for my care to provide for them." The later years of Dr.
+Roebuck's life were spent in comparative obscurity; and he died in
+1794, in his 76th year.
+
+He lived to witness the success of the steam-engine, the opening up
+of the Boroughstoness coal,*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. Roebuck had been on the brink of great good fortune, but he did
+not know it. Mr. Ralph Moore, in his "Papers on the Blackband
+Ironstones" (Glasgow, 1861), observes: -- "Strange to say, he was
+leaving behind him, almost as the roof of one of the seams of coal
+which he worked, a valuable blackband ironstone, upon which Kinneil
+Iron Works are now founded. The coal-field continued to be worked
+until the accidental discovery of the blackband about 1845. The old
+coal-pits are now used for working the ironstone."
+ ...]
+and the rapid extension of the Scotch iron trade, though he shared in
+the prosperity of neither of those branches of industry. He had been
+working ahead of his age, and he suffered for it. He fell in the
+breach at the critical moment, and more fortunate men marched over
+his body into the fortress which his enterprise and valour had mainly
+contributed to win. Before his great undertaking of the Carron Works,
+Scotland was entirely dependent upon other countries for its supply
+of iron. In 1760, the first year of its operations, the whole produce
+was 1500 tons. In course of time other iron works were erected, at
+Clyde Cleugh, Muirkirk, and Devon--the managers and overseers of
+which, as well as the workmen, had mostly received their training and
+experience at Carron--until at length the iron trade of Scotland has
+assumed such a magnitude that its manufacturers are enabled to export
+to England and other countries upwards of 500,000 tons a-year. How
+different this state of things from the time when raids were made
+across the Border for the purpose of obtaining a store of iron
+plunder to be carried back into Scotland!
+
+The extraordinary expansion of the Scotch iron trade of late years
+has been mainly due to the discovery by David Mushet of the Black
+Band ironstone in 1801, and the invention of the Hot Blast by James
+Beaumont Neilson in 1828. David Mushet was born at Dalkeith, near
+Edinburgh, in 1772.*
+ [footnpote...
+The Mushets are an old Kincardine family; but they were almost
+extinguished by the plague in the reign of Charles the Second. Their
+numbers were then reduced to two; one of whom remained at Kincardine,
+and the other, a clergyman, the Rev. George Mushet , accompanied
+Montrose as chaplain. He is buried in Kincardine churchyard.
+ ...]
+Like other members of his family he was brought up to metal-founding.
+At the age of nineteen he joined the staff of the Clyde Iron Works,
+near Glasgow, at a time when the Company had only two blast-furnaces
+at work. The office of accountant, which he held, precluded him from
+taking any part in the manufacturing operations of the concern. But
+being of a speculative and ingenious turn of mind, the remarkable
+conversions which iron underwent in the process of manufacture very
+shortly began to occupy his attention. The subject was much discussed
+by the young men about the works, and they frequently had occasion to
+refer to Foureroy's well-known book for the purpose of determining
+various questions of difference which arose among them in the course
+of their inquiries. The book was, however, in many respects
+indecisive and unsatisfactory; and, in 1793, when a reduction took
+place in the Company's staff, and David Mushet was left nearly the
+sole occupant of the office, he determined to study the subject for
+himself experimentally, and in the first place to acquire a thorough
+knowledge of assaying, as the true key to the whole art of
+iron-making.
+
+He first set up his crucible upon the bridge of the reverberatory
+furnace used for melting pig-iron, and filled it with a mixture
+carefully compounded according to the formula of the books; but,
+notwithstanding the shelter of a brick, placed before it to break the
+action of the flame, the crucible generally split in two, and not
+unfrequently melted and disappeared altogether. To obtain better
+results if possible, he next had recourse to the ordinary smith's
+fire, carrying on his experiments in the evenings after office-hours.
+He set his crucible upon the fire on a piece of fire brick, opposite
+the nozzle of the bellows; covering the whole with coke, and then
+exciting the flame by blowing. This mode of operating produced
+somewhat better results, but still neither the iron nor the cinder
+obtained resembled the pig or scoria of the blast-furnace, which it
+was his ambition to imitate. From the irregularity of the results,
+and the frequent failure of the crucibles, he came to the conclusion
+that either his furnace, or his mode of fluxing, was in fault, and he
+looked about him for a more convenient means of pursuing his
+experiments. A small square furnace had been erected in the works for
+the purpose of heating the rivets used for the repair of steam-engine
+boilers; the furnace had for its chimney a cast-iron pipe six or
+seven inches in diameter and nine feet long. After a few trials with
+it, he raised the heat to such an extent that the lower end of the
+pipe was melted off, without producing any very satisfactory results
+on the experimental crucible, and his operations were again brought
+to a standstill. A chimney of brick having been substituted for the
+cast-iron pipe, he was, however, enabled to proceed with his trials.
+
+He continued to pursue his experiments in assaying for about two
+years, during which he had been working entirely after the methods
+described in books; but, feeling the results still unsatisfactory, he
+determined to borrow no more from the books, but to work out a system
+of his own, which should ensure results similar to those produced at
+the blast-furnace. This he eventually succeeded in effecting by
+numerous experiments performed in the night; as his time was fully
+occupied by his office-duties during the day. At length these patient
+experiments bore their due fruits. David Mushet became the most
+skilled assayer at the works; and when a difficulty occurred in
+smelting a quantity of new ironstone which had been contracted for,
+the manager himself resorted to the bookkeeper for advice and
+information; and the skill and experience which he had gathered
+during his nightly labours, enabled him readily and satisfactorily to
+solve the difficulty and suggest a suitable remedy. His reward for
+this achievement was the permission, which was immediately granted
+him by the manager, to make use of his own assay-furnace, in which he
+thenceforward continued his investigations, at the same time that he
+instructed the manager's son in the art of assaying. This additional
+experience proved of great benefit to him; and he continued to
+prosecute his inquiries with much zeal, sometimes devoting entire
+nights to experiments in assaying, roasting and cementing iron-ores
+and ironstone, decarbonating cast-iron for steel and bar-iron, and
+various like operations. His general practice, however, at that time
+was, to retire between two and three o'clock in the morning, leaving
+directions with the engine-man to call him at half-past five, so as
+to be present in the office at six. But these praiseworthy
+experiments were brought to a sudden end, as thus described by
+himself: --
+
+"In the midst of my career of investigation," says he,*
+ [footnote...
+Papers on Iron and Steel. By David Mushet. London, 1840.
+ ...]
+"and without a cause being assigned, I was stopped short. My
+furnaces, at the order of the manager, were pulled in pieces, and an
+edict was passed that they should never be erected again. Thus
+terminated my researches at the Clyde Iron Works. It happened at a
+time when I was interested--and I had been two years previously
+occupied--in an attempt to convert cast-iron into steel, without
+fusion, by a process of cementation, which had for its object the
+dispersion or absorption of the superfluous carbon contained in the
+cast-iron,--an object which at that time appeared to me of so great
+importance, that, with the consent of a friend, I erected an assay
+and cementing Furnace at the distance of about two miles from the
+Clyde Works. Thither I repaired at night, and sometimes at the
+breakfast and dinner hours during the day. This plan of operation was
+persevered in for the whole of one summer, but was found too
+uncertain and laborious to be continued. At the latter end of the
+year 1798 I left my chambers, and removed from the Clyde Works to the
+distance of about a mile, where I constructed several furnaces for
+assaying and cementing, capable of exciting a greater temperature
+than any to which I before had access; and thus for nearly two years
+I continued to carry on my investigations connected with iron and the
+alloys of the metals.
+
+"Though operating in a retired manner, and holding little
+communication with others, my views and opinions upon the RATIONALE
+of iron-making spread over the establishment. I was considered
+forward in affecting to see and explain matters in a different way
+from others who were much my seniors, and who were content to be
+satisfied with old methods of explanation, or with no explanation at
+all..... Notwithstanding these early reproaches, I have lived to see
+the nomenclature of my youth furnish a vocabulary of terms in the art
+of iron-making, which is used by many of the ironmasters of the
+present day with freedom and effect, in communicating with each other
+on the subject of their respective manufactures. Prejudices seldom
+outlive the generation to which they belong, when opposed by a more
+rational system of explanation. In this respect, Time (as my Lord
+Bacon says) is the greatest of all innovators.
+
+"In a similar manner, Time operated in my favour in respect to the
+Black Band Ironstone.*
+ [footnote...
+This valuable description of iron ore was discovered by Mr. Mushet,
+as he afterwards informs us (Papers on Iron and Steel, 121),in the
+year 1801, when crossing the river Calder, in the parish of Old
+Monkland. Having subjected a specimen which he found in the river-bed
+to the test of his crucible, he satisfied himself as to its
+properties, and proceeded to ascertain its geological position and
+relations. He shortly found that it belonged to the upper part of the
+coal-formation, and hence he designated it carboniferous ironstone.
+He prosecuted his researches, and found various rich beds of the
+mineral distributed throughout the western counties of Scotland. On
+analysis, it was found to contain a little over 50 per cent. of
+protoxide of iron. The coaly matter it contained was not its least
+valuable ingredient; for by the aid of the hot blast it was
+afterwards found practicable to smelt it almost without any addition
+of coal. Seams of black band have since been discovered and
+successfully worked in Edinburghshire, Staffordshire, and North
+Wales.
+ ...]
+The discovery of this was made in 1801, when I was engaged in
+erecting for myself and partners the Calder Iron Works. Great
+prejudice was excited against me by the ironmasters and others of
+that day in presuming to class the WILD COALS of the country (as
+Black Band was called) with ironstone fit and proper for the blast
+furnace. Yet that discovery has elevated Scotland to a considerable
+rank among the iron-making nations of Europe, with resources still in
+store that may be considered inexhaustible. But such are the
+consolatory effects of Time, that the discoverer of 1801 is no longer
+considered the intrusive visionary of the laboratory, but the
+acknowledged benefactor of his country at large, and particularly of
+an extensive class of coal and mine proprietors and iron masters, who
+have derived, and are still deriving, great wealth from this
+important discovery; and who, in the spirit of grateful
+acknowledgment, have pronounced it worthy of a crown of gold, or a
+monumental record on the spot where the discovery was first made.
+
+"At an advanced period of life, such considerations are soothing and
+satisfactory. Many under similar circumstances have not, in their own
+lifetime, had that measure of justice awarded to them by their
+country to which they were equally entitled. I accept it, however, as
+a boon justly due to me, and as an equivalent in some degree for that
+laborious course of investigation which I had prescribed for myself,
+and which, in early life, was carried on under circumstances of
+personal exposure and inconvenience, which nothing but a frame of
+iron could have supported. They atone also ,in part, for that
+disappointment sustained in early life by the speculative habits of
+one partner, and the constitutional nervousness of another, which
+eventually occasioned my separation from the Calder Iron Works, and
+lost me the possession of extensive tracts of Black Band iron-stone,
+which I had secured while the value of the discovery was known only
+to myself."
+
+Mr. Mushet published the results of his laborious investigations in a
+series of papers in the Philosophical Magazine,--afterwards reprinted
+in a collected form in 1840 under the title of "Papers on Iron and
+Steel." These papers are among the most valuable original
+contributions to the literature of the iron-manufacture that have yet
+been given to the world. They contain the germs of many inventions
+and discoveries in iron and steel, some of which were perfected by
+Mr. Mushet himself, while others were adopted and worked out by
+different experimenters. In 1798 some of the leading French chemists
+were endeavouring to prove by experiment that steel could be made by
+contact of the diamond with bar-iron in the crucible, the carbon of
+the diamond being liberated and entering into combination with the
+iron, forming steel. In the animated controversy which occurred on
+the subject, Mr. Mushet's name was brought into considerable notice;
+one of the subjects of his published experiments having been the
+conversion of bar-iron into steel in the crucible by contact with
+regulated proportions of charcoal. The experiments which he made in
+connection with this controversy, though in themselves unproductive
+of results, led to the important discovery by Mr. Mushet of the
+certain fusibility of malleable iron at a suitable temperature.
+
+Among the other important results of Mr. Mushet's lifelong labours,
+the following may be summarily mentioned: The preparation of steel
+from bar-iron by a direct process, combining the iron with carbon;
+the discovery of the beneficial effects of oxide of manganese on iron
+and steel; the use of oxides of iron in the puddling-furnace in
+various modes of appliance; the production of pig-iron from the
+blast-furnace, suitable for puddling, without the intervention of the
+refinery; and the application of the hot blast to anthracite coal in
+iron-smelting. For the process of combining iron with carbon for the
+production of steel, Mr. Mushet took out a patent in November, 1800;
+and many years after, when he had discovered the beneficial effects
+of oxide of manganese on steel, Mr. Josiah Heath founded upon it his
+celebrated patent for the making of cast-steel, which had the effect
+of raising the annual production of that metal in Sheffield from 3000
+to 100,000 tons. His application of the hot blast to anthracite coal,
+after a process invented by him and adopted by the Messrs. Hill of
+the Plymouth Iron Works, South Wales, had the effect of producing
+savings equal to about 20,000L. a year at those works; and yet,
+strange to say, Mr. Mushet himself never received any consideration
+for his invention.
+
+The discovery of Titanium by Mr. Mushet in the hearth of a
+blast-furnace in 1794 would now be regarded as a mere isolated fact,
+inasmuch as Titanium was not placed in the list of recognised metals
+until Dr. Wollaston, many years later, ascertained its qualities. But
+in connection with the fact, it may be mentioned that Mr. Mushet's
+youngest son, Robert, reasoning on the peculiar circumstances of the
+discovery in question, of which ample record is left, has founded
+upon it his Titanium process, which is expected by him eventually to
+supersede all other methods of manufacturing steel, and to reduce
+very materially the cost of its production.
+
+While he lived, Mr. Mushet was a leading authority on all matters
+connected with Iron and Steel, and he contributed largely to the
+scientific works of his time. Besides his papers in the Philosophical
+Journal, he wrote the article "Iron" for Napiers Supplement to the
+Encyclopaedia Britannica; and the articles "Blast Furnace" and
+"Blowing Machine" for Rees's Cyclopaedia. The two latter articles had
+a considerable influence on the opposition to the intended tax upon
+iron in 1807, and were frequently referred to in the discussions on
+the subject in Parliament. Mr. Mushet died in 1847.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+INVENTION OF THE HOT BLAST--JAMES BEAUMONT NEILSON.
+
+"Whilst the exploits of the conqueror and the intrigues of the
+demagogue are faithfully preserved through a succession of ages, the
+persevering and unobtrusive efforts of genius, developing the best
+blessings of the Deity to man, are often consigned to oblivion."--
+David Mushet.
+
+
+The extraordinary value of the Black Band ironstone was not at first
+duly recognised, perhaps not even by Mr. Mushet himself. For several
+years after its discovery by him, its use was confined to the Calder
+Iron Works, where it was employed in mixture with other ironstones of
+the argillaceous class. It was afterwards partially used at the Clyde
+Iron Works, but nowhere else, a strong feeling of prejudice being
+entertained against it on the part of the iron trade generally. It
+was not until the year 1825 that the Monkland Company used it alone,
+without any other mixture than the necessary quantity of limestone
+for a flux. "The success of this Company," says Mr. Mushet, "soon
+gave rise to the Gartsherrie and Dundyvan furnaces, in the midst of
+which progress came the use of raw pit-coal and the Hot Blast--the
+latter one of the greatest discoveries in metallurgy of the present
+age, and, above every other process, admirably adapted for smelting
+the Blackband ironstone." From the introduction of this process the
+extraordinary development of the iron-manufacture of Scotland may be
+said to date; and we accordingly propose to devote the present
+chapter to an account of its meritorious inventor.
+
+James Beaumont Neilson was born at Shettleston, a roadside village
+about three miles eastward of Glasgow, on the 22nd of June, 1792. His
+parents belonged to the working class. His father's earnings during
+many laborious years of his life did not exceed sixteen shillings a
+week. He had been bred to the trade of a mill-wright, and was for
+some time in the employment of Dr. Roebuck as an engine-wright at his
+colliery near Boroughstoness. He was next employed in a like capacity
+by Mr. Beaumont, the mineral-manager of the collieries of Mrs.
+Cunningham of Lainshaw, near Irvine in Ayrshire; after which he was
+appointed engine-wright at Ayr, and subsequently at the Govan Coal
+Works near Glasgow, where he remained until his death. It was while
+working at the Irvine Works that he first became acquainted with his
+future wife, Marion Smith, the daughter of a Renfrewshire bleacher, a
+woman remarkable through life for her clever, managing, and
+industrious habits. She had the charge of Mrs. Cunningham's children
+for some time after the marriage of that lady to Mr. Beaumont, and it
+was in compliment to her former mistress and her husband that she
+named her youngest son James Beaumont after the latter.
+
+The boy's education was confined to the common elements of reading,
+writing, and arithmetic, which he partly acquired at the parish
+school of Strathbungo near Glasgow, and partly at the Chapel School,
+as it was called, in the Gorbals at Glasgow. He had finally left
+school before he was fourteen. Some time before he left, he had been
+partially set to work, and earned four shillings a week by employing
+a part of each day in driving a small condensing engine which his
+father had put up in a neighbouring quarry. After leaving school, he
+was employed for two years as a gig boy on one of the winding engines
+at the Govan colliery. His parents now considered him of fit age to
+be apprenticed to some special trade, and as Beaumont had much of his
+father's tastes for mechanical pursuits, it was determined to put him
+apprentice to a working engineer. His elder brother John was then
+acting as engineman at Oakbank near Glasgow, and Beaumont was
+apprenticed under him to learn the trade. John was a person of a
+studious and serious turn of mind, and had been strongly attracted to
+follow the example of the brothers Haldane, who were then exciting
+great interest by their preaching throughout the North; but his
+father set his face against his son's "preaching at the back o'
+dikes," as he called it; and so John quietly settled down to his
+work. The engine which the two brothers managed was a very small one,
+and the master and apprentice served for engineman and fireman. Here
+the youth worked for three years, employing his leisure hours in the
+evenings in remedying the defects of his early education, and
+endeavouring to acquire a knowledge of English grammar, drawing, and
+mathematics.
+
+On the expiry of his apprenticeship, Beaumont continued for a time to
+work under his brother as journeyman at a guinea a week; after which,
+in 1814, he entered the employment of William Taylor, coal-master at
+Irvine, and he was appointed engine-wright of the colliery at a
+salary of from 70L. to 80L. a year. One of the improvements which he
+introduced in the working of the colliery, while he held that office,
+was the laying down of an edge railway of cast-iron, in lengths of
+three feet, from the pit to the harbour of Irvine, a distance of
+three miles. At the age of 23 he married his first wife, Barbara
+Montgomerie, an Irvine lass, with a "tocher" of 250L. This little
+provision was all the more serviceable to him, as his master, Taylor,
+becoming unfortunate in business, he was suddenly thrown out of
+employment, and the little fortune enabled the newly-married pair to
+hold their heads above water till better days came round. They took a
+humble tenement, consisting of a room and a kitchen, in the
+Cowcaddens, Glasgow, where their first child was born.
+
+About this time a gas-work, the first in Glasgow, was projected, and
+the company having been formed, the directors advertised for a
+superintendent and foreman, to whom they offered a "liberal salary."
+Though Beaumont had never seen gaslight before, except at the
+illumination of his father's colliery office after the Peace of
+Amiens, which was accomplished in a very simple and original manner,
+without either condenser, purifier, or gas-holder, and though he knew
+nothing of the art of gas-making, he had the courage to apply for the
+situation. He was one of twenty candidates, and the fortunate one;
+and in August, 1817, we find him appointed foreman of the Glasgow
+Gasworks, for five years, at the salary of 90L. a year. Before the
+expiry of his term he was reappointed for six years more, at the
+advanced salary of 200L., with the status of manager and engineer of
+the works. His salary was gradually increased to 400L. a year, with a
+free dwelling-house, until 1847, when, after a faithful service of
+thirty years, during which he had largely extended the central works,
+and erected branch works in Tradeston and Partick, he finally
+resigned the management.
+
+The situation of manager of the Glasgow Gas-works was in many
+respects well suited for the development of Mr. Neilson's peculiar
+abilities. In the first place it afforded him facilities for
+obtaining theoretical as well as practical knowledge in Chemical
+Science, of which he was a diligent student at the Andersonian
+University, as well as of Natural Philosophy and Mathematics in their
+higher branches. In the next place it gave free scope for his
+ingenuity in introducing improvements in the manufacture of gas, then
+in its infancy. He was the first to employ clay retorts; and he
+introduced sulphate of iron as a self-acting purifier, passing the
+gas through beds of charcoal to remove its oily and tarry elements.
+The swallow-tail or union jet was also his invention, and it has
+since come into general use.
+
+While managing the Gas-works, one of Mr.Neilson's labours of love was
+the establishment and direction by him of a Workmen's Institution for
+mutual improvement. Having been a workman himself, and experienced
+the disadvantages of an imperfect education in early life, as well as
+the benefits arising from improved culture in later years, he desired
+to impart some of these advantages to the workmen in his employment,
+who consisted chiefly of persons from remote parts of the Highlands
+or from Ireland. Most of them could not even read, and his principal
+difficulty consisted in persuading them that it was of any use to
+learn. For some time they resisted his persuasions to form a
+Workmen's Institution, with a view to the establishment of a library,
+classes, and lectures, urging as a sufficient plea for not joining
+it, that they could not read, and that books would be of no use to
+them. At last Mr. Neilson succeeded, though with considerable
+difficulty, in inducing fourteen of the workmen to adopt his plan.
+Each member was to contribute a small sum monthly, to be laid out in
+books, the Gas Company providing the members with a comfortable room
+in which they might meet to read and converse in the evenings instead
+of going to the alehouse. The members were afterwards allowed to take
+the books home to read, and the room was used for the purpose of
+conversation on the subjects of the books read by them, and
+occasionally for lectures delivered by the members themselves on
+geography, arithmetic, chemistry, and mechanics. Their numbers
+increased so that the room in which they met became insufficient for
+their accommodation, when the Gas Company provided them with a new
+and larger place of meeting, together with a laboratory and workshop.
+In the former they studied practical chemistry, and in the latter
+they studied practical mechanics, making for themselves an air pump
+and an electrifying machine, as well as preparing the various models
+used in the course of the lectures. The effects on the workmen were
+eminently beneficial, and the institution came to be cited as among
+the most valuable of its kind in the kingdom.*
+ [footnote...
+Article by Dugald Bannatyne in Glasgow Mechanic's Magazine, No. 53,
+Dec. 1824.
+ ...]
+Mr. Neilson throughout watched carefully over its working, and
+exerted himself in all ways to promote its usefulness, in which he
+had the zealous co-operation of the leading workmen themselves, and
+the gratitude of all. On the opening of the new and enlarged rooms in
+1825, we find him delivering an admirable address, which was thought
+worthy of republication, together with the reply of George
+Sutherland, one of the workmen, in which Mr. Neilson's exertions as
+its founder and chief supporter were gratefully and forcibly
+expressed.*
+ [footnote...
+Glasgow Mechanic's Magazine, vol. iii. p. 159.
+ ...]
+
+It was during the period of his connection with the Glasgow Gas-works
+that Mr. Neilson directed his attention to the smelting of iron. His
+views in regard to the subject were at first somewhat crude, as
+appears from a paper read by him before the Glasgow Philosophical
+Society early in 1825. It appears that in the course of the preceding
+year his attention had been called to the subject by an iron-maker,
+who asked him if he thought it possible to purify the air blown into
+the blast furnaces, in like manner as carburetted hydrogen gas was
+purified. The ironmaster supposed that it was the presence of sulphur
+in the air that caused blast-furnaces to work irregularly, and to
+make bad iron in the summer months. Mr. Neilson was of opinion that
+this was not the true cause, and he was rather disposed to think it
+attributable to the want of a due proportion of oxygen in summer,
+when the air was more rarefied, besides containing more aqueous
+vapour than in winter. He therefore thought the true remedy was in
+some way or other to throw in a greater proportion of oxygen; and he
+suggested that, in order to dry the air, it should be passed, on its
+way to the furnace, through two long tunnels containing calcined
+lime. But further inquiry served to correct his views, and eventually
+led him to the true theory of blasting.
+
+Shortly after, his attention was directed by Mr. James Ewing to a
+defect in one of the Muirkirk blast-furnaces, situated about half a
+mile distant from the blowing-engine, which was found not to work so
+well as others which were situated close to it. The circumstances of
+the case led Mr. Neilson to form the opinion that, as air increases
+in volume according to temperature, if he were to heat it by passing
+it through a red-hot vessel, its volume would be increased, according
+to the well-known law, and the blast might thus be enabled to do more
+duty in the distant furnace. He proceeded to make a series of
+experiments at the Gas-works, trying the effect of heated air on the
+illuminating power of gas, by bringing up a stream of it in a tube so
+as to surround the gas-burner. He found that by this means the
+combustion of the gas was rendered more intense, and its illuminating
+power greatly increased. He proceeded to try a similar experiment on
+a common smith's fire, by blowing the fire with heated air, and the
+effect was the same; the fire was much more brilliant, and
+accompanied by an unusually intense degree of heat.
+
+Having obtained such marked results by these small experiments, it
+naturally occurred to him that a similar increase in intensity of
+combustion and temperature would attend the application of the
+process to the blast-furnace on a large scale; but being only a
+gas-maker, he had the greatest difficulty in persuading any
+ironmaster to permit him to make the necessary experiment's with
+blast-furnaces actually at work. Besides, his theory was altogether
+at variance with the established practice, which was to supply air as
+cold as possible, the prevailing idea being that the coldness of the
+air in winter was the cause of the best iron being then produced.
+Acting on these views, the efforts of the ironmasters had always been
+directed to the cooling of the blast, and various expedients were
+devised for the purpose. Thus the regulator was painted white, as
+being the coolest colour; the air was passed over cold water, and in
+some cases the air pipes were even surrounded by ice, all with the
+object of keeping the blast cold. When, therefore, Mr. Neilson
+proposed entirely to reverse the process, and to employ hot instead
+of cold blast, the incredulity of the ironmasters may well be
+imagined. What! Neilson, a mere maker of gas, undertake to instruct
+practical men in the manufacture of iron! And to suppose that heated
+air can be used for the purpose! It was presumption in the extreme,
+or at best the mere visionary idea of a person altogether
+unacquainted with the subject!
+
+At length, however, Mr. Neilson succeeded in inducing Mr. Charles
+Macintosh of Crossbasket, and Mr. Colin Dunlop of the Clyde Iron
+Works, to allow him to make a trial of the hot air process. In the
+first imperfect attempts the air was heated to little more than 80
+degrees Fahrenheit, yet the results were satisfactory, and the
+scoriae from the furnace evidently contained less iron. He was
+therefore desirous of trying his plan upon a more extensive scale,
+with the object, if possible, of thoroughly establishing the
+soundness of his principle. In this he was a good deal hampered even
+by those ironmasters who were his friends, and had promised him the
+requisite opportunities for making a fair trial of the new process.
+They strongly objected to his making the necessary alterations in the
+furnaces, and he seemed to be as far from a satisfactory experiment
+as ever. In one instance, where he had so far succeeded as to be
+allowed to heat the blast-main, he asked permission to introduce
+deflecting plates in the main or to put a bend in the pipe, so as to
+bring the blast more closely against the heated sides of the pipe,
+and also increase the area of heating surface, in order to raise the
+temperature to a higher point; but this was refused, and it was said
+that if even a bend were put in the pipe the furnace would stop
+working. These prejudices proved a serious difficulty in the way of
+our inventor, and several more years passed before he was allowed to
+put a bend in the blast-main. After many years of perseverance, he
+was, however, at length enabled to work out his plan into a definite
+shape at the Clyde Iron Works, and its practical value was at once
+admitted. At the meeting of the Mechanical Engineers' Society held in
+May, 1859, Mr. Neilson explained that his invention consisted solely
+in the principle of heating the blast between the engine and the
+furnace, and was not associated with any particular construction of
+the intermediate heating apparatus. This, he said, was the cause of
+its success; and in some respects it resembled the invention of his
+countryman, James Watt, who, in connection with the steam-engine,
+invented the plan of condensing the steam in a separate vessel, and
+was successful in maintaining his invention by not limiting it to any
+particular construction of the condenser. On the same occasion he
+took the opportunity of acknowledging the firmness with which the
+English ironmasters had stood by him when attempts were made to
+deprive him of the benefits of his invention; and to them he
+acknowledged he was mainly indebted for the successful issue of the
+severe contests he had to undergo. For there were, of course, certain
+of the ironmasters, both English and Scotch, supporters of the cause
+of free trade in others' inventions, who sought to resist the patent,
+after it had come into general use, and had been recognised as one of
+the most valuable improvements of modem times.*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Mushet described it as "a wonderful discovery," and one of the
+"most novel and beautiful improvements in his time." Professor
+Gregory of Aberdeen characterized it as "the greatest improvement
+with which he was acquainted." Mr. Jessop, an extensive English iron
+manufacturer, declared it to be "of as great advantage in the iron
+trade as Arkwright's machinery was in the cotton-spinning trade; and
+Mr. Fairbairn, in his contribution on "Iron" in the Encyclopaedia
+Britannica, says that it "has effected an entire revolution in the
+iron industry of Great Britain, and forms the last era in the history
+of this material."
+ ...]
+
+The patent was secured in 1828 for a term of fourteen years; but, as
+Mr. Neilson did not himself possess the requisite capital to enable
+him to perfect the invention, or to defend it if attacked, he found
+it necessary to invite other gentlemen, able to support him in these
+respects, to share its profits; retaining for himself only
+three-tenths of the whole. His partners were Mr. Charles Macintosh,
+Mr. Colin Dunlop, and Mr.John Wilson of Dundyvan. The charge made by
+them was only a shilling a ton for all iron produced by the new
+process; this low rate being fixed in order to ensure the
+introduction of the patent into general use, as well as to reduce to
+a minimum the temptations of the ironmasters to infringe it.
+
+The first trials of the process were made at the blast-furnaces of
+Clyde and Calder; from whence the use of the hot blast gradually
+extended to the other iron-mining districts. In the course of a few
+years every furnace in Scotland, with one exception (that at Carron),
+had adopted the improvement; while it was also employed in half the
+furnaces of England and Wales, and in many of the furnaces on the
+Continent and in America. In course of time, and with increasing
+experience, various improvements were introduced in the process, more
+particularly in the shape of the air-heating vessels; the last form
+adopted being that of a congeries of tubes, similar to the tubular
+arrangement in the boiler of the locomotive, by which the greatest
+extent of heating surface was provided for the thorough heating of
+the air. By these modifications the temperature of the air introduced
+into the furnace has been raised from 240 degrees to 600 degrees, or
+the temperature of melting lead. To protect the nozzle of the
+air-pipe as it entered the furnace against the action of the intense
+heat to which it was subjected, a spiral pipe for a stream of cold
+water constantly to play in has been introduced within the sides of
+the iron tuyere through which the nozzle passes; by which means the
+tuyere is kept comparatively cool, while the nozzle of the air-pipe
+is effectually protected.*
+ [footnote...
+The invention of the tubular air-vessels and the water-tuyere
+belongs, we believe, to Mr. John Condie, sometime manager of the
+Blair Iron Works.
+ ...]
+
+This valuable invention did not escape the usual fate of successful
+patents, and it was on several occasions the subject of protracted
+litigation. The first action occurred in 1832; but the objectors
+shortly gave in, and renewed their licence. In 1839, when the process
+had become generally adopted throughout Scotland, and, indeed, was
+found absolutely essential for smelting the peculiar ores of that
+country--more especially Mushet's Black Band--a powerful combination
+was formed amongst the ironmasters to resist the patent. The
+litigation which ensued extended over five years, during which period
+some twenty actions were proceeding in Scotland, and several in
+England. Three juries sat upon the subject at different times, and on
+three occasions appeals were carried to the House of Lords. One jury
+trial occupied ten days, during which a hundred and two witnesses
+were examined; the law costs on both sides amounting, it is supposed,
+to at least 40,000L. The result was, that the novelty and merit of
+Mr. Neilson's invention were finally established, and he was secured
+in the enjoyment of the patent right.
+
+We are gratified to add, that, though Mr. Neilson had to part with
+two-thirds of the profits of the invention to secure the capital and
+influence necessary to bring it into general use, he realized
+sufficient to enable him to enjoy the evening of his life in peace
+and comfort. He retired from active business to an estate which he
+purchased in 1851 in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, where he is
+found ready to lend a hand in every good work--whether in
+agricultural improvement, railway extension, or the moral and social
+good of those about him. Mindful of the success of his Workmen's
+Institution at the Glasgow Gas-Works, he has, almost at his own door,
+erected a similar Institution for the use of the parish in which his
+property is situated, the beneficial effects of which have been very
+marked in the district. We may add that Mr. Neilson's merits have
+been recognised by many eminent bodies--by the Institution of Civil
+Engineers, the Chemical Society, and others--the last honour
+conferred on him being his election as a Member of the Royal Society
+in 1846.
+
+The invention of the hot blast, in conjunction with the discovery of
+the Black Band ironstone, has had an extra ordinary effect upon the
+development of the iron-manufacture of Scotland. The coals of that
+country are generally unfit for coking, and lose as much as 55 per
+cent. in the process. But by using the hot blast, the coal could be
+sent to the blast-furnace in its raw state, by which a large saving
+of fuel was effected.*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Mushet says, "The greatest produce in iron per furnace with the
+Black Band and cold blast never exceeded 60 tons a-week. The produce
+per furnace now averages 90 tons a-week. Ten tons of this I attribute
+to the use of raw pit-coal, and the other twenty tons to the use of
+hot blast." [Papers on Iron and Steel, 127.] The produce per furnace
+is now 200 tons a-week and upwards. The hot blast process was
+afterwards applied to the making of iron with the anthracite or stone
+coal of Wales; for which a patent was taken out by George Crane in
+1836. Before the hot blast was introduced, anthracite coal would not
+act as fuel in the blast-furnace. When put in, it merely had the
+effect of putting the fire out. With the aid of the hot blast,
+however, it now proves to be a most valuable fuel in smelting.
+ ...]
+Even coals of an inferior quality were by its means made available
+for the manufacture of iron. But one of the peculiar qualities of the
+Black Band ironstone is that in many cases it contains sufficient
+coaly matter for purposes of calcination, without any admixture of
+coal whatever. Before its discovery, all the iron manufactured in
+Scotland was made from clay-band; but the use of the latter has in a
+great measure been discontinued wherever a sufficient supply of Black
+Band can be obtained. And it is found to exist very extensively in
+most of the midland Scotch counties,--the coal and iron measures
+stretching in a broad belt from the Firth of Forth to the Irish
+Channel at the Firth of Clyde. At the time when the hot blast was
+invented, the fortunes of many of the older works were at a low ebb,
+and several of them had been discontinued; but they were speedily
+brought to life again wherever Black Band could be found. In 1829,
+the year after Neilson's patent was taken out, the total make of
+Scotland was 29,000 tons. As fresh discoveries of the mineral were
+made, in Ayrshire and Lanarkshire, new works were erected, until, in
+1845, we find the production of Scotch pig-iron had increased to
+475,000 tons. It has since increased to upwards of a million of tons,
+nineteen-twentieths of which are made from Black Band ironstone.*
+ [footnote...
+It is stated in the North British Review for Nov. 1845, that "As in
+Scotland every furnace--with the exception of one at Carron--now uses
+the hot blast the saving on our present produce of 400,000 tons of
+pig-iron is 2,000,000 tons of coals, 200,000 tons of limestone, and
+#650,000 sterling per annum." But as the Scotch produce is now above
+a million tons of pig-iron a year, the above figures will have to be
+multiplied by 2 1/2 to give the present annual savings.
+ ...]
+
+Employment has thus been given to vast numbers of our industrial
+population, and the wealth and resources of the Scotch iron districts
+have been increased to an extraordinary extent. During the last year
+there were 125 furnaces in blast throughout Scotland, each employing
+about 400 men in making an average of 200 tons a week; and the money
+distributed amongst the workmen may readily be computed from the fact
+that, under the most favourable circumstances, the cost of making
+iron in wages alone amounts to 36s. a-ton.*
+ [footnote...
+Papers read by Mr. Ralph Moore, Mining Engineer, Glasgow, before the
+Royal Scottish Society of Arts, Edin. 1861, pp. 13, 14.
+ ...]
+
+An immense additional value was given to all land in which the Black
+Band was found. Mr. Mushet mentions that in 1839 the proprietor of
+the Airdrie estate derived a royalty of 16,500L. from the mineral,
+which had not before its discovery yielded him one farthing. At the
+same time, many fortunes have been made by pushing and energetic men
+who have of late years entered upon this new branch of industry.
+Amongst these may be mentioned the Bairds of Gartsherrie, who vie
+with the Guests and Crawshays of South Wales, and have advanced
+themselves in the course of a very few years from the station of
+small farmers to that of great capitalists owning estates in many
+counties, holding the highest character commercial men, and ranking
+among the largest employers of labour in the kingdom.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MECHANICAL INVENTIONS AND INVENTORS.
+
+"L'invention nest-elle pas la poesie de la science? . . . Toutes les
+grandes decouvertes portent avec elles la trace ineffacable d'une
+pensee poetique. ll faut etre poete pour creer. Aussi, sommes-nous
+convaincus que si les puissantes machines, veritable source de la
+production et de l'industrie de nos jours, doivent recevoir des
+modifications radicales, ce sera a des hommes d'imagination, et non
+point a dea hommes purement speciaux, que l'on devra cette
+transformation."--E. M. BATAILLE, Tr aite des Machines a Vapeur.
+
+
+Tools have played a highly important part in the history of
+civilization. Without tools and the ability to use them, man were
+indeed but a "poor, bare, forked animal,"--worse clothed than the
+birds, worse housed than the beaver, worse fed than the jackal. "Weak
+in himself," says Carlyle, "and of small stature, he stands on a
+basis, at most for the flattest-soled, of some half square foot,
+insecurely enough; has to straddle out his legs, Jest the very wind
+supplant him. Feeblest of bipeds! Three quintals are a crushing load
+for him; the steer of the meadow tosses him aloft like a waste rag.
+Nevertheless he can use tools, can devise tools: with these the
+granite mountain melts into light dust before him; he kneads glowing
+iron as if it were soft paste; seas are his smooth highway, winds and
+fire his unvarying steeds. Nowhere do you find him without tools:
+without tools he is nothing; with tools he is all." His very first
+contrivances to support life were tools of the simplest and rudest
+construction; and his latest achievements in the substitution of
+machinery for the relief of the human hand and intellect are founded
+on the use of tools of a still higher order. Hence it is not without
+good reason that man has by some philosophers been defined as A
+TOOL-MAKING ANIMAL.
+
+Tools, like everything else, had small beginnings. With the primitive
+stone-hammer and chisel very little could be done. The felling of a
+tree would occupy a workman a month, unless helped by the destructive
+action of fire. Dwellings could not be built, the soil could not be
+tilled, clothes could not be fashioned and made, and the hewing out
+of a boat was so tedious a process that the wood must have been far
+gone in decay before it could be launched. It was a great step in
+advance to discover the art of working in metals, more especially in
+steel, one of the few metals capable of taking a sharp edge and
+keeping it. From the date of this discovery, working in wood and
+stone would be found comparatively easy; and the results must
+speedily have been felt not only in the improvement of man's daily
+food, but in his domestic and social condition. Clothing could then
+be made, the primitive forest could be cleared and tillage carried
+on; abundant fuel could be obtained, dwellings erected, ships built,
+temples reared; every improvement in tools marking a new step in the
+development of the human intellect, and a further stage in the
+progress of human civilization.
+
+The earliest tools were of the simplest possible character,
+consisting principally of modifications of the wedge; such as the
+knife, the shears (formed of two knives working on a joint), the
+chisel, and the axe. These, with the primitive hammer, formed the
+principal stock-in-trade of the early mechanics, who were
+handicraftsmen in the literal sense of the word. But the work which
+the early craftsmen in wood, stone, brass, and iron, contrived to
+execute, sufficed to show how much expertness in the handling of
+tools will serve to compensate for their mechanical imperfections.
+Workmen then sought rather to aid muscular strength than to supersede
+it, and mainly to facilitate the efforts of manual skill. Another
+tool became added to those mentioned above, which proved an
+additional source of power to the workman. We mean the Saw, which was
+considered of so much importance that its inventor was honoured with
+a place among the gods in the mythology of the Greeks. This invention
+is said to have been suggested by the arrangement of the teeth in the
+jaw of a serpent, used by Talus the nephew of Daedalus in dividing a
+piece of wood. From the representations of ancient tools found in the
+paintings at Herculaneum it appears that the frame-saw used by the
+ancients very nearly resembled that still in use; and we are informed
+that the tools employed in the carpenters' shops at Nazareth at this
+day are in most respects the same as those represented in the buried
+Roman city. Another very ancient tool referred to in the Bible and in
+Homer was the File, which was used to sharpen weapons and implements.
+Thus the Hebrews "had a file for the mattocks, and for the coulters,
+and for the forks, and for the axes, and to sharpen the goads."*
+ [footnote...
+1 Samuel, ch. xiii. v. 21.
+ ...]
+When to these we add the adze, plane-irons, the anger, and the
+chisel, we sum up the tools principally relied on by the early
+mechanics for working in wood and iron.
+
+Such continued to be the chief tools in use down almost to our own
+day. The smith was at first the principal tool-maker; but special
+branches of trade were gradually established, devoted to tool-making.
+So long, however, as the workman relied mainly on his dexterity of
+hand, the amount of production was comparatively limited; for the
+number of skilled workmen was but small. The articles turned out by
+them, being the product of tedious manual labour, were too dear to
+come into common use, and were made almost exclusively for the richer
+classes of the community. It was not until machinery had been
+invented and become generally adopted that many of the ordinary
+articles of necessity and of comfort were produced in sufficient
+abundance and at such prices as enabled them to enter into the
+consumption of the great body of the people.
+
+But every improver of tools had a long and difficult battle to fight;
+for any improvement in their effective power was sure to touch the
+interests of some established craft. Especially was this the case
+with machines, which are but tools of a more complete though
+complicated kind than those above described.
+
+Take, for instance, the case of the Saw. The tedious drudgery of
+dividing timber by the old fashioned hand-saw is well known. To avoid
+it, some ingenious person suggested that a number of saws should be
+fixed to a frame in a mill, so contrived as to work with a
+reciprocating motion, upwards and downwards, or backwards and
+forwards, and that this frame so mounted should be yoked to the mill
+wheel, and the saws driven by the power of wind or water. The plan
+was tried, and, as may readily be imagined, the amount of effective
+work done by this machine-saw was immense, compared with the tedious
+process of sawing by hand.
+
+It will be observed, however, that the new method must have seriously
+interfered with the labour of the hand-sawyers; and it was but
+natural that they should regard the establishment of the saw-mills
+with suspicion and hostility. Hence a long period elapsed before the
+hand-sawyers would permit the new machinery to be set up and worked.
+The first saw-mill in England was erected by a Dutchman, near London,
+in 1663, but was shortly abandoned in consequence of the determined
+hostility of the workmen. More than a century passed before a second
+saw-mill was set up; when, in 1767, Mr. John Houghton, a London
+timber-merchant, by the desire and with the approbation of the
+Society of Arts, erected one at Limehouse, to be driven by wind. The
+work was directed by one James Stansfield, who had gone over to
+Holland for the purpose of learning the art of constructing and
+managing the sawing machinery. But the mill was no sooner erected
+than a mob assembled and razed it to the ground. The principal
+rioters having been punished, and the loss to the proprietor having
+been made good by the nation, a new mill was shortly after built, and
+it was suffered to work without further molestation.
+
+Improved methods of manufacture have usually had to encounter the
+same kind of opposition. Thus, when the Flemish weavers came over to
+England in the seventeenth century, bringing with them their skill
+and their industry, they excited great jealousy and hostility amongst
+the native workmen. Their competition as workmen was resented as an
+injury, but their improved machinery was regarded as a far greater
+source of mischief. In a memorial presented to the king in 1621 we
+find the London weavers complaining of the foreigners' competition,
+but especially that "they have made so bould of late as to devise
+engines for working of tape, lace, ribbin, and such like, wherein one
+man doth more among them than 7 Englishe men can doe; so as their
+cheap sale of commodities beggereth all our Englishe artificers of
+that trade, and enricheth them."*
+ [footnote...
+State Papers, Dom. 1621, Vol. 88, No. 112.
+ ...]
+
+At a much more recent period new inventions have had to encounter
+serious rioting and machine-breaking fury. Kay of the fly-shuttle,
+Hargreaves of the spinning-jenny, and Arkwright of the
+spinning-frame, all had to fly from Lancashire, glad to escape with
+their lives. Indeed, says Mr. Bazley, "so jealous were the people,
+and also the legislature, of everything calculated to supersede men's
+labour, that when the Sankey Canal, six miles long, near Warrington,
+was authorized about the middle of last century, it was on the
+express condition that the boats plying on it should be drawn by men
+only!"*
+ [footnote...
+Lectures on the Results of the Great Exhibition of 1851, 2nd Series,
+117.
+ ...]
+Even improved agricultural tools and machines have had the same
+opposition to encounter; and in our own time bands of rural labourers
+have gone from farm to farm breaking drill-ploughs, winnowing,
+threshing, and other machines, down even to the common drills,--not
+perceiving that if their policy had proved successful, and tools
+could have been effectually destroyed, the human race would at once
+have been reduced to their teeth and nails, and civilization
+summarily abolished.*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. Kirwan, late President of the Royal Irish Academy, who had
+travelled much on the continent of Europe, used to relate, when
+speaking of the difficulty of introducing improvements in the arts
+and manufactures, and of the prejudices entertained for old
+practices, that, in Normandy, the farmers had been so long accustomed
+to the use of plough's whose shares were made entirely of WOOD that
+they could not be prevailed on to make trial of those with IRON; that
+they considered them to be an idle and useless innovation on the
+long-established practices of their ancestors; and that they carried
+these prejudices so far as to force the government to issue an edict
+on the subject. And even to the last they were so obstinate in their
+attachment to ploughshares of wood that a tumultuous opposition was
+made to the enforcement of the edict, which for a short time
+threatened a rebellion in the province.-- PARKES, Chemical Essays,
+4th Ed. 473.
+ ...]
+
+It is, no doubt, natural that the ordinary class of workmen should
+regard with prejudice, if not with hostility, the introduction of
+machines calculated to place them at a disadvantage and to interfere
+with their usual employments; for to poor and not very far-seeing men
+the loss of daily bread is an appalling prospect. But invention does
+not stand still on that account. Human brains WILL work. Old tools
+are improved and new ones invented, superseding existing methods of
+production, though the weak and unskilled may occasionally be pushed
+aside or even trodden under foot. The consolation which remains is,
+that while the few suffer, society as a whole is vastly benefitted by
+the improved methods of production which are suggested, invented, and
+perfected by the experience of successive generations.
+
+The living race is the inheritor of the industry and skill of all
+past times; and the civilization we enjoy is but the sum of the
+useful effects of labour during the past centuries. Nihil per saltum.
+By slow and often painful steps Nature's secrets have been mastered.
+Not an effort has been made but has had its influence. For no human
+labour is altogether lost; some remnant of useful effect surviving
+for the benefit of the race, if not of the individual. Even attempts
+apparently useless have not really been so, but have served in some
+way to advance man to higher knowledge, skill, or discipline. "The
+loss of a position gained," says Professor Thomson, "is an event
+unknown in the history of man's struggle with the forces of inanimate
+nature." A single step won gives a firmer foothold for further
+effort. The man may die, but the race survives and continues the
+work,--to use the poet's simile, mounting on stepping-stones of dead
+selves to higher selves.
+
+Philarete Chasles, indeed, holds that it is the Human Race that is
+your true inventor: "As if to unite all generations," he says, "and
+to show that man can only act efficiently by association with others,
+it has been ordained that each inventor shall only interpret the
+first word of the problem he sets himself to solve, and that every
+great idea shall be the RESUME of the past at the same time that it
+is the germ of the future." And rarely does it happen that any
+discovery or invention of importance is made by one man alone. The
+threads of inquiry are taken up and traced, one labourer succeeding
+another, each tracing it a little further, often without apparent
+result. This goes on sometimes for centuries, until at length some
+man, greater perhaps than his fellows, seeking to fulfil the needs of
+his time, gathers the various threads together, treasures up the gain
+of past successes and failures, and uses them as the means for some
+solid achievement, Thus Newton discovered the law of gravitation, and
+thus James Watt invented the steam-engine. So also of the Locomotive,
+of which Robert Stephenson said, "It has not been the invention of
+any one man, but of a race of mechanical engineers." Or, as Joseph
+Bramah observed, in the preamble to his second Lock patent, "Among
+the number of patents granted there are comparatively few which can
+be called original so that it is difficult to say where the boundary
+of one ends and where that of another begins."
+
+The arts are indeed reared but slowly; and it was a wise observation
+of Lord Bacon that we are too apt to pass those ladders by which they
+have been reared, and reflect the whole merit on the last new
+performer. Thus, what is hailed as an original invention is often
+found to be but the result of a long succession of trials and
+experiments gradually following each other, which ought rather to be
+considered as a continuous series of achievements of the human mind
+than as the conquest of any single individual. It has sometimes taken
+centuries of experience to ascertain the value of a single fact in
+its various bearings. Like man himself, experience is feeble and
+apparently purposeless in its infancy, but acquires maturity and
+strength with age. Experience, however, is not limited to a lifetime,
+but is the stored-up wealth and power of our race. Even amidst the
+death of successive generations it is constantly advancing and
+accumulating, exhibiting at the same time the weakness and the power,
+the littleness and the greatness of our common humanity. And not only
+do we who live succeed to the actual results of our predecessors'
+labours,--to their works of learning and of art, their inventions and
+discoveries, their tools and machines, their roads, bridges , canals,
+and railways,--but to the inborn aptitudes of blood and brain which
+they bequeath to us, to that "educability," so to speak, which has
+been won for us by the labours of many generations, and forms our
+richest natural heritage.
+
+The beginning of most inventions is very remote. The first idea, born
+within some unknown brain, passes thence into others, and at last
+comes forth complete, after a parturition, it may be, of centuries.
+One starts the idea, another developes it, and so on progressively
+until at last it is elaborated and worked out in practice; but the
+first not less than the last is entitled to his share in the merit of
+the invention, were it only possible to measure and apportion it
+duly. Sometimes a great original mind strikes upon some new vein of
+hidden power, and gives a powerful impulse to the inventive faculties
+of man, which lasts through generations. More frequently, however,
+inventions are not entirely new, but modifications of contrivances
+previously known, though to a few, and not yet brought into practical
+use. Glancing back over the history of mechanism, we occasionally see
+an invention seemingly full born, when suddenly it drops out of
+sight, and we hear no more of it for centuries. It is taken up de
+novo by some inventor, stimulated by the needs of his time, and
+falling again upon the track, he recovers the old footmarks, follows
+them up, and completes the work.
+
+There is also such a thing as inventions being born before their time
+--the advanced mind of one generation projecting that which cannot be
+executed for want of the requisite means; but in due process of time,
+when mechanism has got abreast of the original idea, it is at length
+carried out; and thus it is that modern inventors are enabled to
+effect many objects which their predecessors had tried in vain to
+accomplish. As Louis Napoleon has said, "Inventions born before their
+time must remain useless until the level of common intellects rises
+to comprehend them." For this reason, misfortune is often the lot of
+the inventor before his time, though glory and profit may belong to
+his successors. Hence the gift of inventing not unfrequently involves
+a yoke of sorrow. Many of the greatest inventors have lived neglected
+and died unrequited, before their merits could be recognised and
+estimated. Even if they succeed, they often raise up hosts of enemies
+in the persons whose methods they propose to supersede. Envy, malice,
+and detraction meet them in all their forms; they are assailed by
+combinations of rich and unscrupulous persons to wrest from them the
+profits of their ingenuity; and last and worst of all, the successful
+inventor often finds his claims to originality decried, and himself
+branded as a copyist and a pirate.
+
+Among the inventions born out of time, and before the world could
+make adequate use of them, we can only find space to allude to a few,
+though they are so many that one is almost disposed to accept the
+words of Chaucer as true, that "There is nothing new but what has
+once been old;" or, as another writer puts it, "There is nothing new
+but what has before been known and forgotten;" or, in the words of
+Solomon, "The thing that hath been is that which shall be, and there
+is no new thing under the sun." One of the most important of these is
+the use of Steam, which was well known to the ancients; but though it
+was used to grind drugs, to turn a spit, and to excite the wonder and
+fear of the credulous, a long time elapsed before it became employed
+as a useful motive-power. The inquiries and experiments on the
+subject extended through many ages. Friar Bacon, who flourished in
+the thirteenth century, seems fully to have anticipated, in the
+following remarkable passage, nearly all that steam could accomplish,
+as well as the hydraulic engine and the diving-bell, though the
+flying machine yet remains to be invented: --
+
+"I will now," says the Friar, "mention some of the wonderful works of
+art and nature in which there is nothing of magic, and which magic
+could not perform. Instruments may be made by which the largest
+ships, with only one man guiding them, will be carried with greater
+velocity than if they were full of sailors. Chariots may be
+constructed that will move with incredible rapidity, without the help
+of animals. Instruments of flying may be formed, in which a man,
+sitting at his ease and meditating on any subject, may beat the air
+with his artificial wings, after the manner of birds. A small
+instrument may be made to raise or depress the greatest weights. An
+instrument may be fabricated by which one man may draw a thousand men
+to him by force and against their will; as also machines which will
+enable men to walk at the bottom of seas or rivers without danger."
+It is possible that Friar Bacon derived his knowledge of the powers
+which he thus described from the traditions handed down of former
+inventions which had been neglected and allowed to fall into
+oblivion; for before the invention of printing, which enabled the
+results of investigation and experience to be treasured up in books,
+there was great risk of the inventions of one age being lost to the
+succeeding generations. Yet Disraeli the elder is of opinion that the
+Romans had invented printing without being aware of it; or perhaps
+the senate dreaded the inconveniences attending its use, and did not
+care to deprive a large body of scribes of their employment. They
+even used stereotypes, or immovable printing-types, to stamp
+impressions on their pottery, specimens of which still exist. In
+China the art of printing is of great antiquity. Lithography was well
+known in Germany, by the very name which it still bears, nearly three
+hundred years before Senefelder reinvented it; and specimens of the
+ancient art are yet to be seen in the Royal Museum at Munich.*
+ [footnote...
+EDOUARD FOURNIER, Vieux-Neuf, i. 339.
+ ...]
+
+Steam-locomotion by sea and land, had long been dreamt of and
+attempted. Blasco de Garay made his experiment in the harbour of
+Barcelona as early as 1543; Denis Papin made a similar attempt at
+Cassel in 1707; but it was not until Watt had solved the problem of
+the steam-engine that the idea of the steam-boat could be developed
+in practice, which was done by Miller of Dalswinton in 1788. Sages
+and poets have frequently foreshadowed inventions of great social
+moment. Thus Dr. Darwin's anticipation of the locomotive, in his
+Botanic Garden, published in 1791, before any locomotive had been
+invented, might almost be regarded as prophetic:
+
+ Soon shall thy arm, unconquered Steam! afar
+ Drag the slow barge, and drive the rapid car.
+
+Denis Papin first threw out the idea of atmospheric locomotion; and
+Gauthey, another Frenchman, in 1782 projected a method of conveying
+parcels and merchandise by subterraneous tubes,*
+ [footnote...
+Memoires de l' Academie des Sciences, 6 Feb. 1826.
+ ...]
+after the method recently patented and brought into operation by the
+London Pneumatic Despatch Company. The balloon was an ancient Italian
+invention, revived by Mongolfier long after the original had been
+forgotten. Even the reaping machine is an old invention revived. Thus
+Barnabe Googe, the translator of a book from the German entitled 'The
+whole Arte and Trade of Husbandrie,' published in 1577, in the reign
+of Elizabeth, speaks of the reaping-machine as a worn-out
+invention--a thing "which was woont to be used in France. The device
+was a lowe kinde of carre with a couple of wheeles, and the frunt
+armed with sharpe syckles, whiche, forced by the beaste through the
+corne, did cut down al before it. This tricke," says Googe, "might be
+used in levell and champion countreys; but with us it wolde make but
+ill-favoured woorke."*
+ [footnote...
+Farmer's Magazine, 1817, No. ixxi. 291.
+ ...]
+The Thames Tunnel was thought an entirely new manifestation of
+engineering genius; but the tunnel under the Euphrates at ancient
+Babylon, and that under the wide mouth of the harbour at Marseilles
+(a much more difficult work), show that the ancients were beforehand
+with us in the art of tunnelling. Macadamized roads are as old as the
+Roman empire; and suspension bridges, though comparatively new in
+Europe, have been known in China for centuries.
+
+There is every reason to believe--indeed it seems clear that the
+Romans knew of gunpowder, though they only used it for purposes of
+fireworks; while the secret of the destructive Greek fire has been
+lost altogether. When gunpowder came to be used for purposes of war,
+invention busied itself upon instruments of destruction. When
+recently examining the Museum of the Arsenal at Venice, we were
+surprised to find numerous weapons of the fifteenth and sixteenth
+centuries embodying the most recent English improvements in arms,
+such as revolving pistols, rifled muskets, and breech-loading cannon.
+The latter, embodying Sir William Armstrong's modem idea, though in a
+rude form, had been fished up from the bottom of the Adriatic, where
+the ship armed with them had been sunk hundreds of years ago. Even
+Perkins's steam-gun was an old invention revived by Leonardo da Vinci
+and by him attributed to Archimedes.*
+ [footnote...
+Vieux-Neuf, i. 228; Inventa Nova-Antiqua, 742.
+ ...]
+The Congreve rocket is said to have an Eastern origin, Sir William
+Congreve having observed its destructive effects when employed by the
+forces under Tippoo Saib in the Mahratta war, on which he adopted and
+improved the missile, and brought out the invention as his own.
+
+Coal-gas was regularly used by the Chinese for lighting purposes long
+before it was known amongst us. Hydropathy was generally practised by
+the Romans, who established baths wherever they went. Even chloroform
+is no new thing. The use of ether as an anaesthetic was known to
+Albertus Magnus, who flourished in the thirteenth century; and in his
+works he gives a recipe for its preparation. In 1681 Denis Papin
+published his Traite des Operations sans Douleur, showing that he had
+discovered methods of deadening pain. But the use of anaesthetics is
+much older than Albertus Magnus or Papin; for the ancients had their
+nepenthe and mandragora; the Chinese their mayo, and the Egyptians
+their hachisch (both preparations of Cannabis Indica), the effects of
+which in a great measure resemble those of chloroform. What is
+perhaps still more surprising is the circumstance that one of the
+most elegant of recent inventions, that of sun-painting by the
+daguerreotype, was in the fifteenth century known to Leonardo da
+Vinci,*
+ [footnote...
+Vieux-Neuf, i. 19. See also Inventa Nova-Antiqua, 803.
+ ...]
+whose skill as an architect and engraver, and whose accomplishments
+as a chemist and natural philosopher, have been almost entirely
+overshadowed by his genius as a painter.*
+ [footnote...
+Mr. Hallam, in his Introduction to the History of Europe, pronounces
+the following remarkable eulogium on this extraordinary genius: --
+"If any doubt could be harboured, not only as to the right of
+Leonardo da Vinci to stand as 'the first name of the fifteenth
+century, which is beyond all doubt, but as to his originality in so
+many discoveries, which probably no one man, especially in such
+circumstances, has ever made, it must be on an hypothesis not very
+untenable, that some parts of physical science had already attained a
+height which mere books do not record." "Unpublished MSS. by Leonado
+contain discoveries and anticipations of discoveries," says Mr.
+Hallam, "within the compass of a few pages, so as to strike us with
+something like the awe of preternatural knowledge."
+ ...]
+The idea, thus early born, lay in oblivion until 1760, when the
+daguerreotype was again clearly indicated in a book published in
+Paris, written by a certain Tiphanie de la Roche, under the
+anagrammatic title of Giphantie. Still later, at the beginning of the
+present century, we find Thomas Wedgwood, Sir Humphry Davy, and James
+Watt, making experiments on the action of light upon nitrate of
+silver; and only within the last few months a silvered copper-plate
+has been found amongst the old household lumber of Matthew Boulton
+(Watt's partner), having on it a representation of the old premises
+at Soho, apparently taken by some such process.*
+ [footnote...
+The plate is now to be seen at the Museum of Patents at South
+Kensington. In the account which has been published of the above
+discovery it is stated that "an old man of ninety (recently dead or
+still alive) recollected, or recollects, that Watt and others used to
+take portraits of people in a dark (?) room; and there is a letter
+extant of Sir William Beechey, begging the Lunar Society to desist
+from these experiments, as, were the process to succeed, it would
+ruin portrait-painting."
+ ...]
+
+In like manner the invention of the electric telegraph, supposed to
+be exclusively modern, was clearly indicated by Schwenter in his
+Delasements Physico-Mathematiques, published in 1636; and he there
+pointed out how two individuals could communicate with each other by
+means of the magnetic needle. A century later, in 1746, Le Monnier
+exhibited a series of experiments in the Royal Gardens at Paris,
+showing how electricity could be transmitted through iron wire 950
+fathoms in length; and in 1753 we find one Charles Marshall
+publishing a remarkable description of the electric telegraph in the
+Scots Magazine, under the title of 'An expeditions Method of
+conveying Intelligence.' Again, in 1760, we find George Louis Lesage,
+professor of mathematics at Geneva, promulgating his invention of an
+electric telegraph, which he eventually completed and set to work in
+1774. This instrument was composed of twenty-four metallic wires,
+separate from each other and enclosed in a non-conducting substance.
+Each wire ended in a stalk mounted with a little ball of elder-wood
+suspended by a silk thread. When a stream of electricity, no matter
+how slight., was sent through the wire, the elder-ball at the
+opposite end was repelled, such movement designating some letter of
+the alphabet. A few years later we find Arthur Young, in his Travels
+in France, describing a similar machine invented by a M. Lomond of
+Paris, the action of which he also describes.*
+ [footnote...
+"l6th Oct.l787. In the evening to M. Lomond, a very ingenious and
+inventive mechanic, who has made an improvement of the jenny for
+spinning cotton. Common machines are said to make too hard a thread
+for certain fabrics, but this forms it loose and spongy. In
+electricity he has made a remarkable discovery: you write two or
+three words on a paper; he takes it with him into a room, and turns a
+machine inclosed in a cylindrical case, at the top of which is an
+electrometer, a small fine pith ball; a wire connects with a similar
+cylinder and electrometer in a distant apartment; and his wife, by
+remarking the corresponding motions of the ball, writes down the
+words they indicate; from which it appears that he has formed an
+alphabet of motions. As the length of the wire makes no difference in
+the effect, a correspondence might be carried on at any distance:
+within and without a besieged town, for instance; or for a purpose
+much more worthy, and a thousand times more harmless, between two
+lovers prohibited or prevented from any better connexion. Whatever
+the use may be, the invention is beautiful."--Arthur Young's Travels
+in France in 1787-8-9. London, 1792, 4to. ed. p. 65.
+ ...]
+In these and similar cases, though the idea was born and the model of
+the invention was actually made, it still waited the advent of the
+scientific mechanical inventor who should bring it to perfection, and
+embody it in a practical working form.
+
+Some of the most valuable inventions have descended to us without the
+names of their authors having been preserved. We are the inheritors
+of an immense legacy of the results of labour and ingenuity, but we
+know not the names of our benefactors. Who invented the watch as a
+measurer of time? Who invented the fast and loose pulley? Who
+invented the eccentric? Who, asks a mechanical inquirer,*
+ [footnote...
+Mechanic's Magazine, 4th Feb. 1859.
+ ...]
+"invented the method of cutting screws with stocks and dies? Whoever
+he might be, he was certainly a great benefactor of his species. Yet
+(adds the writer) his name is not known, though the invention has
+been so recent." This is not, however, the case with most modern
+inventions, the greater number of which are more or less disputed.
+Who was entitled to the merit of inventing printing has never yet been
+determined. Weber and Senefelder both laid claim to the invention of
+lithography, though it was merely an old German art revived. Even the
+invention of the penny-postage system by Sir Rowland Hill is
+disputed; Dr. Gray of the British Museum claiming to be its inventor,
+and a French writer alleging it to be an old French invention.*
+ [footnote...
+A writer in the Monde says: --"The invention of postage-stamps. is far
+from being so modern as is generally supposed. A postal regulation in
+France of the year 1653, which has recently come to light, gives
+notice of the creation of pre-paid tickets to be used for Paris
+instead of money payments. These tickets were to be dated and
+attached to the letter or wrapped round it, in such a manner that the
+postman could remove and retain them on delivering the missive. These
+franks were to be sold by the porters of the convents, prisons,
+colleges, and other public institutions, at the price of one sou."
+ ...]
+ The invention of the steamboat has been claimed on behalf of Blasco
+de Garay, a Spaniard, Papin, a Frenchman, Jonathan Hulls, an
+Englishman, and Patrick Miller of Dalswinton, a Scotchman. The
+invention of the spinning machine has been variously attributed to
+Paul, Wyatt, Hargreaves, Higley, and Arkwright. The invention of the
+balance-spring was claimed by Huyghens, a Dutchman, Hautefeuille, a
+Frenchman, and Hooke, an Englishman. There is scarcely a point of
+detail in the locomotive but is the subject of dispute. Thus the
+invention of the blast-pipe is claimed for Trevithick, George
+Stephenson, Goldsworthy Gurney, and Timothy Hackworth; that of the
+tubular boiler by Seguin, Stevens, Booth, and W. H. James; that of
+the link-motion by John Gray, Hugh Williams, and Robert Stephenson.
+
+Indeed many inventions appear to be coincident. A number of minds are
+working at the same time in the same track, with the object of
+supplying some want generally felt; and, guided by the same
+experience, they not unfrequently arrive at like results. It has
+sometimes happened that the inventors have been separated by great
+distances, so that piracy on the part of either was impossible. Thus
+Hadley and Godfrey almost simultaneously invented the quadrant, the
+one in London, the other in Philadelphia; and the process of
+electrotyping was invented at the same time by Mr. Spencer, a working
+chemist at Liverpool, and by Professor Jacobi at St. Petersburg. The
+safety-lamp was a coincident invention, made about the same time by
+Sir Humphry Davy and George Stephenson; and perhaps a still more
+remarkable instance of a coincident discovery was that of the planet
+Neptune by Leverrier at Paris, and by Adams at Cambridge.
+
+It is always difficult to apportion the due share of merit which
+belongs to mechanical inventors, who are accustomed to work upon each
+other's hints and suggestions, as well as by their own experience.
+Some idea of this difficulty may be formed from the fact that, in the
+course of our investigations as to the origin of the planing
+machine--one of the most useful of modern tools--we have found that
+it has been claimed on behalf of six inventors--Fox of Derby, Roberts
+of Manchester, Matthew Murray of Leeds, Spring of Aberdeen, Clement
+and George Rennie of London; and there may be other claimants of whom
+we have not yet heard. But most mechanical inventions are of a very
+composite character, and are led up to by the labour and the study of
+a long succession of workers. Thus Savary and Newcomen led up to
+Watt; Cugnot, Murdock, and Trevithick to the Stephensons; and
+Maudslay to Clement, Roberts, Nasmyth, Whitworth, and many more
+mechanical inventors. There is scarcely a process in the arts but has
+in like manner engaged mind after mind in bringing it to perfection.
+"There is nothing," says Mr. Hawkshaw, "really worth having that man
+has obtained, that has not been the result of a combined and gradual
+process of investigation. A gifted individual comes across some old
+footmark, stumbles on a chain of previous research and inquiry. He
+meets, for instance, with a machine, the result of much previous
+labour; he modifies it, pulls it to pieces, constructs and
+reconstructs it, and by further trial and experiment he arrives at
+the long sought-for result."*
+ [footnote...
+Inaugural Address delivered before the Institution of Civil
+Engineers, l4th Jan. 1862.
+ ...]
+
+But the making of the invention is not the sole difficulty. It is one
+thing to invent, said Sir Marc Brunel, and another thing to make the
+invention work. Thus when Watt, after long labour and study, had
+brought his invention to completion, he encountered an obstacle which
+has stood in the way of other inventors, and for a time prevented the
+introduction of their improvements, if not led to their being laid
+aside and abandoned. This was the circumstance that the machine
+projected was so much in advance of the mechanical capability of the
+age that it was with the greatest difficulty it could be executed.
+When labouring upon his invention at Glasgow, Watt was baffled and
+thrown into despair by the clumsiness and incompetency of his
+workmen. Writing to Dr. Roebuck on one occasion, he said, "You ask
+what is the principal hindrance in erecting engines? It is always the
+smith-work." His first cylinder was made by a whitesmith, of hammered
+iron soldered together, but having used quicksilver to keep the
+cylinder air-tight, it dropped through the inequalities into the
+interior, and "played the devil with the solder." Yet, inefficient
+though the whitesmith was, Watt could ill spare him, and we find him
+writing to Dr. Roebuck almost in despair, saying, "My old white-iron
+man is dead!" feeling his loss to be almost irreparable. His next
+cylinder was cast and bored at Carron, but it was so untrue that it
+proved next to useless. The piston could not be kept steam tight,
+notwithstanding the various expedients which were adopted of stuffing
+it with paper, cork, putty, pasteboard, and old hat. Even after Watt
+had removed to Birmingham, and he had the assistance of Boulton's
+best workmen, Smeaton expressed the opinion, when he saw the engine
+at work, that notwithstanding the excellence of the invention, it
+could never be brought into general use because of the difficulty of
+getting its various parts manufactured with sufficient precision. For
+a long time we find Watt, in his letters, complaining to his partner
+of the failure of his engines through "villainous bad workmanship."
+Sometimes the cylinders, when cast, were found to be more than an
+eighth of an inch wider at one end than the other; and under such
+circumstances it was impossible the engine could act with precision.
+Yet better work could not be had. First-rate workmen in machinery did
+not as yet exist; they were only in process of education. Nearly
+everything had to be done by hand. The tools used were of a very
+imperfect kind. A few ill-constructed lathes, with some drills and
+boring-machines of a rude sort, constituted the principal furniture
+of the workshop. Years after, when Brunel invented his
+block-machines, considerable time elapsed before he could find
+competent mechanics to construct them, and even after they had been
+constructed he had equal difficulty in finding competent hands to
+work them.*
+ [footnote...
+BEAMISH'S Memoir of Sir I. M. Brunel, 79, 80.
+ ...]
+
+Watt endeavoured to remedy the defect by keeping certain sets of
+workmen to special classes of work, allowing them to do nothing else.
+Fathers were induced to bring up their sons at the same bench with
+themselves, and initiate them in the dexterity which they had
+acquired by experience; and at Soho it was not unusual for the same
+precise line of work to be followed by members of the same family for
+three generations. In this way as great a degree of accuracy of a
+mechanical kind was arrived at was practicable under the
+circumstances. But notwithstanding all this care, accuracy of fitting
+could not be secured so long as the manufacture of steam-engines was
+conducted mainly by hand. There was usually a considerable waste of
+steam, which the expedients of chewed paper and greased hat packed
+outside the piston were insufficient to remedy; and it was not until
+the invention of automatic machine-tools by the mechanical engineers
+about to be mentioned, that the manufacture of the steam-engine
+became a matter of comparative ease and certainty. Watt was compelled
+to rest satisfied with imperfect results, arising from imperfect
+workmanship. Thus, writing to Dr. Small respecting a cylinder 18
+inches in diameter, he said, "at the worst place the long diameter
+exceeded the short by only three-eighths of an inch." How different
+from the state of things at this day, when a cylinder five feet wide
+will be rejected as a piece of imperfect workmanship if it be found
+to vary in any part more than the 80th part of an inch in diameter!
+
+Not fifty years since it was a matter of the utmost difficulty to set
+an engine to work, and sometimes of equal difficulty to keep it
+going. Though fitted by competent workmen, it often would not go at
+all. Then the foreman of the factory at which it was made was sent
+for, and he would almost live beside the engine for a month or more;
+and after easing her here and screwing her up there, putting in a new
+part and altering an old one, packing the piston and tightening the
+valves, the machine would at length begot to work.*
+ [footnote...
+There was the same clumsiness in all kinds of mill-work before the
+introduction of machine-tools. We have heard of a piece of machinery
+of the old school, the wheels of which, when set to work, made such a
+clatter that the owner feared the engine would fall to pieces. The
+foreman who set it agoing, after working at it until he was almost in
+despair, at last gave it up, saving, "I think we had better leave the
+cogs to settle their differences with one another: they will grind
+themselves right in time!"
+ ...]
+Now the case is altogether different. The perfection of modern
+machine-tools is such that the utmost possible precision is secured,
+and the mechanical engineer can calculate on a degree of exactitude
+that does not admit of a deviation beyond the thousandth part of an
+inch. When the powerful oscillating engines of the 'Warrior' were put
+on board that ship, the parts, consisting of some five thousand
+separate pieces, were brought from the different workshops of the
+Messrs. Penn and Sons, where they had been made by workmen who knew
+not the places they were to occupy, and fitted together with such
+precision that so soon as the steam was raised and let into the
+cylinders, the immense machine began as if to breathe and move like a
+living creature, stretching its huge arms like a new-born giant, and
+then, after practising its strength a little and proving its
+soundness in body and limb, it started off with the power of above a
+thousand horses to try its strength in breasting the billows of the
+North Sea.
+
+Such are among the triumphs of modern mechanical engineering, due in
+a great measure to the perfection of the tools by means of which all
+works in metal are now fashioned. These tools are themselves among
+the most striking results of the mechanical invention of the day.
+They are automata of the most perfect kind, rendering the engine and
+machine-maker in a great measure independent of inferior workmen. For
+the machine tools have no unsteady hand, are not careless nor clumsy,
+do not work by rule of thumb, and cannot make mistakes. They will
+repeat their operations a thousand times without tiring, or varying
+one hair's breadth in their action; and will turn out, without
+complaining, any quantity of work, all of like accuracy and finish.
+Exercising as they do so remarkable an influence on the development
+of modem industry, we now propose, so far as the materials at our
+disposal will admit, to give an account of their principal inventors,
+beginning with the school of Bramah.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+JOSEPH BRAMAH.
+
+"The great Inventor is one who has walked forth upon the industrial
+world, not from universities, but from hovels; not as clad in silks
+and decked with honours, but as clad in fustian and grimed with soot
+and oil."--ISAAC TAYLOR, Ultimate Civilization.
+
+
+The inventive faculty is so strong in some men that it may be said to
+amount to a passion, and cannot be restrained. The saying that the
+poet is born, not made, applies with equal force to the inventor,
+who, though indebted like the other to culture and improved
+opportunities, nevertheless invents and goes on inventing mainly to
+gratify his own instinct. The inventor, however, is not a creator
+like the poet, but chiefly a finder-out. His power consists in a
+great measure in quick perception and accurate observation, and in
+seeing and foreseeing the effects of certain mechanical combinations.
+He must possess the gift of insight, as well as of manual dexterity,
+combined with the indispensable qualities of patience and
+perseverance,--for though baffled, as he often is, he must be ready
+to rise up again unconquered even in the moment of defeat. This is
+the stuff of which the greatest inventors have been made. The subject
+of the following memoir may not be entitled to take rank as a
+first-class inventor, though he was a most prolific one; but, as the
+founder of a school from which proceeded some of the most
+distinguished mechanics of our time, he is entitled to a prominent
+place in this series of memoirs.
+
+Joseph Bramah was born in 1748 at the village of Stainborough, near
+Barnsley in Yorkshire, where his father rented a small farm under
+Lord Strafford. Joseph was the eldest of five children, and was early
+destined to follow the plough. After receiving a small amount of
+education at the village school, he was set to work upon the farm.
+From an early period he showed signs of constructive skill. When a
+mere boy, he occupied his leisure hours in making musical
+instruments, and he succeeded in executing some creditable pieces of
+work with very imperfect tools. A violin, which he made out of a
+solid block of wood, was long preserved as a curiosity. He was so
+fortunate as to make a friend of the village blacksmith, whose smithy
+he was in the practice of frequenting. The smith was an ingenious
+workman, and, having taken a liking for the boy, he made sundry tools
+for him out of old files and razor blades; and with these his fiddle
+and other pieces of work were mainly executed.
+
+Joseph might have remained a ploughman for life, but for an accident
+which happened to his right ankle at the age of 16, which unfitted
+him for farm-work. While confined at home disabled he spent his time
+in carving and making things in wood; and then it occurred to him
+that, though he could not now be a ploughman, he might be a mechanic.
+When sufficiently recovered, he was accordingly put apprentice to one
+Allott, the village carpenter, under whom he soon became an expert
+workman. He could make ploughs, window-frames, or fiddles, with equal
+dexterity. He also made violoncellos, and was so fortunate as to sell
+one of his making for three guineas, which is still reckoned a good
+instrument. He doubtless felt within him the promptings of ambition,
+such as every good workman feels, and at all events entertained the
+desire of rising in his trade. When his time was out, he accordingly
+resolved to seek work in London, whither he made the journey on foot.
+He soon found work at a cabinet-maker's, and remained with him for
+some time, after which he set up business in a very small way on his
+own account. An accident which happened to him in the course of his
+daily work, again proved his helper, by affording him a degree of
+leisure which he at once proceeded to turn to some useful account.
+Part of his business consisted in putting up water-closets, after a
+method invented or improved by a Mr. Allen; but the article was still
+very imperfect; and Bramah had long resolved that if he could only
+secure some leisure for the purpose, he would contrive something that
+should supersede it altogether. A severe fall which occurred to him
+in the course of his business, and laid him up, though very much
+against his will, now afforded him the leisure which he desired, and
+he proceeded to make his proposed invention. He took out a patent for
+it in 1778, describing himself in the specification as "of Cross
+Court, Carnaby Market [Golden Square], Middlesex, Cabinet Maker." He
+afterwards removed to a shop in Denmark Street, St. Giles's, and
+while there he made a further improvement in his invention by the
+addition of a water cock, which he patented in 1783. The merits of
+the machine were generally recognised, and before long it came into
+extensive use, continuing to be employed, with but few alterations,
+until the present day. His circumstances improving with the increased
+use of his invention, Bramah proceeded to undertake the manufacture
+of the pumps, pipes, &c., required for its construction; and,
+remembering his friend the Yorkshire blacksmith, who had made his
+first tools for him out of the old files and razor-blades, he sent
+for him to London to take charge of his blacksmith's department, in
+which he proved a most useful assistant. As usual, the patent was
+attacked by pirates so soon as it became productive, and Bramah was
+under the necessity, on more than one occasion, of defending his
+property in the invention, in which he was completely successful.
+
+We next find Bramah turning his attention to the invention of a lock
+that should surpass all others then known. The locks then in use were
+of a very imperfect character, easily picked by dexterous thieves,
+against whom they afforded little protection. Yet locks are a very
+ancient invention, though, as in many other cases, the art of making
+them seems in a great measure to have become lost, and accordingly
+had to be found out anew. Thus the tumbler lock--which consists in
+the use of moveable impediments acted on by the proper key only, as
+contradistinguished from the ordinary ward locks, where the
+impediments are fixed-- appears to have been well known to the
+ancient Egyptians, the representation of such a lock being found
+sculptured among the bas-reliefs which decorate the great temple at
+Karnak. This kind of lock was revived, or at least greatly improved,
+by a Mr. Barron in 1774, and it was shortly after this time that
+Bramah directed his attention to the subject. After much study and
+many experiments, he contrived a lock more simple, more serviceable,
+as well as more secure, than Barron's, as is proved by the fact that
+it has stood the test of nearly eighty years' experience,*
+ [footnote...
+The lock invented by Bramah was patented in 1784. Mr. Bramah himself
+fully set forth the specific merits of the invention in his
+Dissertation on the Construction of Locks. In a second patent, taken
+out by him in 1798, he amended his first with the object of
+preventing the counterfeiting of keys, and suspending the office of
+the lock until the key was again in the possession of the owner. This
+he effected by enabling the owner so to alter the sliders as to
+render the lock inaccessible to such key if applied by any other
+person but himself, or until the sliders had been rearranged so as to
+admit of its proper action. We may mention in passing that the
+security of Bramah's locks depends on the doctrine of combinations,
+or multiplication of numbers into each other, which is known to
+increase in the most rapid proportion. Thus, a lock of five slides
+admits of 3,000 variations, while one of eight will have no less than
+1,935,360 changes; in other words, that number of attempts at making
+a key, or at picking it, may be made before it can be opened.
+ ...]
+and still holds its ground. For a long time, indeed, Bramah's lock
+was regarded as absolutely inviolable, and it remained unpicked for
+sixty-seven years until Hobbs the American mastered it in 1851. A
+notice had long been exhibited in Bramah's shop-window in Piccadilly,
+offering 200L. to any one who should succeed in picking the patent
+lock. Many tried, and all failed, until Hobbs succeeded, after
+sixteen days' manipulation of it with various elaborate instruments.
+But the difficulty with which the lock was picked showed that, for
+all ordinary purposes, it might be pronounced impregnable.
+
+The new locks were machines of the most delicate kind, the action of
+which depended in a great measure upon the precision with which the
+springs, sliders, levers, barrels, and other parts were finished. The
+merits of the invention being generally admitted, there was a
+considerable demand for the locks, and the necessity thus arose for
+inventing a series of original machine-tools to enable them to be
+manufactured in sufficient quantities to meet the demand. It is
+probable, indeed, that, but for the contrivance of such tools, the
+lock could never have come in to general use, as the skill of
+hand-workmen, no matter how experienced, could not have been relied
+upon for turning out the article with that degree of accuracy and
+finish in all the parts which was indispensable for its proper
+action. In conducting the manufacture throughout, Bramah was greatly
+assisted by Henry Maudslay, his foreman, to whom he was in no small
+degree indebted for the contrivance of those tool-machines which
+enabled him to carry on the business of lock-making with advantage
+and profit.
+
+Bramah's indefatigable spirit of invention was only stimulated to
+fresh efforts by the success of his lock; and in the course of a few
+years we find him entering upon a more important and original line of
+action than he had yet ventured on. His patent of 1785 shows the
+direction of his studies. Watt had invented his steam-engine, which
+was coming into general use; and the creation of motive-power in
+various other forms became a favourite subject of inquiry with
+inventors. Bramah's first invention with this object was his
+Hydrostatic Machine, founded on the doctrine of the equilibrium of
+pressure in fluids, as exhibited in the well known 'hydrostatic
+paradox.' In his patent of 1785, in which he no longer describes
+himself as Cabinet maker, but 'Engine maker' of Piccadilly, he
+indicated many inventions, though none of them came into practical
+use,--such as a Hydrostatical Machine and Boiler, and the application
+of the power produced by them to the drawing of carriages, and the
+propelling of ships by a paddle-wheel fixed in the stern of the
+vessel, of which drawings are annexed to the specification; but it
+was not until 1795 that he patented his Hydrostatic or Hydraulic
+Press.
+
+Though the principle on which the Hydraulic Press is founded had long
+been known, and formed the subject of much curious speculation, it
+remained unproductive of results until a comparatively recent period,
+when the idea occurred of applying it to mechanical purposes. A
+machine of the kind was indeed proposed by Pascal, the eminent
+philosopher, in 1664, but more than a century elapsed before the
+difficulties in the way of its construction were satisfactorily
+overcome. Bramah's machine consists of a large and massive cylinder,
+in which there works an accurately-fitted solid piston or plunger. A
+forcing-pump of very small bore communicates with the bottom of the
+cylinder, and by the action of the pump-handle or lever, exceeding
+small quantities of water are forced in succession beneath the piston
+in the large cylinder, thus gradually raising it up, and compressing
+bodies whose bulk or volume it is intended to reduce. Hence it is
+most commonly used as a packing-press, being superior to every other
+contrivance of the kind that has yet been invented; and though
+exercising a prodigious force, it is so easily managed that a boy can
+work it. The machine has been employed on many extraordinary
+occasions in preference to other methods of applying power. Thus
+Robert Stephenson used it to hoist the gigantic tubes of the
+Britannia Bridge into their bed,*
+ [footnote...
+The weight raised by a single press at the Britannia Bridge was 1144
+tons.
+ ...]
+and Brunel to launch the Great Eastern steamship from her cradles. It
+has also been used to cut bars of iron, to draw the piles driven in
+forming coffer dams, and to wrench up trees by the roots, all of
+which feats it accomplishes with comparative ease.
+
+The principal difficulty experienced in constructing the hydraulic
+press before the time of Bramah arose from the tremendous pressure
+exercised by the pump, which forced the water through between the
+solid piston and the side of the cylinder in which it worked in such
+quantities as to render the press useless for practical purposes.
+Bramah himself was at first completely baffled by this difficulty. It
+will be observed that the problem was to secure a joint sufficiently
+free to let the piston slide up through it, and at the same time so
+water-tight as to withstand the internal force of the pump. These two
+conditions seemed so conflicting that Bramah was almost at his wit's
+end, and for a time despaired of being able to bring the machine to a
+state of practical efficiency. None but those who have occupied
+themselves in the laborious and often profitless task of helping the
+world to new and useful machines can have any idea of the tantalizing
+anxiety which arises from the apparently petty stumbling-blocks which
+for awhile impede the realization of a great idea in mechanical
+invention. Such was the case with the water-tight arrangement in the
+hydraulic press. In his early experiments, Bramah tried the expedient
+of the ordinary stuffing-box for the purpose of securing the required
+water tightness' That is, a coil of hemp on leather washers was
+placed in a recess, so as to fit tightly round the moving ram or
+piston, and it was further held in its place by means of a
+compressing collar forced hard down by strong screws. The defect of
+this arrangement was, that, even supposing the packing could be made
+sufficiently tight to resist the passage of the water urged by the
+tremendous pressure from beneath, such was the grip which the
+compressed material took of the ram of the press, that it could not
+be got to return down after the water pressure had been removed.
+
+In this dilemma, Bramah's ever-ready workman, Henry Maudslay, came to
+his rescue. The happy idea occurred to him of employing the pressure
+of the water itself to give the requisite water-tightness to the
+collar. It was a flash of common-sense genius-- beautiful through its
+very simplicity. The result was Maudslay's self-tightening collar,
+the action of which a few words of description will render easily
+intelligible. A collar of sound leather, the convex side upwards and
+the concave downwards, was fitted into the recess turned out in the
+neck of the press-cylinder, at the place formerly used as a
+stuffing-box . Immediately on the high pressure water being turned
+on, it forced its way into the leathern concavity and 'flapped out'
+the bent edges of the collar; and, in so doing, caused the leather to
+apply itself to the surface of the rising ram with a degree of
+closeness and tightness so as to seal up the joint the closer exactly
+in proportion to the pressure of the water in its tendency to escape.
+On the other hand, the moment the pressure was let off and the ram
+desired to return, the collar collapsed and the ram slid gently down,
+perfectly free and yet perfectly water-tight. Thus, the former
+tendency of the water to escape by the side of the piston was by this
+most simple and elegant self-adjusting contrivance made instrumental
+to the perfectly efficient action of the machine; and from the moment
+of its invention the hydraulic press took its place as one of the
+grandest agents for exercising power in a concentrated and tranquil
+form.
+
+Bramah continued his useful labours as an inventor for many years.
+His study of the principles of hydraulics, in the course of his
+invention of the press, enabled him to introduce many valuable
+improvements in pumping-machinery. By varying the form of the piston
+and cylinder he was enabled to obtain a rotary motion,*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. Thomas Young, in his article on Bramah in the Encyclopaedia
+Britannica, describes the "rotative principle" as consisting in
+making the part which acts immediately on the water in the form of a
+slider, "sweeping round a cylindrical cavity, and kept in its place
+by means of an eccentric groove; a contrivance which was probably
+Bramah's own invention, but which had been before described, in a
+form nearly similar, by Ramelli, Canalleri, Amontons, Prince Rupert,
+and Dr. Hooke.
+ ...]
+which he advantageously applied to many purposes. Thus he adopted it
+in the well known fire-engine, the use of which has almost become
+universal. Another popular machine of his is the beer-pump, patented
+in 1797, by which the publican is enabled to raise from the casks in
+the cellar beneath, the various liquors sold by him over the counter.
+He also took out several patents for the improvement of the
+steam-engine, in which, however, Watt left little room for other
+inventors; and hence Bramah seems to have entertained a grudge
+against Watt, which broke out fiercely in the evidence given by him
+in the case of Boulton and Watt versus Hornblower and Maberly, tried
+in December 1796. On that occasion his temper seems to have got the
+better of his judgment, and he was cut short by the judge in the
+attempt which he then made to submit the contents of the pamphlet
+subsequently published by him in the form of a letter to the judge
+before whom the case was tried.*
+ [footnote...
+A Letter to the Right Hon. Sir James Eyre, Lord Chief Justice
+of the Common Pleas, on the subject of the cause Boulton and
+Watt v. Hornblower and Maberly, for Infringement on Mr. Watt's Patent
+for an Improvement of the Steam Engine. By Joseph Bramah, Engineer.
+London, 1797.
+ ...]
+In that pamphlet he argued that Watt's specification had no definite
+meaning; that it was inconsistent and absurd, and could not possibly
+be understood; that the proposal to work steam-engines on the
+principle of condensation was entirely fallacious; that Watt's method
+of packing the piston was "monstrous stupidity;" that the engines of
+Newcomen (since entirely superseded) were infinitely superior, in all
+respects, to those of Watt;-- conclusions which, we need scarcely
+say, have been refuted by the experience of nearly a century.
+
+On the expiry of Boulton and Watt's patent, Bramah introduced several
+valuable improvements in the details of the condensing engine, which
+had by that time become an established power,--the most important of
+which was his "four-way cock," which he so arranged as to revolve
+continuously instead of alternately, thus insuring greater precision
+with considerably less wear of parts. In the same patent by which he
+secured this invention in 1801, he also proposed sundry improvements
+in the boilers, as well as modifications in various parts of the
+engine, with the object of effecting greater simplicity and
+directness of action.
+
+In his patent of 1802, we find Bramah making another great stride in
+mechanical invention, in his tools "for producing straight, smooth,
+and parallel surfaces on wood and other materials requiring truth, in
+a manner much more expeditious and perfect than can be performed by
+the use of axes, saws, planes, and other cutting instruments used by
+hand in the ordinary way." The specification describes the object of
+the invention to be the saving of manual labour, the reduction in the
+cost of production, and the superior character of the work executed.
+The tools were fixed on frames driven by machinery, some moving in a
+rotary direction round an upright shaft, some with the shaft
+horizontal like an ordinary wood-turning lathe, while in others the
+tools were fixed on frames sliding in stationary grooves. A
+wood-planing machine*
+ [footnote...
+Sir Samuel Bentham and Marc Isambard Brunel subsequently
+distinguished themselves by the invention of wood-working machinery,
+full accounts of which will be found in the Memoirs of the former by
+Lady Bentham, and in the Life of the latter by Mr. Beamish.
+ ...]
+was constructed on the principle of this invention at Woolwich
+Arsenal, where it still continues in efficient use. The axis of the
+principal shaft was supported on a piston in a vessel of oil, which
+considerably diminished the friction, and it was so contrived as to
+be accurately regulated by means of a small forcing-pump. Although
+the machinery described in the patent was first applied to working on
+wood, it was equally applicable to working on metals; and in his own
+shops at Pimlico Bramah employed a machine with revolving cutters to
+plane metallic surfaces for his patent locks and other articles. He
+also introduced a method of turning spherical surfaces, either convex
+or concave, by a tool moveable on an axis perpendicular to that of
+the lathe; and of cutting out concentric shells by fixing in a
+similar manner a curved tool of nearly the same form as that employed
+by common turners for making bowls. "In fact," says Mr. Mallet,
+"Bramah not only anticipated, but carried out upon a tolerably large
+scale in his own works--for the construction of the patent hydraulic
+press, the water-closet, and his locks--a surprisingly large
+proportion of our modern tools."*
+ [footnote...
+"Record of the International Exhibition, 1862." Practical Mechanic's
+Journal, 293.
+ ...]
+His remarkable predilection in favour of the use of hydraulic
+arrangements is displayed in his specification of the surface-planing
+machinery, which includes a method of running pivots entirely on a
+fluid, and raising and depressing them at pleasure by means of a
+small forcing-pump and stop-cock,--though we are not aware that any
+practical use has ever been made of this part of the invention.
+
+Bramah's inventive genius displayed itself alike in small things as
+in great--in a tap wherewith to draw a glass of beer, and in a
+hydraulic machine capable of tearing up a tree by the roots. His
+powers of contrivance seemed inexhaustible, and were exercised on the
+most various subjects. When any difficulty occurred which mechanical
+ingenuity was calculated to remove, recourse was usually had to
+Bramah, and he was rarely found at a loss for a contrivance to
+overcome it. Thus, when applied to by the Bank of England in 1806, to
+construct a machine for more accurately and expeditiously printing
+the numbers and date lines on Bank notes, he at once proceeded to
+invent the requisite model, which he completed in the course of a
+month. He subsequently brought it to great perfection the figures in
+numerical succession being changed by the action of the machine
+itself,--and it still continues in regular use. Its employment in the
+Bank of England alone saved the labour of a hundred clerks; but its
+chief value consisted in its greater accuracy, the perfect legibility
+of the figures printed by it, and the greatly improved check which it
+afforded.
+
+We next find him occupying himself with inventions connected with the
+manufacture of pens and paper. His little pen-making machine for
+readily making quill pens long continued in use, until driven out by
+the invention of the steel pen; but his patent for making paper by
+machinery, though ingenious, like everything he did, does not seem to
+have been adopted, the inventions of Fourdrinier and Donkin in this
+direction having shortly superseded all others. Among his other minor
+inventions may be mentioned his improved method of constructing and
+sledging carriage-wheels, and his improved method of laying
+water-pipes. In his specification of the last-mentioned invention, he
+included the application of water-power to the driving of machinery
+of every description, and for hoisting and lowering goods in docks
+and warehouses,--since carried out in practice, though in a different
+manner, by Sir William Armstrong.*
+ [footnote...
+In this, as in other methods of employing power, the moderns had been
+anticipated by the ancients; and though hydraulic machinery is a
+comparatively recent invention in England, it had long been in use
+abroad. Thus we find in Dr. Bright's Travels in Lower Hungary a full
+description of the powerful hydraulic machinery invented by M. Holl,
+Chief Engineer of the Imperial Mines, which had been in use since the
+year 1749, in pumping water from a depth of 1800 feet, from the
+silver and gold mines of Schemnitz and Kremnitz. A head of water was
+collected by forming a reservoir along the mountain side, from which
+it was conducted through water-tight cast-iron pipes erected
+perpendicularly in the mine-shaft. About forty-five fathoms down, the
+water descending through the pipe was forced by the weight of the
+column above it into the bottom of a perpendicular cylinder, in which
+it raised a water-tight piston. When forced up to a given point a
+self-acting stop-cock shut off the pressure of the descending column,
+while a self-acting valve enabled the water contained in the cylinder
+to be discharged, on which the piston again descended, and the
+process was repeated like the successive strokes of a steam-engine.
+Pump-rods were attached to this hydraulic apparatus, which were
+carried to the bottom of the shaft, and each worked a pump at
+different levels, raising the water stage by stage to the level of
+the main adit. The pumps of these three several stages each raised
+1790 cubic feet of water from a depth of 600 feet in the hour. The
+regular working of the machinery was aided by the employment of a
+balance-beam connected by a chain with the head of the large piston
+and pump-rods; and the whole of these powerful machines by means of
+three of which as much as 789,840 gallons of water were pumped out of
+the mines every 24 hours -- were set in operation and regulated
+merely by the turning of a stopcock. It will be observed that the
+arrangement thus briefly described was equally applicable to the
+working of machinery of all kinds, cranes, &c., as well as pumps; and
+it will be noted that, notwithstanding the ingenuity of Bramah,
+Armstrong, and other eminent English mechanics, the Austrian engineer
+Holl was thus decidedly beforehand with them in the practical
+application of the principles of hydrostatics.
+ ...]
+In this, as in many other matters, Bramah shot ahead of the
+mechanical necessities of his time; and hence many of his patents (of
+which he held at one time more than twenty) proved altogether
+profitless. His last patent, taken out in 1814, was for the
+application of Roman cement to timber for the purpose of preventing
+dry rot.
+
+Besides his various mechanical pursuits, Bramah also followed to a
+certain extent the profession of a civil engineer, though his more
+urgent engagements rendered it necessary for him to refuse many
+advantageous offers of employment in this line. He was, however, led
+to carry out the new water-works at Norwich, between the years l790
+and l793, in consequence of his having been called upon to give
+evidence in a dispute between the corporation of that city and the
+lessees, in the course of which he propounded plans which, it was
+alleged, could not be carried out. To prove that they could be
+carried out, and that his evidence was correct, he undertook the new
+works, and executed them with complete success; besides demonstrating
+in a spirited publication elicited by the controversy, the
+insufficiency and incongruity of the plans which had been submitted
+by the rival engineer.
+
+For some time prior to his death Bramah had been employed in the
+erection of several large machines in his works at Pimlico for sawing
+stone and timber, to which he applied his hydraulic power with great
+success. New methods of building bridges and canal-locks, with a
+variety of other matters, were in an embryo state in his mind, but he
+did not live to complete them. He was occupied in superintending the
+action of his hydrostatic press at Holt Forest, in Hants--where
+upwards of 300 trees of the largest dimensions were in a very short
+time torn up by the roots,--when he caught a severe cold, which
+settled upon his lungs, and his life was suddenly brought to a close
+on the 9th of December, 1814, in his 66th year.
+
+His friend, Dr. Cullen Brown,*
+ [footnote...
+Dr. Brown published a brief memoir of his friend in the New Monthly
+Magazine for April, 1815, which has been the foundation of all the
+notices of Bramah's life that have heretofore appeared.
+ ...]
+has said of him, that Bramah was a man of excellent moral character,
+temperate in his habits, of a pious turn of mind,*
+ [footnote...
+Notwithstanding his well-known religious character, Bramah seems to
+have fallen under the grievous displeasure of William Huntington,
+S.S. (Sinner Saved), described by Macaulay in his youth as "a
+worthless ugly lad of the name of Hunter," and in his manhood as
+"that remarkable impostor" (Essays, 1 vol. ed. 529). It seems that
+Huntington sought the professional services of Bramah when
+re-edifying his chapel in 1793; and at the conclusion of the work,
+the engineer generously sent the preacher a cheque for 8l. towards
+defraying the necessary expenses. Whether the sum was less than
+Huntington expected, or from whatever cause, the S.S. contemptuously
+flung back the gift, as proceeding from an Arian whose religion was
+"unsavoury," at the same time hurling at the giver a number of texts
+conveying epithets of an offensive character. Bramah replied to the
+farrago of nonsense, which he characterised as "unmannerly, absurd,
+and illiterate that it must have been composed when the writer was
+"intoxicated, mad, or under the influence of Lucifer," and he
+threatened that unless Huntington apologised for his gratuitous
+insults, he (Bramah) would assuredly expose him. The mechanician
+nevertheless proceeded gravely to explain and defend his "profession
+of faith," which was altogether unnecessary. On this Huntington
+returned to the charge, and directed against the mechanic a fresh
+volley of Scripture texts and phraseology, not without humour, if
+profanity be allowable in controversy, as where he says, "Poor man!
+he makes a good patent lock, but cuts a sad figure with the keys of
+the Kingdom of Heaven!" "What Mr. Bramah is," says S.S., "In respect
+to his character or conduct in life, as a man, a tradesman, a
+neighbour, a gentleman, a husband, friend, master, or subject, I know
+not. In all these characters he may shine as a comet for aught I
+know; but he appears to me to be as far from any resemblance to a
+poor penitent or broken-hearted sinner as Jannes, Jambres, or
+Alexander the coppersmith!" Bramah rejoined by threatening to publish
+his assailant's letters, but Huntington anticipated him in A Feeble
+Dispute with a Wise and Learned Man, 8vo. London, 1793, in which,
+whether justly or not, Huntington makes Bramah appear to murder the
+king's English in the most barbarous manner.
+ ...]
+and so cheerful in temperament, that he was the life of every company
+into which he entered. To much facility of expression he added the
+most perfect independence of opinion; he was a benevolent and
+affectionate man; neat and methodical in his habits, and knew well
+how to temper liberality with economy. Greatly to his honour, he
+often kept his workmen employed, solely for their sake, when
+stagnation of trade prevented him disposing of the products of their
+labour. As a manufacturer he was distinguished for his promptitude
+and probity, and he was celebrated for the exquisite finish which he
+gave to all his productions. In this excellence of workmanship, which
+he was the first to introduce, he continued while he lived to be
+unrivalled.
+
+Bramah was deservedly honoured and admired as the first mechanical
+genius of his time, and as the founder of the art of tool-making in
+its highest branches. From his shops at Pimlico came Henry Maudslay,
+Joseph Clement, and many more first-class mechanics, who carried the
+mechanical arts to still higher perfection, and gave an impulse to
+mechanical engineering, the effects of which are still felt in every
+branch of industry.
+
+The parish to which Bramah belonged was naturally proud of the
+distinction he had achieved in the world, and commemorated his life
+and career by a marble tablet erected by subscription to his memory,
+in the parish church of Silkstone. In the churchyard are found the
+tombstones of Joseph's father, brother, and other members of the
+family; and we are informed that their descendants still occupy the
+farm at Stainborough on which the great mechanician was born.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+HENRY MAUDSLAY.
+
+"The successful construction of all machinery depends on the
+perfection of the tools employed; and whoever is a master in the arts
+of tool-making possesses the key to the construction of all
+machines..... The contrivance and construction of tools must
+therefore ever stand at the head of the industrial arts."
+--C. BABBAGE, Exposition of 1851.
+
+
+Henry Maudslay was born at Woolwich towards the end of last century,
+in a house standing in the court at the back of the Salutation Inn,
+the entrance to which is nearly opposite the Arsenal gates. His
+father was a native of Lancashire, descended from an old family of
+the same name, the head of which resided at Mawdsley Hall near
+Ormskirk at the beginning of the seventeenth century. The family were
+afterwards scattered, and several of its members became workmen.
+William Maudslay, the father of Henry, belonged to the neighbourhood
+of Bolton, where he was brought up to the trade of a joiner. His
+principal employment, while working at his trade in Lancashire,
+consisted in making the wood framing of cotton machinery, in the
+construction of which cast-iron had not yet been introduced. Having
+got into some trouble in his neighbourhood, through some alleged
+LIAISON, William enlisted in the Royal Artillery, and the corps to
+which he belonged was shortly after sent out to the West Indies. He
+was several times engaged in battle, and in his last action he was
+hit by a musket-bullet in the throat. The soldier's stock which he
+wore had a piece cut out of it by the ball, the direction of which
+was diverted, and though severely wounded, his life was saved. He
+brought home the stock and preserved it as a relic, afterwards
+leaving it to his son. Long after, the son would point to the stock,
+hung up against his wall, and say "But for that bit of leather there
+would have been no Henry Maudslay." The wounded artilleryman was
+invalided and sent home to Woolwich, the headquarters of his corps,
+where he was shortly after discharged. Being a handy workman, he
+sought and obtained employment at the Arsenal. He was afterwards
+appointed a storekeeper in the Dockyard. It was during the former
+stage of William Maudslay's employment at Woolwich, that the subject
+of this memoir was born in the house in the court above mentioned, on
+the 22nd of August, 1771.
+
+The boy was early set to work. When twelve years old he was employed
+as a "powder-monkey," in making and filling cartridges. After two
+years, he was passed on to the carpenter's shop where his father
+worked, and there he became acquainted with tools and the art of
+working in wood and iron. From the first, the latter seems to have
+had by far the greatest charms for him. The blacksmiths' shop was
+close to the carpenters', and Harry seized every opportunity that
+offered of plying the hammer, the file, and the chisel, in preference
+to the saw and the plane. Many a cuff did the foreman of carpenters
+give him for absenting himself from his proper shop and stealing off
+to the smithy. His propensity was indeed so strong that, at the end
+of a year, it was thought better, as he was a handy, clever boy, to
+yield to his earnest desire to be placed in the smithy, and he was
+removed thither accordingly in his fifteenth year.
+
+His heart being now in his work, he made rapid progress, and soon
+became an expert smith and metal worker. He displayed his skill
+especially in forging light ironwork; and a favourite job of his was
+the making of "Trivets" out of the solid, which only the "dab hands"
+of the shop could do, but which he threw off with great rapidity in
+first rate style. These "Trivets" were made out of Spanish iron bolts
+--rare stuff, which, though exceedingly tough, forged like wax under
+the hammer. Even at the close of his life, when he had acquired
+eminent distinction as an inventor, and was a large employer of
+skilled labour, he looked back with pride to the forging of his early
+days in Woolwich Arsenal. He used to describe with much gusto, how
+the old experienced hands, with whom he was a great favourite, would
+crowd about him when forging his "Trivets," some of which may to this
+day be in use among Woolwich housewives for supporting the
+toast-plate before the bright fire against tea time. This was,
+however, entirely contraband work, done "on the sly," and strictly
+prohibited by the superintending officer, who used kindly to signal
+his approach by blowing his nose in a peculiar manner, so that all
+forbidden jobs might be put out of the way by the time he entered the
+shop.
+
+We have referred to Maudslay's early dexterity in trivet-making--a
+circumstance trifling enough in itself--for the purpose of
+illustrating the progress which he had made in a branch of his art of
+the greatest importance in tool and machine making. Nothing pleased
+him more in his after life than to be set to work upon an unusual
+piece of forging, and to overcome, as none could do so cleverly as
+he, the difficulties which it presented. The pride of art was as
+strong in him as it must have been in the mediaeval smiths, who
+turned out those beautiful pieces of workmanship still regarded as
+the pride of our cathedrals and old mansions. In Maudslay's case, his
+dexterity as a smith was eventually directed to machinery, rather
+than ornamental work; though, had the latter been his line of labour,
+we do not doubt that he would have reached the highest distinction.
+
+The manual skill which our young blacksmith had acquired was such as
+to give him considerable reputation in his craft, and he was spoken
+of even in the London shops as one of the most dexterous hands in the
+trade. It was this circumstance that shortly after led to his removal
+from the smithy in Woolwich Arsenal to a sphere more suitable for the
+development of his mechanical ability.
+
+We have already stated in the preceding memoir, that Joseph Bramah
+took out the first patent for his lock in 1784, and a second for its
+improvement several years later; but notwithstanding the acknowledged
+superiority of the new lock over all others, Bramah experienced the
+greatest difficulty in getting it manufactured with sufficient
+precision, and at such a price as to render it an article of
+extensive commerce. This arose from the generally inferior character
+of the workmanship of that day, as well as the clumsiness and
+uncertainty of the tools then in use. Bramah found that even the best
+manual dexterity was not to be trusted, and yet it seemed to be his
+only resource; for machine-tools of a superior kind had not yet been
+invented. In this dilemma he determined to consult an ingenious old
+German artisan, then working with William Moodie, a general
+blacksmith in Whitechapel. This German was reckoned one of the most
+ingenious workmen in London at the time. Bramah had several long
+interviews with him, with the object of endeavouring to solve the
+difficult problem of how to secure precise workmanship in
+lock-making. But they could not solve it; they saw that without
+better tools the difficulty was insuperable; and then Bramah began to
+fear that his lock would remain a mere mechanical curiosity, and be
+prevented from coming into general use.
+
+He was indeed sorely puzzled what next to do, when one of the
+hammermen in Moodie's shop ventured to suggest that there was a young
+man in the Woolwich Arsenal smithy, named Maudslay, who was so
+ingenious in such matters that "nothing bet him," and he recommended
+that Mr. Bramah should have a talk with him upon the subject of his
+difficulty. Maudslay was at once sent for to Bramah's workshop, and
+appeared before the lock-maker, a tall, strong, comely young fellow,
+then only eighteen years old. Bramah was almost ashamed to lay his
+case before such a mere youth; but necessity constrained him to try
+all methods of accomplishing his object, and Maudslay's suggestions
+in reply to his statement of the case were so modest, so sensible,
+and as the result proved, so practical, that the master was
+constrained to admit that the lad before him had an old head though
+set on young shoulders. Bramah decided to adopt the youth's
+suggestions, made him a present on the spot, and offered to give him
+a job if he was willing to come and work in a town shop. Maudslay
+gladly accepted the offer, and in due time appeared before Bramah to
+enter upon his duties.
+
+As Maudslay had served no regular apprenticeship, and was of a very
+youthful appearance, the foreman of the shop had considerable doubts
+as to his ability to take rank alongside his experienced hands. But
+Maudslay soon set his master's and the foreman's mind at rest.
+Pointing to a worn-out vice-bench, he said to Bramah, "Perhaps if I
+can make that as good as new by six o'clock to-night, it will satisfy
+your foreman that I am entitled to rank as a tradesman and take my
+place among your men, even though I have not served a seven years'
+apprenticeship." There was so much self-reliant ability in the
+proposal, which was moreover so reasonable, that it was at once
+acceded to. Off went Maudslay's coat, up went his shirt sleeves, and
+to work he set with a will upon the old bench. The vice-jaws were
+re-steeled "in no time," filed up, re-cut, all the parts cleaned and
+made trim, and set into form again. By six o'clock, the old vice was
+screwed up to its place, its jaws were hardened and "let down" to
+proper temper, and the old bench was made to look so smart and neat
+that it threw all the neighbouring benches into the shade! Bramah and
+his foreman came round to see it, while the men of the shop looked
+admiringly on. It was examined and pronounced "a first-rate job."
+This diploma piece of work secured Maudslay's footing, and next
+Monday morning he came on as one of the regular hands.
+
+He soon took rank in the shop as a first-class workman. Loving his
+art, he aimed at excellence in it, and succeeded. For it must be
+understood that the handicraftsman whose heart is in his calling,
+feels as much honest pride in turning out a piece of thoroughly good
+workmanship, as the sculptor or the painter does in executing a
+statue or a picture. In course of time, the most difficult and
+delicate jobs came to be entrusted to Maudslay; and nothing gave him
+greater pleasure than to be set to work upon an entirely new piece of
+machinery. And thus he rose, naturally and steadily, from hand to
+head work. For his manual dexterity was the least of his gifts. He
+possessed an intuitive power of mechanical analysis and synthesis. He
+had a quick eye to perceive the arrangements requisite to effect
+given purposes; and whenever a difficulty arose, his inventive mind
+set to work to overcome it.
+
+His fellow-workmen were not slow to recognise his many admirable
+qualities, of hand, mind, and heart; and he became not only the
+favourite, but the hero of the shop. Perhaps he owed something to his
+fine personal appearance. Hence on gala-days, when the men turned out
+in procession, "Harry" was usually selected to march at their head
+and carry the flag. His conduct as a son, also, was as admirable as
+his qualities as a workman. His father dying shortly after Maudslay
+entered Bramah's concern, he was accustomed to walk down to Woolwich
+every Saturday night, and hand over to his mother, for whom he had
+the tenderest regard, a considerable share of his week's wages, and
+this he continued to do as long as she lived.
+
+Notwithstanding his youth, he was raised from one post to another,
+until he was appointed, by unanimous consent, the head foreman of the
+works; and was recognised by all who had occasion to do business
+there as "Bramah's right-hand man." He not only won the heart of his
+master, but--what proved of far greater importance to him--he also
+won the heart of his master's pretty housemaid, Sarah Tindel by name,
+whom he married, and she went hand-in-hand with him through life, an
+admirable "help meet," in every way worthy of the noble character of
+the great mechanic. Maudslay was found especially useful by his
+master in devising the tools for making his patent locks; and many
+were the beautiful contrivances which he invented for the purpose of
+ensuring their more accurate and speedy manufacture, with a minimum
+degree of labour, and without the need of any large amount of manual
+dexterity on the part of the workman. The lock was so delicate a
+machine, that the identity of the several parts of which it was
+composed was found to be an absolute necessity. Mere handicraft,
+however skilled, could not secure the requisite precision of
+workmanship; nor could the parts be turned out in sufficient quantity
+to meet any large demand. It was therefore requisite to devise
+machine-tools which should not blunder, nor turn out imperfect
+work;-- machines, in short, which should be in a great measure
+independent of the want of dexterity of individual workmen, but which
+should unerringly labour in their prescribed track, and do the work
+set them, even in the minutest details, after the methods designed by
+their inventor. In this department Maudslay was eminently successful,
+and to his laborious ingenuity, as first displayed in Bramah's
+workshops, and afterwards in his own establishment, we unquestionably
+owe much of the power and accuracy of our present self-acting
+machines.
+
+Bramah himself was not backward in admitting that to Henry Maudslay's
+practical skill in contriving the machines for manufacturing his
+locks on a large scale, the success of his invention was in a great
+degree attributable. In further proof of his manual dexterity, it may
+be mentioned that he constructed with his own hands the identical
+padlock which so severely tested the powers of Mr. Hobbs in 1851. And
+when it is considered that the lock had been made for more than half
+a century, and did not embody any of the modern improvements, it will
+perhaps be regarded not only as creditable to the principles on which
+it was constructed, but to the workmanship of its maker, that it
+should so long have withstood the various mechanical dexterity to
+which it was exposed.
+
+Besides the invention of improved machine-tools for the manufacture
+of locks, Maudslay was of further service to Bramah in applying the
+expedient to his famous Hydraulic Press, without which it would
+probably have remained an impracticable though a highly ingenious
+machine. As in other instances of great inventions, the practical
+success of the whole is often found to depend upon the action of some
+apparently trifling detail. This was especially the case with the
+hydraulic press; to which Maudslay added the essential feature of the
+self-tightening collar, above described in the memoir of Bramah. Mr.
+James Nasmyth is our authority for ascribing this invention to
+Maudslay, who was certainly quite competent to have made it; and it
+is a matter of fact that Bramah's specification of the press says
+nothing of the hollow collar,*
+ [footnote...
+The words Bramah uses in describing this part of his patent of 1795
+are these--"The piston must be made perfectly watertight by leather
+or other materials, as used in pump-making." He elsewhere speaks of
+the piston-rod "working through the stuffing-box." But in practice,
+as we have above shown, these methods were found to be altogether
+inefficient.
+ ...]
+on which its efficient action mainly depends. Mr. Nasmyth
+says--"Maudslay himself told me, or led me to believe, that it was he
+who invented the self-tightening collar for the hydraulic press,
+without which it would never have been a serviceable machine. As the
+self-tightening collar is to the hydraulic press, so is the
+steamblast to the locomotive. It is the one thing needful that has
+made it effective in practice. If Maudslay was the inventor of the
+collar, that one contrivance ought to immortalize him. He used to
+tell me of it with great gusto, and I have no reason to doubt the
+correctness of his statement." Whoever really struck out the idea of
+the collar, displayed the instinct of the true inventor, who
+invariably seeks to accomplish his object by the adoption of the
+simplest possible means.
+
+During the time that Maudslay held the important office of manager of
+Bramah's works, his highest wages were not more than thirty shillings
+a-week. He himself thought that he was worth more to his master--as
+indeed he was,--and he felt somewhat mortified that he should have to
+make an application for an advance; but the increasing expenses of
+his family compelled him in a measure to do so. His application was
+refused in such a manner as greatly to hurt his sensitive feelings;
+and the result was that he threw up his situation, and determined to
+begin working on his own account.
+
+His first start in business was in the year 1797, in a small workshop
+and smithy situated in Wells Street, Oxford Street. It was in an
+awful state of dirt and dilapidation when he became its tenant. He
+entered the place on a Friday, but by the Saturday evening, with the
+help of his excellent wife, he had the shop thoroughly cleaned,
+whitewashed, and put in readiness for beginning work on the next
+Monday morning. He had then the pleasure of hearing the roar of his
+own forge-fire, and the cheering ring of the hammer on his own anvil;
+and great was the pride he felt in standing for the first time within
+his own smithy and executing orders for customers on his own account.
+His first customer was an artist, who gave him an order to execute
+the iron work of a large easel, embodying some new arrangements; and
+the work was punctually done to his employer's satisfaction. Other
+orders followed, and he soon became fully employed. His fame as a
+first-rate workman was almost as great as that of his former master;
+and many who had been accustomed to do business with him at Pimlico
+followed him to Wells Street. Long years after, the thought of these
+early days of self-dependence and hard work used to set him in a
+glow, and he would dilate to his intimate friends up on his early
+struggles and his first successes, which were much more highly prized
+by him than those of his maturer years.
+
+With a true love of his craft, Maudslay continued to apply himself,
+as he had done whilst working as Bramah's foreman, to the best
+methods of ensuring accuracy and finish of work, so as in a measure
+to be independent of the carelessness or want of dexterity of the
+workman. With this object he aimed at the contrivance of improved
+machine-tools, which should be as much self-acting and
+self-regulating as possible; and it was while pursuing this study
+that he wrought out the important mechanical invention with which his
+name is usually identified--that of the Slide Rest. It continued to
+be his special delight, when engaged in the execution of any piece of
+work in which he took a personal interest, to introduce a system of
+identity of parts, and to adapt for the purpose some one or other of
+the mechanical contrivances with which his fertile brain was always
+teeming. Thus it was from his desire to leave nothing to the chance
+of mere individual dexterity of hand that he introduced the slide
+rest in the lathe, and rendered it one of the most important of
+machine-tools. The first device of this kind was contrived by him for
+Bramah, in whose shops it continued in practical use long after he
+had begun business for himself. "I have seen the slide rest," says
+Mr. James Nasmyth, "the first that Henry Maudslay made, in use at
+Messrs. Bramah's workshops, and in it were all those arrangements
+which are to be found in the most modern slide rest of our own day,*
+ [footnote...
+In this lathe the slide rest and frame were moveable along the
+traversing-bar, according to the length of the work, and could be
+placed in any position and secured by a handle and screw underneath.
+The Rest, however, afterwards underwent many important modifications;
+but the principle of the whole machine was there.
+ ...]
+all of which are the legitimate offspring of Maudslay's original
+rest. If this tool be yet extant, it ought to be preserved with the
+greatest care, for it was the beginning of those mechanical triumphs
+which give to the days in which we live so much of their
+distinguishing character."
+
+A very few words of explanation will serve to illustrate the
+importance of Maudslay's invention. Every person is familiar with the
+uses of the common turning-lathe. It is a favourite machine with
+amateur mechanics, and its employment is indispensable for the
+execution of all kinds of rounded work in wood and metal. Perhaps
+there is no contrivance by which the skill of the handicraftsman has
+been more effectually aided than by this machine. Its origin is lost
+in the shades of antiquity. Its most ancient form was probably the
+potter's wheel, from which it advanced, by successive improvements,
+to its present highly improved form. It was found that, by whatever
+means a substance capable of being cut could be made to revolve with
+a circular motion round a fixed right line as a centre, a cutting
+tool applied to its surface would remove the inequalities so that any
+part of such surface should be equidistant from that centre. Such is
+the fundamental idea of the ordinary turning-lathe. The ingenuity and
+experience of mechanics working such an instrument enabled them to
+add many improvements to it; until the skilful artisan at length
+produced not merely circular turning of the most beautiful and
+accurate description, but exquisite figure-work, and complicated
+geometrical designs, depending upon the cycloidal and eccentric
+movements which were from time to time added to the machine.
+
+The artisans of the Middle Ages were very skilful in the use of the
+lathe, and turned out much beautiful screen and stall work, still to
+be seen in our cathedrals, as well as twisted and swash-work for the
+balusters of staircases and other ornamental purposes. English
+mechanics seem early to have distinguished themselves as improvers of
+the lathe; and in Moxon's 'Treatise on Turning,' published in 1680,
+we find Mr. Thomas Oldfield, at the sign of the Flower-de-Luce, near
+the Savoy in the Strand, named as an excellent maker of oval-engines
+and swash-engines, showing that such machines were then in some
+demand. The French writer Plumier*
+ [footnote...
+PLUMIER, L'Art de Tourner, Paris, 1754, p. 155. ...]
+also mentions an ingenious modification of the lathe by means of
+which any kind of reticulated form could be given to the work; and,
+from it's being employed to ornament the handles of knives, it was
+called by him the "Machine a manche de Couteau d'Angleterre." But
+the French artisans were at that time much better skilled than the
+English in the use of tools, and it is most probable that we owe to
+the Flemish and French Protestant workmen who flocked into England in
+such large numbers during the religious persecutions of the sixteenth
+and seventeenth centuries, the improvement, if not the introduction,
+of the art of turning, as well as many other arts hereafter to be
+referred to. It is certain that at the period to which we refer
+numerous treatises were published in France on the art of turning,
+some of them of a most elaborate character. Such were the works of
+De la Hire,*
+ [footnote...
+Machines approuvees par l' Academie, 1719.
+ ...]
+who described how every kind of polygon might be made by the lathe;
+De la Condamine,*
+ [footnote...
+Machines approuvees par l' Academie, 1733.
+ ...]
+who showed how a lathe could turn all sorts of irregular figures by
+means of tracers; and of Grand Jean, Morin,*
+ [footnote...
+L'Art de Tourner en perfection, 49.
+ ...]
+ Plumier, Bergeron, and many other writers.
+
+The work of Plumier is especially elaborate, entering into the
+construction of the lathe in its various parts, the making of the
+tools and cutters, and the different motions to be given to the
+machine by means of wheels, eccentrics, and other expedients, amongst
+which may be mentioned one very much resembling the slide rest and
+planing-machine combined.*
+ [footnote...
+It consisted of two parallel bars of wood or iron connected together
+at both extremities by bolts or keys of sufficient width to admit of
+the article required to be planed. A moveable frame was placed
+between the two bars, motion being given to it by a long cylindrical
+thread acting on any tool put into the sliding frame, and,
+consequently, causing the screw, by means of a handle at each end of
+it, to push or draw the point or cutting-edge of the tool either
+way.--Mr. George Rennie's Preface to Buchanan's Practical Essays on
+Mill Work, 3rd Ed. xli.
+ ...]
+ From this work it appears that turning had long been a favourite
+pursuit in France with amateurs of all ranks, who spared no expense
+in the contrivance and perfection of elaborate machinery for the
+production of complex figures.*
+ [footnote...
+Turning was a favourite amusement amongst the French nobles of last
+century, many of whom acquired great dexterity in the art, which they
+turned to account when compelled to emigrate at the Revolution. Louis
+XVI. himself was a very good locksmith, and could have earned a fair
+living at the trade. Our own George III. was a good turner, and was
+learned in wheels and treadles, chucks and chisels. Henry Mayhew
+says, on the authority of an old working turner, that, with average
+industry, the King might have made from 40s. to 50s. a-week as a hard
+wood and ivory turner. Lord John Hay, though one-armed, was an adept
+at the latter, and Lord Gray was another capital turner. Indeed the
+late Mr. Holtzapffel's elaborately illustrated treatise was written
+quite as much for amateurs as for working mechanics. Among other
+noble handicraftsmen we may mention the late Lord Douglas, who
+cultivated bookbinding. Lord Traquair's fancy was cutlery, and one
+could not come to him in a more welcome fashion than with a pair of
+old razors to set up.
+ ...]
+There was at that time a great passion for automata in France, which
+gave rise to many highly ingenious devices, such as Camus's miniature
+carriage (made for Louis XIV. when a child), Degennes' mechanical
+peacock, Vancanson's duck, and Maillardet's conjuror. It had the
+effect of introducing among the higher order of artists habits of
+nice and accurate workmanship in executing delicate pieces of
+machinery; and the same combination of mechanical powers which made
+the steel spider crawl, the duck quack, or waved the tiny rod of the
+magician, contributed in future years to purposes of higher
+import,--the wheels and pinions, which in these automata almost
+eluded the human senses by their minuteness, reappearing in modern
+times in the stupendous mechanism of our self-acting lathes,
+spinning-mules, and steam-engines.
+
+"In our own country," says Professor Willis, "the literature of this
+subject is so defective that it is very difficult to discover what
+progress we were making during the seventeenth and eighteenth
+centuries."*
+ [footnote...
+Professor WILLIS, Lectures on the Results of the Great Exhibition of
+1851, lst series, p. 306.
+ ...]
+We believe the fact to be, that the progress made in England down to
+the end of last century had been very small indeed, and that the
+lathe had experienced little or no improvement until Maudslay took it
+in hand. Nothing seems to have been known of the slide rest until he
+re-invented it and applied it to the production of machinery of a far
+more elaborate character than had ever before been contemplated as
+possible. Professor Willis says that Bramah's, in other words
+Maudslay's, slide rest of 1794 is so different from that described in
+the French 'Encyclopedie in 1772, that the two could not have had a
+common origin. We are therefore led to the conclusion that Maudslay's
+invention was entirely independent of all that had gone before, and
+that he contrived it for the special purpose of overcoming the
+difficulties which he himself experienced in turning out duplicate
+parts in large numbers. At all events, he was so early and zealous a
+promoter of its use, that we think he may, in the eyes of all
+practical mechanics, stand as the parent of its introduction to the
+workshops of England.
+
+It is unquestionable that at the time when Maudslay began the
+improvement of machine-tools, the methods of working in wood and
+metals were exceedingly imperfect. Mr. William Fairbairn has stated
+that when he first became acquainted with mechanical engineering,
+about sixty years ago, there were no self-acting tools; everything
+was executed by hand. There were neither planing, slotting, nor
+shaping machines; and the whole stock of an engineering or machine
+establishment might be summed up in a few ill-constructed lathes, and
+a few drills and boring machines of rude construction.*
+ [footnote...
+Address delivered before the British Association at Manchester in
+1861; and Useful Information for Engineers, 1st series, p. 22.
+ ...]
+Our mechanics were equally backward in contrivances for working in
+wood. Thus, when Sir Samuel Bentham made a tour through the
+manufacturing districts of England in 1791, he was surprised to find
+how little had been done to substitute the invariable accuracy of
+machinery for the uncertain dexterity of the human hand. Steam-power
+was as yet only employed in driving spinning-machines, rolling
+metals, pumping water, and such like purposes. In the working of wood
+no machinery had been introduced beyond the common turning-lathe and
+some saws, and a few boring tools used in making blocks for the navy.
+Even saws worked by inanimate force for slitting timber, though in
+extensive use in foreign countries, were nowhere to be found in Great
+Britain.*
+ [footnote...
+Life of Sir Samuel Bentham, 97-8.
+ ...]
+As everything depended on the dexterity of hand and correctness of
+eye of the workmen, the work turned out was of very unequal merit,
+besides being exceedingly costly. Even in the construction of
+comparatively simple machines, the expense was so great as to present
+a formidable obstacle to their introduction and extensive use; and
+but for the invention of machine-making tools, the use of the
+steam-engine in the various forms in which it is now applied for the
+production of power could never have become general.
+
+In turning a piece of work on the old-fashioned lathe, the workman
+applied and guided his tool by means of muscular strength. The work
+was made to revolve, and the turner, holding the cutting tool firmly
+upon the long, straight, guiding edge of the rest, along which he
+carried it, and pressing its point firmly against the article to be
+turned, was thus enabled to reduce its surface to the required size
+and shape. Some dexterous turners were able, with practice and
+carefulness, to execute very clever pieces of work by this simple
+means. But when the article to be turned was of considerable size,
+and especially when it was of metal, the expenditure of muscular
+strength was so great that the workman soon became exhausted. The
+slightest variation in the pressure of the tool led to an
+irregularity of surface; and with the utmost care on the workman's
+part, he could not avoid occasionally cutting a little too deep, in
+consequence of which he must necessarily go over the surface again,
+to reduce the whole to the level of that accidentally cut too deep;
+and thus possibly the job would be altogether spoiled by the diameter
+of the article under operation being made too small for its intended
+purpose.
+
+The introduction of the slide rest furnished a complete remedy for
+this source of imperfection. The principle of the invention consists
+in constructing and fitting the rest so that, instead of being
+screwed down to one place, and the tool in the hands of the workman
+travelling over it, the rest shall itself hold the cutting tool
+firmly fixed in it, and slide along the surface of the bench in a
+direction exactly parallel with the axis of the work. Before its
+invention various methods had been tried with the object of enabling
+the work to be turned true independent of the dexterity of the
+workman. Thus, a square steel cutter used to be firmly fixed in a
+bed, along which it was wedged from point to point of the work, and
+tolerable accuracy was in this way secured. But the slide rest was
+much more easily managed, and the result was much more satisfactory.
+All that the workman had to do, after the tool was firmly fitted into
+the rest, was merely to turn a screw-handle, and thus advance the
+cutter along the face of the work as required, with an expenditure of
+strength so slight as scarcely to be appreciable. And even this
+labour has now been got rid of; for, by an arrangement of the
+gearing, the slide itself has been made self-acting, and advances
+with the revolution of the work in the lathe, which thus supplies the
+place of the workman's hand. The accuracy of the turning done by this
+beautiful yet simple arrangement is as mechanically perfect as work
+can be. The pair of steel fingers which hold the cutting tool firmly
+in their grasp never tire, and it moves along the metal to be cut
+with an accuracy and precision which the human hand, however skilled,
+could never equal.
+
+The effects of the introduction of the slide rest were very shortly
+felt in all departments of mechanism. Though it had to encounter some
+of the ridicule with which new methods of working are usually
+received, and for a time was spoken of in derision as "Maudslay's
+Go-cart,"--its practical advantages were so decided that it gradually
+made its way, and became an established tool in all the best
+mechanical workshops. It was found alike capable of executing the
+most delicate and the most ponderous pieces of machinery; and as
+slide-lathes could be manufactured to any extent, machinery,
+steam-engines, and all kinds of metal work could now be turned out in
+a quantity and at a price that, but for its use, could never have
+been practicable. In course of time various modifications of the
+machine were introduced--such as the planing machine, the
+wheel-cutting machine, and other beautiful tools on the slide-rest
+principle,--the result of which has been that extraordinary
+development of mechanical production and power which is so
+characteristic a feature of the age we live in.
+
+"It is not, indeed, saying at all too much to state," says Mr.
+Nasmyth,*
+ [footnote...
+Remarks on the Introduction of the Slide Principle in Tools and
+Machines employed in the Production of Machinery, in Buchanan's
+Practical Essays on Mill Work and other Machinery. 3rd ed. p. 397.
+ ...]
+a most competent judge in such a matter, "that its influence in
+improving and extending the use of machinery has been as great as
+that produced by the improvement of the steam-engine in respect to
+perfecting manufactures and extending commerce, inasmuch as without
+the aid of the vast accession to our power of producing perfect
+mechanism which it at once supplied, we could never have worked out
+into practical and profitable forms the conceptions of those master
+minds who, during the last half century, have so successfully
+pioneered the way for mankind. The steam-engine itself, which
+supplies us with such unbounded power, owes its present perfection to
+this most admirable means of giving to metallic objects the most
+precise and perfect geometrical forms. How could we, for instance,
+have good steam-engines if we had not the means of boring out a true
+cylinder, or turning a true piston-rod, or planing a valve face? It
+is this alone which has furnished us with the means of carrying into
+practice the accumulated result's of scientific investigation on
+mechanical subjects. It would be blamable indeed," continues Mr.
+Nasmyth, "after having endeavoured to set forth the vast advantages
+which have been conferred on the mechanical world, and therefore on
+mankind generally, by the invention and introduction of the Slide
+Rest, were I to suppress the name of that admirable individual to
+whom we are indebted for this powerful agent towards the attainment
+of mechanical perfection. I allude to Henry Maudslay, whose useful
+life was enthusiastically devoted to the grand object of improving
+our means of producing perfect workmanship and machinery: to him we
+are certainly indebted for the slide rest, and, consequently, to say
+the least, we are indirectly so for the vast benefits which have
+resulted from the introduction of so powerful an agent in perfecting
+our machinery and mechanism generally. The indefatigable care which
+he took in inculcating and diffusing among his workmen, and
+mechanical men generally, sound ideas of practical knowledge and
+refined views of construction, have rendered and ever will continue
+to render his name identified with all that is noble in the ambition
+of a lover of mechanical perfection."
+
+One of the first uses to which Mr. Maudslay applied the improved
+slide rest, which he perfected shortly after beginning business in
+Margaret Street, Cavendish Square, was in executing the requisite
+tools and machinery required by Mr. (afterwards Sir Marc Isambard)
+Brunel for manufacturing ships' blocks. The career of Brunel was of a
+more romantic character than falls to the ordinary lot of mechanical
+engineers. His father was a small farmer and postmaster, at the
+village of Hacqueville, in Normandy, where Marc Isambard was born in
+1769. He was early intended for a priest, and educated accordingly.
+But he was much fonder of the carpenter's shop than of the school;
+and coaxing, entreaty, and punishment alike failed in making a
+hopeful scholar of him. He drew faces and plans until his father was
+almost in despair. Sent to school at Rouen, his chief pleasure was in
+watching the ships along the quays; and one day his curiosity was
+excited by the sight of some large iron castings just landed. What
+were they? How had they been made? Where did they come from? His
+eager inquiries were soon answered. They were parts of an engine
+intended for the great Paris water-works; the engine was to pump
+water by the power of steam; and the castings had been made in
+England, and had just been landed from an English ship. "England!"
+exclaimed the boy, "ah! when I am a man I will go see the country
+where such grand machines are made!" On one occasion, seeing a new
+tool in a cutler's window, he coveted it so much that he pawned his
+hat to possess it. This was not the right road to the priesthood; and
+his father soon saw that it was of no use urging him further: but the
+boy's instinct proved truer than the father's judgment.
+
+It was eventually determined that he should qualify himself to enter
+the royal navy, and at seventeen he was nominated to serve in a
+corvette as "volontaire d'honneur." His ship was paid off in 1792,
+and he was at Paris during the trial of the King. With the
+incautiousness of youth he openly avowed his royalist opinions in the
+cafe which he frequented. On the very day that Louis was condemned
+to death, Brunel had an angry altercation with some
+ultra-republicans, after which he called to his dog, "Viens,
+citoyen!" Scowling looks were turned upon him, and he deemed it
+expedient to take the first opportunity of escaping from the house,
+which he did by a back-door, and made the best of his way to
+Hacqueville. From thence he went to Rouen, and succeeded in finding a
+passage on board an American ship, in which he sailed for New York,
+having first pledged his affections to an English girl, Sophia
+Kingdom, whom he had accidentally met at the house of Mr. Carpentier,
+the American consul at Rouen.
+
+Arrived in America, he succeeded in finding employment as assistant
+surveyor of a tract of land along the Black River, near Lake Ontario.
+In the intervals of his labours he made occasional visits to New
+York, and it was there that the first idea of his block-machinery
+occurred to him. He carried his idea back with him into the woods,
+where it often mingled with his thoughts of Sophia Kingdom, by this
+time safe in England after passing through the horrors of a French
+prison. "My first thought of the block-machinery," he once said, "was
+at a dinner party at Major-General Hamilton's, in New York; my second
+under an American tree, when, one day that I was carving letters on
+its bark, the turn of one of them reminded me of it, and I thought,
+'Ah! my block! so it must be.' And what do you think. were the
+letters I was cutting? Of course none other than S. K." Brunel
+subsequently obtained some employment as an architect in New York,
+and promulgated various plans for improving the navigation of the
+principal rivers. Among the designs of his which were carried out,
+was that of the Park Theatre at New York, and a cannon foundry, in
+which he introduced improvements in casting and boring big guns. But
+being badly paid for his work, and a powerful attraction drawing him
+constantly towards England, he determined to take final leave of
+America, which he did in 1799, and landed at Falmouth in the
+following March. There he again met Miss Kingdom, who had remained
+faithful to him during his six long years of exile, and the pair were
+shortly after united for life.
+
+Brunel was a prolific inventor. During his residence in America, he
+had planned many contrivances in his mind, which he now proceeded to
+work out. The first was a duplicate writing and drawing machine,
+which he patented. The next was a machine for twisting cotton thread
+and forming it into balls; but omitting to protect it by a patent, he
+derived no benefit from the invention, though it shortly came into
+very general use. He then invented a machine for trimmings and
+borders for muslins, lawns, and cambrics,--of the nature of a sewing
+machine. His famous block-machinery formed the subject of his next
+patent.
+
+It may be explained that the making of the blocks employed in the
+rigging of ships for raising and lowering the sails, masts, and
+yards, was then a highly important branch of manufacture. Some idea
+may be formed of the number used in the Royal Navy alone, from the
+fact that a 74-gun ship required to be provided with no fewer than
+1400 blocks of various sizes. The sheaved blocks used for the running
+rigging consisted of the shell, the sheaves, which revolved within
+the shell, and the pins which fastened them together. The fabrication
+of these articles, though apparently simple, was in reality attended
+with much difficulty. Every part had to be fashioned with great
+accuracy and precision to ensure the easy working of the block when
+put together, as any hitch in the raising or lowering of the sails
+might, on certain emergencies, occasion a serious disaster. Indeed,
+it became clear that mere hand-work was not to be relied on in the
+manufacture of these articles, and efforts were early made to produce
+them by means of machinery of the most perfect kind that could be
+devised. In 1781, Mr. Taylor, of Southampton, set up a large
+establishment on the river Itchen for their manufacture; and on the
+expiry of his contract, the Government determined to establish works
+of their own in Portsmouth Dockyard, for the purpose at the same time
+of securing greater economy, and of being independent of individual
+makers in the supply of an article of such importance in the
+equipment of ships.
+
+Sir Samuel Bentham, who then filled the office of Inspector-General
+of Naval Works, was a highly ingenious person, and had for some years
+been applying his mind to the invention of improved machinery for
+working in wood. He had succeeded in introducing into the royal
+dockyards sawing-machines and planing-machines of a superior kind, as
+well as block-making machines. Thus the specification of one of his
+patents, taken out in 1793, clearly describes a machine for shaping
+the shells of the blocks, in a manner similar to that afterwards
+specified by Brunel. Bentham had even proceeded with the erection of
+a building in Portsmouth Dockyard for the manufacture of the blocks
+after his method, the necessary steam-engine being already provided;
+but with a singular degree of candour and generosity, on Brunel's
+method being submitted to him, Sir Samuel at once acknowledged its
+superiority to his own, and promised to recommend its adoption by the
+authorities in his department.
+
+The circumstance of Mrs. Brunel's brother being Under-Secretary to
+the Navy Board at the time, probably led Brunel in the first instance
+to offer his invention to the Admiralty. A great deal, however,
+remained to be done before he could bring his ideas of the
+block-machinery into a definite shape; for there is usually a wide
+interval between the first conception of an intricate machine and its
+practical realization. Though Brunel had a good knowledge of
+mechanics, and was able to master the intricacies of any machine, he
+laboured under the disadvantage of not being a practical mechanic and
+it is probable that but for the help of someone possessed of this
+important qualification, his invention, ingenious and important
+though it was, would have borne no practical fruits. It was at this
+juncture that he was so fortunate as to be introduced to Henry
+Maudslay, the inventor of the sliderest.
+
+It happened that a M. de Bacquancourt, one of the French emigres,
+of whom there were then so many in London, was accustomed almost
+daily to pass Maudslay's little shop in Wells-street, and being
+himself an amateur turner, he curiously inspected the articles from
+time to time exhibited in the window of the young mechanic. One day a
+more than ordinarily nice piece of screw-cutting made its appearance,
+on which he entered the shop to make inquiries as to the method by
+which it had been executed. He had a long conversation with Maudslay,
+with whom he was greatly pleased; and he was afterwards accustomed to
+look in upon him occasionally to see what new work was going on.
+Bacquancourt was also on intimate terms with Brunel, who communicated
+to him the difficulty he had experienced in finding a mechanic of
+sufficient dexterity to execute his design of the block-making
+machinery. It immediately occurred to the former that Henry Maudslay
+was the very man to execute work of the elaborate character proposed,
+and he described to Brunel the new and beautiful tools which Maudslay
+had contrived for the purpose of ensuring accuracy and finish. Brunel
+at once determined to call upon Maudslay, and it was arranged that
+Bacquancourt should introduce him, which he did, and after the
+interview which took place Brunel promised to call again with the
+drawings of his proposed model.
+
+A few days passed, and Brunel called with the first drawing, done by
+himself; for he was a capital draughtsman, and used to speak of
+drawing as the "alphabet of the engineer." The drawing only showed a
+little bit of the intended machine, and Brunel did not yet think it
+advisable to communicate to Maudslay the precise object he had in
+view; for inventors are usually very chary of explaining their
+schemes to others, for fear of being anticipated. Again Brunel
+appeared at Maudslay's shop with a further drawing, still not
+explaining his design; but at the third visit, immediately on looking
+at the fresh drawings he had brought, Maudslay exclaimed, "Ah! now I
+see what you are thinking of; you want machinery for making blocks."
+At this Brunel became more communicative, and explained his designs
+to the mechanic, who fully entered into his views, and went on from
+that time forward striving to his utmost to work out the inventor's
+conceptions and embody them in a practical machine.
+
+While still occupied on the models, which were begun in 1800,
+Maudslay removed his shop from Wells-street, where he was assisted by
+a single journeyman, to Margaret-street, Cavendish-square, where he
+had greater room for carrying on his trade, and was also enabled to
+increase the number of his hands. The working models were ready for
+inspection by Sir Samuel Bentham and the Lords of the Admiralty in
+1801, and having been fully approved by them, Brunel was authorized
+to proceed with the execution of the requisite machinery for the
+manufacture of the ship's blocks required for the Royal Navy. The
+whole of this machinery was executed by Henry Maudslay; it occupied
+him very fully for nearly six years, so that the manufacture of
+blocks by the new process was not begun until September, 1808.
+
+We despair of being able to give any adequate description in words of
+the intricate arrangements and mode of action of the block-making
+machinery. Let any one attempt to describe the much more simple and
+familiar process by which a shoemaker makes a pair of shoes, and he
+will find how inadequate mere words are to describe any mechanical
+operation.*
+ [footnote...
+So far as words and drawings can serve to describe the block-making
+machinery, it will be found very ably described by Mr. Farey in his
+article under this head in Rees's Cyclopaedia, and by Dr. Brewster in
+the Edinburgh Cyclopaedia. A very good account will also be found in
+Tomlinson's Cyclopaedia of the Useful Arts, Art. "Block."
+ ...]
+Suffice it to say, that the machinery was of the most beautiful
+manufacture and finish, and even at this day will bear comparison
+with the most perfect machines which can be turned out with all the
+improved appliances of modern tools. The framing was of cast-iron,
+while the parts exposed to violent and rapid action were all of the
+best hardened steel. In turning out the various parts, Maudslay found
+his slide rest of indispensable value. Indeed, without this
+contrivance, it is doubtful whether machinery of so delicate and
+intricate a character could possibly have been executed. There was
+not one, but many machines in the series, each devoted to a special
+operation in the formation of a block. Thus there were various
+sawing-machines,--the Straight Cross-Cutting Saw, the Circular
+Cross-Cutting Saw, the Reciprocating Ripping-saw, and the Circular
+Ripping-Saw. Then there were the Boring Machines, and the Mortising
+Machine, of beautiful construction, for cutting the sheave-holes,
+furnished with numerous chisels, each making from 110 to 150 strokes
+a minute, and cutting at every stroke a chip as thick as pasteboard
+with the utmost precision. In addition to these were the Corner-Saw
+for cutting off the corners of the block, the Shaping Machine for
+accurately forming the outside surfaces, the Scoring Engine for
+cutting the groove round the longest diameter of the block for the
+reception of the rope, and various other machines for drilling,
+riveting, and finishing the blocks, besides those for making the
+sheaves.
+
+The total number of machines employed in the various operations of
+making a ship's block by the new method was forty-four; and after
+being regularly employed in Portsmouth Dockyard for upwards of fifty
+years, they are still as perfect in their action as on the day they
+were erected. They constitute one of the most ingenious and complete
+collections of tools ever invented for making articles in wood, being
+capable of performing most of the practical operations of carpentry
+with the utmost accuracy and finish. The machines are worked by a
+steam-engine of 32-horse power, which is also used for various other
+dockyard purposes. Under the new system of block-making it was found
+that the articles were better made, supplied with much greater
+rapidity, and executed at a greatly reduced cost. Only ten men, with
+the new machinery, could perform the work which before had required a
+hundred and ten men to execute, and not fewer than 160,000 blocks of
+various kinds and sizes could be turned out in a year, worth not less
+than 541,000L.*
+ [footnote...
+The remuneration paid to Mr. Brunel for his share in the invention
+was only one year's savings, which, however, were estimated by Sir
+Samuel Bentham at 17,663l.; besides which a grant of 5000L. was
+afterwards made to Brunel when labouring under pecuniary
+difficulties. But the ANNUAL saving to the nation by the adoption of
+the block-making machinery was probably more than the entire sum paid
+to the engineer. Brunel afterwards invented other wood-working
+machinery, but none to compare in merit and excellence with the
+above, For further particulars of his career, see BEAMISH'S Memoirs
+of Sir Marc Isambard Brunel, C.E. London. 1862. ...]
+
+The satisfactory execution of the block-machinery brought Maudslay a
+large accession of fame and business; and the premises in Margaret
+Street proving much too limited for his requirements, he again
+resolved to shift his quarters. He found a piece of ground suitable
+for his purpose in Westminster Road, Lambeth. Little more than a
+century since it formed part of a Marsh, the name of which is still
+retained in the adjoining street; its principal productions being
+bulrushes and willows, which were haunted in certain seasons by snipe
+and waterfowl. An enterprising riding-master had erected some
+premises on a part of the marsh, which he used for a riding-school;
+but the speculation not answering, they were sold, and Henry Maudslay
+became the proprietor. Hither he removed his machinery from Margaret
+Street in 1810, adding fresh plant from time to time as it was
+required; and with the aid of his late excellent partner he built up
+the far-famed establishment of Maudslay, Field, and Co. There he went
+on improving his old tools and inventing new ones, as the necessity
+for them arose, until the original slide-lathes used for making the
+block-machinery became thrown into the shade by the comparatively
+gigantic machine-tools of the modern school. Yet the original lathes
+are still to be found in the collection of the firm in Westminster
+Road, and continue to do their daily quota of work with the same
+precision as they did when turned out of the hands of their inventor
+and maker some sixty years ago.
+
+It is unnecessary that we should describe in any great detail the
+further career of Henry Maudslay. The rest of his life was full of
+useful and profitable work to others as well as to himself. His
+business embraced the making of flour and saw mills, mint machinery,
+and steam-engines of all kinds. Before he left Margaret Street, in
+1807, he took out a patent for improvements in the steam-engine, by
+which he much simplified its parts, and secured greater directness of
+action. His new engine was called the Pyramidal, because of its form,
+and was the first move towards what are now called Direct-acting
+Engines, in which the lateral movement of the piston is communicated
+by connecting-rods to the rotatory movement of the crank-shaft. Mr.
+Nasmyth says of it, that "on account of its great simplicity and
+GET-AT-ABILITY of parts, its compactness and self-contained
+steadiness, this engine has been the parent of a vast progeny, all
+more or less marked by the distinguishing features of the original
+design, which is still in as high favour as ever." Mr. Maudslay also
+directed his attention in like manner to the improvement of the
+marine engine, which he made so simple and effective as to become in
+a great measure the type of its class; and it has held its ground
+almost unchanged for nearly thirty years. The 'Regent,' which was the
+first steamboat that plied between London and Margate, was fitted
+with engines by Maudslay in 1816; and it proved the forerunner of a
+vast number of marine engines, the manufacture of which soon became
+one of the most important branches of mechanical engineering.
+
+Another of Mr. Maudslay's inventions was his machine for punching
+boiler-plates, by which the production of ironwork of many kinds was
+greatly facilitated. This improvement originated in the contract
+which he held for some years for supplying the Royal Navy with iron
+plates for ships' tanks. The operations of shearing and punching had
+before been very imperfectly done by hand, with great expenditure of
+labour. To improve the style of the work and lessen the labour,
+Maudslay invented the machine now in general use, by which the holes
+punched in the iron plate are exactly equidistant, and the subsequent
+operation of riveting is greatly facilitated. One of the results of
+the improved method was the great saving which was at once effected
+in the cost of preparing the plates to receive the rivets, the price
+of which was reduced from seven shillings per tank to ninepence. He
+continued to devote himself to the last to the improvement of the
+lathe,--in his opinion the master-machine, the life and soul of
+engine-turning, of which the planing, screw-cutting, and other
+machines in common use, are but modifications. In one of the early
+lathes which he contrived and made, the mandrill was nine inches in
+diameter; it was driven by wheel-gearing like a crane motion, and
+adapted to different speeds. Some of his friends, on first looking at
+it, said he was going "too fast;" but he lived to see work projected
+on so large a scale as to prove that his conceptions were just, and
+that he had merely anticipated by a few years the mechanical progress
+of his time. His large removable bar-lathe was a highly important
+tool of the same kind. It was used to turn surfaces many feet in
+diameter. While it could be used for boring wheels, or the side-rods
+of marine engines, it could turn a roller or cylinder twice or three
+times the diameter of its own centres from the ground-level, and
+indeed could drive round work of any diameter that would clear the
+roof of the shop. This was therefore an almost universal tool,
+capable of very extensive uses. Indeed much of the work now executed
+by means of special tools, such as the planing or slotting machine,
+was then done in the lathe, which was used as a cutter-shaping
+machine, fitted with various appliances according to the work.
+
+Maudslay's love of accuracy also led him from an early period to
+study the subject of improved screw-cutting. The importance of this
+department of mechanism can scarcely be overrated, the solidity and
+permanency of most mechanical structures mainly depending on the
+employment of the screw, at the same time that the parts can be
+readily separated for renewal or repair. Any one can form an idea of
+the importance of the screw as an element in mechanical construction
+by examining say a steam-engine, and counting the number of screws
+employed in holding it together. Previous to the time at which the
+subject occupied the attention of our mechanic, the tools used for
+making screws were of the most rude and inexact kind. The screws were
+for the most part cut by hand: the small by filing, the larger by
+chipping and filing. In consequence of the great difficulty of making
+them, as few were used as possible; and cotters, cotterils, or
+forelocks, were employed instead. Screws, however, were to a certain
+extent indispensable; and each manufacturing establishment made them
+after their own fashion. There was an utter want of uniformity. No
+system was observed as to "pitch," i.e. the number of threads to the
+inch, nor was any rule followed as to the form of those threads.
+Every bolt and nut was sort of specialty in itself, and neither owed
+nor admitted of any community with its neighbours. To such an extent
+was this irregularity carried, that all bolts and their corresponding
+nuts had to be marked as belonging to each other; and any mixing of
+them together led to endless trouble, hopeless confusion, and
+enormous expense. Indeed none but those who lived in the
+comparatively early days of machine-manufacture can form an adequate
+idea of the annoyance occasioned by the want of system in this branch
+of detail, or duly appreciate the services rendered by Maudslay to
+mechanical engineering by the practical measures which he was among
+the first to introduce for its remedy. In his system of screw-cutting
+machinery, his taps and dies, and screw-tackle generally, he laid the
+foundations of all that has since been done in this essential branch
+of machine-construction, in which he was so ably followed up by
+several of the eminent mechanics brought up in his school, and more
+especially by Joseph Clement and Joseph Whitworth. One of his
+earliest self-acting screw lathes, moved by a guide-screw and wheels
+after the plan followed by the latter engineer, cut screws of large
+diameter and of any required pitch. As an illustration of its
+completeness and accuracy, we may mention that by its means a screw
+five feet in length, and two inches in diameter, was cut with fifty
+threads to the inch; the nut to fit on to it being twelve inches
+long, and containing six hundred threads. This screw was principally
+used for dividing scales for astronomical purposes; and by its means
+divisions were produced so minute that they could not be detected
+without the aid of a magnifier. The screw, which was sent for
+exhibition to the Society of Arts, is still carefully preserved
+amongst the specimens of Maudslay's handicraft at the Lambeth Works,
+and is a piece of delicate work which every skilled mechanic will
+thoroughly appreciate. Yet the tool by which this fine piece of
+turning was produced was not an exceptional tool, but was daily
+employed in the ordinary work of the manufactory.
+
+Like every good workman who takes pride in his craft, he kept his
+tools in first-rate order, clean, and tidily arranged, so that he
+could lay his hand upon the thing he wanted at once, without loss of
+time. They are still preserved in the state in which he left them,
+and strikingly illustrate his love of order, "nattiness," and
+dexterity. Mr. Nasmyth says of him that you could see the man's
+character in whatever work he turned out; and as the connoisseur in
+art will exclaim at sight of a picture, " That is Turner," or "That
+is Stansfield," detecting the hand of the master in it, so the
+experienced mechanician, at sight of one of his machines or engines,
+will be equally ready to exclaim, "That is Maudslay;" for the
+characteristic style of the master-mind is as clear to the
+experienced eye in the case of the finished machine as the touches of
+the artist's pencil are in the case of the finished picture. Every
+mechanical contrivance that became the subject of his study came
+forth from his hand and mind rearranged, simplified, and made new,
+with the impress of his individuality stamped upon it. He at once
+stripped the subject of all unnecessary complications; for he
+possessed a wonderful faculty of KNOWING WHAT TO DO WITHOUT--the
+result of his clearness of insight into mechanical adaptations, and
+the accurate and well-defined notions he had formed of the precise
+object to be accomplished. "Every member or separate machine in the
+system of block-machinery says Mr. Nasmyth, "is full of Maudslay's
+presence; and in that machinery, as constructed by him, is to be
+found the parent of every engineering tool by the aid of which we are
+now achieving such great things in mechanical construction. To the
+tools of which Maudslay furnished the prototypes are we mainly
+indebted for the perfection of our textile machinery, our
+locomotives, our marine engines, and the various implements of art,
+of agriculture, and of war. If any one who can enter into the details
+of this subject will be at the pains to analyse, if I may so term it,
+the machinery of our modern engineering workshops, he will find in
+all of them the strongly-marked features of Maudslay's parent
+machine, the slide rest and slide system--whether it be a planing
+machine, a slotting machine, a slide-lathe, or any other of the
+wonderful tools which are now enabling us to accomplish so much in
+mechanism."
+
+One of the things in which Mr. Maudslay took just pride was in the
+excellence of his work. In designing and executing it, his main
+object was to do it in the best possible style and finish, altogether
+irrespective of the probable pecuniary results. This he regarded in
+the light of a duty he could not and would not evade, independent of
+its being a good investment for securing a future reputation; and the
+character which he thus obtained, although at times purchased at
+great cost, eventually justified the soundness of his views. As the
+eminent Mr. Penn, the head of the great engineering firm, is
+accustomed to say, "I cannot afford to turn out second-rate work," so
+Mr. Maudslay found both character and profit in striving after the
+highest excellence in his productions. He was particular even in the
+minutest details. Thus one of the points on which he
+insisted--apparently a trivial matter, but in reality of considerable
+importance in mechanical construction-- was the avoidance of sharp
+interior angles in ironwork, whether wrought or cast; for he found
+that in such interior angles cracks were apt to originate; and when
+the article was a tool, the sharp angle was less pleasant to the hand
+as well as to the eye. In the application of his favourite round or
+hollow corner system--as, for instance, in the case of the points of
+junction of the arms of a wheel with its centre and rim--he used to
+illustrate its superiority by holding up his hand and pointing out
+the nice rounded hollow at the junction of the fingers, or by
+referring to the junction of the branches to the stem of a tree.
+Hence he made a point of having all the angles of his machine
+framework nicely rounded off on their exterior, and carefully
+hollowed in their interior angles. In forging such articles he would
+so shape his metal before bending that the result should be the right
+hollow or rounded corner when bent; the anticipated external angle
+falling into its proper place when the bar so shaped was brought to
+its ultimate form. In all such matters of detail he was greatly
+assisted by his early dexterity as a blacksmith; and he used to say
+that to be a good smith you must be able to SEE in the bar of iron
+the object proposed to be got out of it by the hammer or the tool,
+just as the sculptor is supposed to see in the block of stone the
+statue which he proposes to bring forth from it by his mind and his
+chisel.
+
+Mr. Maudslay did not allow himself to forget his skill in the use of
+the hammer, and to the last he took pleasure in handling it,
+sometimes in the way of business, and often through sheer love of his
+art. Mr Nasmyth says, "It was one of my duties, while acting as
+assistant in his beautiful little workshop, to keep up a stock of
+handy bars of lead which he had placed on a shelf under his
+work-bench, which was of thick slate for the more ready making of his
+usual illustrative sketches of machinery in chalk. His love of
+iron-forging led him to take delight in forging the models of work to
+be ultimately done in iron; and cold lead being of about the same
+malleability as red-hot iron, furnished a convenient material for
+illustrating the method to be adopted with the large work. I well
+remember the smile of satisfaction that lit up his honest face when
+he met with a good excuse for 'having a go at' one of the bars of
+lead with hammer and anvil as if it were a bar of iron; and how, with
+a few dexterous strokes, punchings of holes, and rounded notches, he
+would give the rough bar or block its desired form. He always aimed
+at working it out of the solid as much as possible, so as to avoid
+the risk of any concealed defect, to which ironwork built up of
+welded parts is so liable; and when he had thus cleverly finished his
+model, he used forthwith to send for the foreman of smiths, and show
+him how he was to instruct his men as to the proper forging of the
+desired object." One of Mr. Maudslay's old workmen, when informing us
+of the skilful manner in which he handled the file, said, "It was a
+pleasure to see him handle a tool of any kind, but he was QUITE
+SPLENDID with an eighteen-inch file!" The vice at which he worked was
+constructed by himself, and it was perfect of its kind. It could be
+turned round to any position on the bench; the jaws would turn from
+the horizontal to the perpendicular or any other
+position--upside-down if necessary--and they would open twelve inches
+parallel.
+
+Mr. Nasmyth furnishes the following further recollections of Mr.
+Maudslay, which will serve in some measure to illustrate his personal
+character. "Henry Maudslay," he says, "lived in the days of
+snuff-taking, which unhappily, as I think, has given way to the
+cigar-smoking system. He enjoyed his occasional pinch very much. It
+generally preceded the giving out of a new notion or suggestion for
+an improvement or alteration of some job in hand. As with most of
+those who enjoy their pinch, about three times as much was taken
+between the fingers as was utilized by the nose, and the consequence
+was that a large unconsumed surplus collected in the folds of the
+master's waistcoat as he sat working at his bench. Sometimes a file,
+or a tool, or some small piece of work would drop, and then it was my
+duty to go down on my knees and fetch it up. On such occasions, while
+waiting for the article, he would take the opportunity of pulling
+down his waistcoat front, which had become disarranged by his
+energetic working at the bench; and many a time have I come up with
+the dropped article, half-blinded by the snuff jerked into my eyes
+from off his waistcoat front.
+
+"All the while he was at work he would be narrating some incident in
+his past life, or describing the progress of some new and important
+undertaking, in illustrating which he would use the bit of chalk
+ready to his hand upon the slate bench before him, which was thus in
+almost constant use. One of the pleasures he indulged in while he sat
+at work was Music, of which he was very fond,--more particularly of
+melodies and airs which took a lasting hold on his mind. Hence he was
+never without an assortment of musical boxes, some of which were of a
+large size. One of these he would set agoing on his library table,
+which was next to his workshop, and with the door kept open, he was
+thus enabled to enjoy the music while he sat working at his bench.
+Intimate friends would frequently call upon him and sit by the hour,
+but though talking all the while he never dropped his work, but
+continued employed on it with as much zeal as if he were only
+beginning life. His old friend Sir Samuel Bentham was a frequent
+caller in this way, as well as Sir Isambard Brunel while occupied
+with his Thames Tunnel works*
+ [footnote...
+Among the last works executed by the firm during Mr. Maudslay's
+lifetime was the famous Shield employed by his friend Brunel in
+carrying forward the excavation of the Thames Tunnel. He also
+supplied the pumping-engines for the same great work, the completion
+of which he did not live to see.
+ ...]
+ and Mr. Chantrey, who was accustomed to consult him about the
+casting of his bronze statuary. Mr. Barton of the Royal Mint, and Mr.
+Donkin the engineer, with whom Mr. Barton was associated in
+ascertaining and devising a correct system of dividing the Standard
+Yard, and many others, had like audience of Mr. Maudslay in his
+little workshop, for friendly converse, for advice, or on affairs of
+business.
+
+"It was a special and constant practice with him on a workman's
+holiday, or on a Sunday morning, to take a walk through his workshops
+when all was quiet, and then and there examine the various jobs in
+hand. On such occasions he carried with him a piece of chalk, with
+which, in a neat and very legible hand, he would record his remarks
+in the most pithy and sometimes caustic terms. Any evidence of want
+of correctness in setting things square, or in 'flat filing,' which
+he held in high esteem, or untidiness in not sweeping down the bench
+and laying the tools in order, was sure to have a record in chalk
+made on the spot. If it was a mild case, the reproof was recorded in
+gentle terms, simply to show that the master's eye was on the
+workman; but where the case deserved hearty approbation or required
+equally hearty reproof, the words employed were few, but went
+straight to the mark. These chalk jottings on the bench were held in
+the highest respect by the workmen themselves, whether they conveyed
+praise or blame, as they were sure to be deserved; and when the men
+next assembled, it soon became known all over the shop who had
+received the honour or otherwise of one of the master's bench
+memoranda in chalk."
+
+The vigilant, the critical, and yet withal the generous eye of the
+master being over all his workmen, it will readily be understood how
+Maudslay's works came to be regarded as a first-class school for
+mechanical engineers. Every one felt that the quality of his
+workmanship was fully understood; and, if he had the right stuff in
+him, and was determined to advance, that his progress in skill would
+be thoroughly appreciated. It is scarcely necessary to point out how
+this feeling, pervading the establishment, must have operated, not
+only in maintaining the quality of the work, but in improving the
+character of the workmen. The results were felt in the increased
+practical ability of a large number of artisans, some of whom
+subsequently rose to the highest distinction. Indeed it may be said
+that what Oxford and Cambridge are in letters, workshops such as
+Maudslay's and Penn's are in mechanics. Nor can Oxford and Cambridge
+men be prouder of the connection with their respective colleges than
+mechanics such as Whitworth, Nasmyth, Roberts, Muir, and Lewis, are
+of their connection with the school of Maudslay. For all these
+distinguished engineers at one time or another formed part of his
+working staff, and were trained to the exercise of their special
+abilities under his own eye. The result has been a development of
+mechanical ability the like of which perhaps is not to be found in
+any age or country.
+
+Although Mr. Maudslay was an unceasing inventor, he troubled himself
+very little about patenting his inventions. He considered that the
+superiority of his tools and the excellence of his work were his
+surest protection. Yet he had sometimes the annoyance of being
+threatened with actions by persons who had patented the inventions
+which he himself had made.*
+ [footnote...
+His principal patent's were--two, taken out in 1805 and 1808, while
+in Margaret Street, for printing calicoes (Nos. 2872 and 3117); one
+taken out in 1806, in conjunction with Mr. Donkin, for lifting heavy
+weights (2948); one taken out in 1807, while still in Margaret
+Street, for improvements in the steam-engine, reducing its parts and
+rendering it more compact and portable (3050); another, taken out in
+conjunction with Robert Dickinson in 1812, for sweetening water and
+other liquids (3538); and, lastly, a patent taken out in conjunction
+"with Joshua Field in 1824 for preventing concentration of brine in
+boilers (5021).
+ ...]
+He was much beset by inventors, sometimes sadly out at elbows, but
+always with a boundless fortune looming before them. To such as
+applied to him for advice in a frank and candid spirit, he did not
+hesitate to speak freely, and communicate the results of his great
+experience in the most liberal manner; and to poor and deserving men
+of this class he was often found as ready to help them with his purse
+as with his still more valuable advice. He had a singular way of
+estimating the abilities of those who thus called upon him about
+their projects. The highest order of man was marked in his own mind
+at l00 degrees; and by this ideal standard he measured others,
+setting them down at 90 degrees, 80 degrees, and so on. A very
+first-rate man he would set down at 95 degrees, but men of this rank
+were exceedingly rare. After an interview with one of the applicants
+to him for advice, he would say to his pupil Nasmyth, "Jem, I think
+that man may be set down at 45 degrees, but he might be WORKED UP TO
+60 degrees--a common enough way of speaking of the working of a
+steam-engine, but a somewhat novel though by no means an inexpressive
+method of estimating the powers of an individual.
+
+But while he had much toleration for modest and meritorious
+inventors, he had a great dislike for secret-mongers,--schemers of
+the close, cunning sort,--and usually made short work of them. He had
+an almost equal aversion for what he called the "fiddle-faddle
+inventors," with their omnibus patents, into which they packed every
+possible thing that their noddles could imagine. "Only once or twice
+in a century," said he, "does a great inventor appear, and yet here
+we have a set of fellows each taking out as many patents as would
+fill a cart,--some of them embodying not a single original idea, but
+including in their specifications all manner of modifications of
+well-known processes, as well as anticipating the arrangements which
+may become practicable in the progress of mechanical improvement."
+Many of these "patents" he regarded as mere pit-falls to catch the
+unwary; and he spoke of such "inventors" as the pests of the
+profession.
+
+The personal appearance of Henry Maudslay was in correspondence with
+his character. He was of a commanding presence, for he stood full six
+feet two inches in height, a massive and portly man. His face was
+round, full, and lit up with good humour. A fine, large, and square
+forehead, of the grand constructive order, dominated over all, and
+his bright keen eye gave energy and life to his countenance. He was
+thoroughly "jolly" and good-natured, yet full of force and character.
+It was a positive delight to hear his cheerful, ringing laugh. He was
+cordial in manner, and his frankness set everybody at their ease who
+had occasion to meet him, even for the first time. No one could be
+more faithful and consistent in his friendships, nor more firm in the
+hour of adversity. In fine, Henry Maudslay was, as described by his
+friend Mr. Nasmyth, the very beau ideal of an honest, upright,
+straight-forward, hard-working, intelligent Englishman.
+
+A severe cold which he caught on his way home from one of his visits to
+France, was the cause of his death, which occurred on the l4th of
+February, 1831. The void which his decease caused was long and deeply
+felt, not only by his family and his large circle of friends, but by
+his workmen, who admired him for his industrial skill, and loved him
+because of his invariably manly, generous, and upright conduct towards
+them. He directed that he should be buried in Woolwich
+parish-churchyard, where a cast-iron tomb, made to his own design, was
+erected over his remains. He had ever a warm heart for Woolwich, where
+he had been born and brought up. He often returned to it, sometimes to
+carry his mother a share of his week's wages while she lived, and
+afterwards to refresh himself with a sight of the neighbourhood with
+which he had been so familiar when a boy. He liked its green common,
+with the soldiers about it; Shooter's Hill, with its out-look over Kent
+and down the valley of the Thames; the river busy with shipping, and
+the royal craft loading and unloading their armaments at the dockyard
+wharves. He liked the clangour of the Arsenal smithy where he had first
+learned his art, and all the busy industry of the place. It was
+natural, therefore, that, being proud of his early connection with
+Woolwich, he should wish to lie there; and Woolwich, on its part, let
+us add, has equal reason to he proud of Henry Maudslay.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+JOSEPH CLEMENT.
+
+"It is almost impossible to over-estimate the importance of these
+inventions. The Greeks would have elevated their authors among the
+gods; nor will the enlightened judgment of modern times deny them the
+place among their fellow-men which is so undeniably their due."--
+Edinburgh Review.
+
+
+That Skill in mechanical contrivance is a matter of education and
+training as well as of inborn faculty, is clear from the fact of so
+many of our distinguished mechanics undergoing the same kind of
+practical discipline, and perhaps still more so from the circumstance
+of so many of them passing through the same workshops. Thus Maudslay
+and Clement were trained in the workshops of Bramah; and Roberts,
+Whitworth, Nasmyth, and others, were trained in those of Maudslay.
+
+Joseph Clement was born at Great Ashby in Westmoreland, in the year
+1779. His father was a hand-loom weaver, and a man of remarkable
+culture considering his humble station in life. He was an ardent
+student of natural history, and possessed a much more complete
+knowledge of several sub-branches of that science than was to have
+been looked for in a common working-man. One of the departments which
+he specially studied was Entomology. In his leisure hours he was
+accustomed to traverse the country searching the hedge-bottoms for
+beetles and other insects, of which he formed a remarkably complete
+collection; and the capture of a rare specimen was quite an event in
+his life. In order more deliberately to study the habits of the bee
+tribe, he had a number of hives constructed for the purpose of
+enabling him to watch their proceedings without leaving his work; and
+the pursuit was a source of the greatest pleasure to him. He was a
+lover of all dumb creatures; his cottage was haunted by birds which
+flew in and out at his door, and some of them became so tame as to
+hop up to him and feed out of his hand. "Old Clement" was also a bit
+of a mechanic, and such of his leisure moments as he did not devote
+to insect-hunting, were employed in working a lathe of his own
+construction, which he used to turn his bobbing on, and also in
+various kinds of amateur mechanics.
+
+His boy Joseph, like other poor men's sons, was early set to work. He
+received very little education, and learnt only the merest rudiments
+of reading and writing at the village school. The rest of his
+education he gave to himself as he grew older. His father needed his
+help at the loom, where he worked with him for some years; but, as
+handloom weaving was gradually being driven out by improved
+mechanism, the father prudently resolved to put his son to a better
+trade. They have a saying in Cumberland that when the bairns reach a
+certain age, they are thrown on to the house-rigg, and that those who
+stick on are made thatchers of, while those who fall off are sent to
+St. Bees to be made parsons of. Joseph must have been one of those
+that stuck on--at all events his father decided to make him a
+thatcher, afterwards a slater, and he worked at that trade for five
+years, between eighteen and twenty-three.
+
+The son, like the father, had a strong liking for mechanics, and as
+the slating trade did not keep him in regular employment, especially
+in winter time, he had plenty of opportunity for following the bent
+of his inclinations. He made a friend of the village blacksmith,
+whose smithy he was accustomed to frequent, and there he learned to
+work at the forge, to handle the hammer and file, and in a short time
+to shoe horses with considerable expertness. A cousin of his named
+Farer, a clock and watchmaker by trade, having returned to the
+village from London, brought with him some books on mechanics, which
+he lent to Joseph to read; and they kindled in him an ardent desire
+to be a mechanic instead of a slater. He nevertheless continued to
+maintain himself by the latter trade for some time longer, until his
+skill had grown; and, by way of cultivating it, he determined, with
+the aid of his friend the village blacksmith, to make a
+turning-lathe. The two set to work, and the result was the production
+of an article in every way superior to that made by Clement's father,
+which was accordingly displaced to make room for the new machine. It
+was found to work very satisfactorily, and by its means Joseph
+proceeded to turn fifes, flutes, clarinets, and hautboys; for to his
+other accomplishments he joined that of music, and could play upon
+the instruments that he made. One of his most ambitious efforts was
+the making of a pair of Northumberland bagpipes, which he finished to
+his satisfaction, and performed upon to the great delight of the
+villagers. To assist his father in his entomological studies, he even
+contrived, with the aid of the descriptions given in the books
+borrowed from his cousin the watchmaker, to make for him a
+microscope, from which he proceeded to make a reflecting telescope,
+which proved a very good instrument. At this early period (1804) he
+also seems to have directed his attention to screw-making--a branch
+of mechanics in which he afterwards became famous; and he proceeded
+to make a pair of very satisfactory die-stocks, though it is said
+that he had not before seen or even heard of such a contrivance for
+making screws.
+
+So clever a workman was not likely to remain long a village slater.
+Although the ingenious pieces of work which he turned out by his
+lathe did not bring him in much money, he liked the occupation so
+much better than slating that he was gradually giving up that trade.
+His father urged him to stick to slating as "a safe thing;" but his
+own mind was in favour of following his instinct to be a mechanic;
+and at length he determined to leave his village and seek work in a
+new line. He succeeded in finding employment in a small factory at
+Kirby Stephen, a town some thirteen miles from Great Ashby, where he
+worked at making power-looms. From an old statement of account
+against his employer which we have seen, in his own handwriting,
+dated the 6th September, 1805, it appears that his earnings at such
+work as "fitting the first set of iron loames," "fitting up
+shittles," and "making moddles," were 3s. 6d. a day; and he must,
+during the same time, have lived with his employer, who charged him
+as a set-off "14 weaks bord at 8s. per weak." He afterwards seems to
+have worked at piece-work in partnership with one Andrew Gamble
+supplying the materials as well as the workmanship for the looms and
+shuttles. His employer, Mr. George Dickinson, also seems to have
+bought his reflecting telescope from him for the sum of 12l.
+
+From Kirby Stephen Clement removed to Carlisle, where he was employed
+by Forster and Sons during the next two years at the same description
+of work; and he conducted himself, according; to their certificate on
+his leaving their employment to proceed to Glasgow in 1807, "with
+great sobriety and industry, entirely to their satisfaction." While
+working at Glasgow as a turner, he took lessons in drawing from Peter
+Nicholson, the well-known writer on carpentry--a highly ingenious
+man. Nicholson happened to call at the shop at which Clement worked
+in order to make a drawing of a power-loom; and Clement's expressions
+of admiration at his expertness were so enthusiastic, that Nicholson,
+pleased with the youth's praise, asked if he could be of service to
+him in any way. Emboldened by the offer, Clement requested, as the
+greatest favour he could confer upon him, to have the loan of the
+drawing he had just made, in order that he might copy it. The request
+was at once complied with; and Clement, though very poor at the time,
+and scarcely able to buy candle for the long winter evenings, sat up
+late every night until he had finished it. Though the first drawing
+he had ever made, he handed it back to Nicholson instead of the
+original, and at first the draughtsman did not recognise that the
+drawing was not his own. When Clement told him that it was only the
+copy, Nicholson's brief but emphatic praise was --- "Young man,
+YOU'LL DO!" Proud to have such a pupil, Nicholson generously offered
+to give him gratuitous lessons in drawing, which were thankfully
+accepted; and Clement, working at nights with great ardour, soon made
+rapid progress, and became an expert draughtsman.
+
+Trade being very slack in Glasgow at the time, Clement, after about a
+year's stay in the place, accepted a situation with Messrs. Leys,
+Masson, and Co., of Aberdeen, with whom he began at a guinea and a
+half a week, from which he gradually rose to two guineas, and
+ultimately to three guineas. His principal work consisted in
+designing and making power-looms for his employers, and fitting them
+up in different parts of the country. He continued to devote himself
+to the study of practical mechanics, and made many improvements in
+the tools with which he worked. While at Glasgow he had made an
+improved pair of die-stocks for screws; and, at Aberdeen, he made a
+turning-lathe with a sliding mandrill and guide-screws, for cutting
+screws, furnished also with the means for correcting guide-screws. In
+the same machine he introduced a small slide rest, into which he
+fixed the tool for cutting the screws,--having never before seen a
+slide rest, though it is very probable he may have heard of what
+Maudslay had already done in the same direction. Clement continued
+during this period of his life an industrious self-cultivator,
+occupying most of his spare hours in mechanical and landscape
+drawing, and in various studies. Among the papers left behind him we
+find a ticket to a course of instruction on Natural Philosophy given
+by Professor Copland in the Marischal College at Aberdeen, which
+Clement attended in the session of 1812-13; and we do not doubt that
+our mechanic was among the most diligent of his pupils. Towards the
+end of 1813, after saving about 100L. out of his wages, Clement
+resolved to proceed to London for the purpose of improving himself in
+his trade and pushing his way in the world. The coach by which he
+travelled set him down in Snow Hill, Holborn; and his first thought
+was of finding work. He had no friend in town to consult on the
+matter, so he made inquiry of the coach-guard whether he knew of any
+person in the mechanical line in that neighbourhood. The guard said,
+"Yes; there was Alexander Galloway's show shop, just round the
+corner, and he employed a large number of hands." Running round the
+corner, Clement looked in at Galloway's window, through which he saw
+some lathes and other articles used in machine shops. Next morning he
+called upon the owner of the shop to ask employment. "What can you
+do?" asked Galloway. "I can work at the forge," said Clement.
+"Anything else?" "I can turn." "What else?" "I can draw." "What!"
+said Galloway, "can you draw? Then I will engage you." A man who
+could draw or work to a drawing in those days was regarded as a
+superior sort of mechanic. Though Galloway was one of the leading
+tradesmen of his time, and had excellent opportunities for
+advancement, he missed them all. As Clement afterwards said of him,
+"He was only a mouthing common-council man, the height of whose
+ambition was to be an alderman;" and, like most corporation
+celebrities, he held a low rank in his own business. He very rarely
+went into his workshops to superintend or direct his workmen, leaving
+this to his foremen--a sufficient indication of the causes of his
+failure as a mechanic.*
+ [footnote...
+On one occasion Galloway had a cast-iron roof made for his workshop,
+so flat and so independent of ties that the wonder was that it should
+have stood an hour. One day Peter Keir, an engineer much employed by
+the government--a clever man, though some what eccentric--was taken
+into the shop by Galloway to admire the new roof. Keir, on glancing
+up at it, immediately exclaimed, "Come outside, and let us speak
+about it there!" All that he could say to Galloway respecting the
+unsoundness of its construction was of no avail. The fact was that,
+however Keir might argue about its not being able to stand, there it
+was actually standing, and that was enough for Galloway. Keir went
+home, his mind filled with Galloway's most unprincipled roof. "If
+that stands," said he to himself, "all that I have been learning and
+doing for thirty years has been wrong." That night he could not sleep
+for thinking about it. In the morning he strolled up Primrose Hill,
+and returned home still muttering to himself about "that roof."
+"What, said his wife to him, "are you thinking of Galloway's roof?"
+"Yes, said he. "Then you have seen the papers?" "No -- what about
+them?" "Galloway's roof has fallen in this morning, and killed eight
+or ten of the men!" Keir immediately went to bed, and slept soundly
+till next morning.
+ ...]
+
+On entering Galloway's shop, Clement was first employed in working at
+the lathe; but finding the tools so bad that it was impossible to
+execute satisfactory work with them, he at once went to the forge,
+and began making a new set of tools for himself. The other men, to
+whom such a proceeding was entirely new, came round him to observe
+his operations, and they were much struck with his manual dexterity.
+The tools made, he proceeded to use them, displaying what seemed to
+the other workmen an unusual degree of energy and intelligence; and
+some of the old hands did not hesitate already to pronounce Clement
+to be the best mechanic in the shop. When Saturday night came round,
+the other men were curious to know what wages Galloway would allow
+the new hand; and when he had been paid, they asked him. "A guinea,"
+was the reply. "A guinea! Why, you are worth two if you are worth a
+shilling," said an old man who came out of the rank--an excellent
+mechanic, who, though comparatively worthless through his devotion to
+drink, knew Clement's money value to his employer better than any man
+there; and he added, "Wait for a week or two, and if you are not
+better paid than this, I can tell you of a master who will give you a
+fairer wage." Several Saturdays came round, but no advance was made
+on the guinea a week; and then the old workman recommended Clement to
+offer himself to Bramah at Pimlico, who was always on the look out
+for first-rate mechanics.
+
+Clement acted on the advice, and took with him some of his drawings,
+at sight of which Bramah immediately engaged him for a month; and at
+the end of that time he had given so much satisfaction, that it was
+agreed he should continue for three months longer at two guineas a
+week. Clement was placed in charge of the tools of the shop, and he
+showed himself so apt at introducing improvements in them, as well as
+in organizing the work with a view to despatch and economy, that at
+the end of the term Bramah made him a handsome present, adding, "if I
+had secured your services five years since, I would now have been a
+richer man by many thousands of pounds." A formal agreement for a
+term of five years was then entered into between Bramah and Clement,
+dated the 1st of April, 1814, by which the latter undertook to fill
+the office of chief-draughtsman and superintendent of the Pimlico
+Works, in consideration of a salary of three guineas a week, with an
+advance of four shillings a week in each succeeding year of the
+engagement. This arrangement proved of mutual advantage to both.
+Clement devoted himself with increased zeal to the improvement of the
+mechanical arrangements of the concern, exhibiting his ingenuity in
+many ways, and taking; a genuine pride in upholding the character of
+his master for turning out first-class work.
+
+On the death of Bramah, his sons returned from college and entered
+into possession of the business. They found Clement the ruling mind
+there and grew jealous of him to such an extent that his situation
+became uncomfortable; and by mutual consent he was allowed to leave
+before the expiry of his term of agreement. He had no difficulty in
+finding employment; and was at once taken on as chief draughtsman at
+Maudslay and Field's where he was of much assistance in proportioning
+the early marine engines, for the manufacture of which that firm were
+becoming celebrated. After a short time, he became desirous of
+beginning business on his own account as a mechanical engineer. He
+was encouraged to do this by the Duke of Northumberland, who, being a
+great lover of mechanics and himself a capital turner, used often to
+visit Maudslay's, and thus became acquainted with Clement, whose
+expertness as a draughtsman and mechanic he greatly admired. Being a
+man of frugal and sober habits, always keeping his expenditure very
+considerably within his income, Clement had been enabled to
+accumulate about 500L., which he thought would be enough for his
+purpose; and he accordingly proceeded, in 1817, to take a small
+workshop in Prospect Place, Newington Butts, where he began business
+as a mechanical draughtsman and manufacturer of small machinery
+requiring first-class workmanship.
+
+From the time when he took his first gratuitous lessons in drawing
+from Peter Nicholson, at Glasgow, in 1807, he had been steadily
+improving in this art, the knowledge of which is indispensable to
+whoever aspires to eminence as a mechanical engineer,--until by
+general consent Clement was confessed to stand unrivalled as a
+draughtsman. Some of the very best drawings contained in the
+Transactions of the Society of Arts, from the year 1817
+downwards,--especially those requiring the delineation of any
+unusually elaborate piece of machinery,--proceeded from the hand of
+Clement. In some of these, he reached a degree of truth in mechanical
+perspective which has never been surpassed.*
+ [footnote...
+See more particularly The Transactions of the Society for the
+Encouragement of Arts, vol. xxxiii. (l8l7), at pp. 74,l57,l60,175,208
+(an admirable drawing; of Mr. James Allen's Theodolite); vol. xxxvi.
+(1818), pp. 28,176 (a series of remarkable illustrations of Mr.
+Clement's own invention of an Instrument for Drawing Ellipses); vol.
+xliii. (1825), containing an illustration of the Drawing Table
+invented by him for large drawings; vol. xlvi. (1828), containing a
+series of elaborate illustrations of his Prize Turning Lathe; and
+xlviii. 1829, containing illustrations of his Self-adjusting Double
+Driver Centre Chuck.
+ ...]
+To facilitate his labours, he invented an extremely ingenious
+instrument, by means of which ellipses of all proportions, as well as
+circles and right lines, might be geometrically drawn on paper or on
+copper. He took his idea of this instrument from the trammel used by
+carpenters for drawing imperfect ellipses; and when he had succeeded
+in avoiding the crossing of the points, he proceeded to invent the
+straight-line motion. For this invention the Society of Arts awarded
+him their gold medal in 1818. Some years later, he submitted to the
+same Society his invention of a stand for drawings of large size. He
+had experienced considerable difficulty in making such drawings, and
+with his accustomed readiness to overcome obstacles, he forthwith set
+to work and brought out his new drawing-table.
+
+As with many other original-minded mechanics, invention became a
+habit with him, and by study and labour he rarely failed in attaining
+the object which he had bent his mind upon accomplishing. Indeed,
+nothing pleased him better than to have what he called "a tough job;"
+as it stimulated his inventive faculty, in the exercise of which he
+took the highest pleasure. Hence mechanical schemers of all kinds
+were accustomed to resort to Clement for help when they had found an
+idea which they desired to embody in a machine. If there was any
+value in their idea, none could be more ready than he to recognise
+its merit, and to work it into shape; but if worthless, he spoke out
+his mind at once, dissuading the projector from wasting upon it
+further labour or expense.
+
+One of the important branches of practical mechanics to which Clement
+continued through life to devote himself, was the improvement of
+self-acting tools, more especially of the slide-lathe. He introduced
+various improvements in its construction and arrangement, until in
+his hands it became as nearly perfect as it was possible to be. In
+1818, he furnished the lathe with a slide rest twenty-two inches
+long, for the purpose of cutting screws, provided with the means of
+self-correction; and some years later, in 1827, the Society of Arts
+awarded him their gold Isis medal for his improved turning-lathe,
+which embodied many ingenious contrivances calculated to increase its
+precision and accuracy in large surface-turning.
+
+The beautiful arrangements embodied in Mr. Clement's improved lathe
+can with difficulty be described in words; but its ingenuity may be
+inferred from a brief statement of the defects which it was invented
+to remedy, and which it successfully overcame. When the mandrill of a
+lathe, having a metal plate fixed to it, turns round with a uniform
+motion, and the slide rest which carries the cutter is moving from
+the circumference of the work to the centre, it will be obvious that
+the quantity of metal passing over the edge of the cutter at each
+revolution, and therefore at equal intervals of time, is continually
+diminishing, in exact proportion to the spiral line described by the
+cutter on the face of the work. But in turning metal plates it is
+found very in expedient to increase the speed of the work beyond a
+certain quantity; for when this happens, and the tool passes the work
+at too great a velocity, it heats, softens, and is ground away, the
+edge of the cutter becomes dull, and the surface of the plate is
+indented and burnished, instead of being turned. Hence loss of time
+on the part of the workman, and diminished work on the part of the
+tool, results which, considering the wages of the one and the capital
+expended on the construction of the other, are of no small
+importance; for the prime objects of all improvement of tools are,
+economy of time and economy of capital--to minimize labour and cost,
+and maximize result.
+
+The defect to which we have referred was almost the only remaining
+imperfection in the lathe, and Mr. Clement overcame it by making the
+machine self-regulating; so that, whatever might be the situation of
+the cutter, equal quantities of metal should pass over it in equal
+times,--the speed at the centre not exceeding that suited to the work
+at the circumference,--while the workman was enabled to convert the
+varying rate of the mandrill into a uniform one whenever he chose.
+Thus the expedients of wheels, riggers, and drums, of different
+diameters, by which it had been endeavoured to alter the speed of the
+lathe-mandrill, according to the hardness of the metal and the
+diameter of the thing to be turned, were effectually disposed of.
+These, though answering very well where cylinders of equal diameter
+had to be bored, and a uniform motion was all that was required, were
+found very inefficient where a Plane surface had to be turned; and it
+was in such cases that Mr. Clement's lathe was found so valuable. By
+its means surfaces of unrivalled correctness were produced, and the
+slide-lathe, so improved, became recognised and adopted as the most
+accurate and extensively applicable of all machine-tools.
+
+The year after Mr. Clement brought out his improved turning-lathe, he
+added to it his self-adjusting double driving centre-chuck, for which
+the Society of Arts awarded him their silver medal in 1828. In
+introducing this invention to the notice of the Society, Mr. Clement
+said, "Although I have been in the habit of turning and making
+turning-lathes and other machinery for upwards of thirty-five years,
+and have examined the best turning-lathes in the principal
+manufactories throughout Great Britain, I find it universally
+regretted by all practical men that they cannot turn anything
+perfectly true between the centres of the lathe." It was found by
+experience, that there was a degree of eccentricity, and consequently
+of imperfection, in the figure of any long cylinder turned while
+suspended between the centres of the lathe, and made to revolve by
+the action of a single driver. Under such circumstances the pressure
+of the tool tended to force the work out of the right line and to
+distribute the strain between the driver and the adjacent centre, so
+that one end of the cylinder became eccentric with respect to the
+other. By Mr. Clement's invention of the two-armed driver, which was
+self-adjusting, the strain was taken from the centre and divided
+between the two arms, which being equidistant from the centre,
+effectually corrected all eccentricity in the work. This invention
+was found of great importance in ensuring the true turning of large
+machinery, which before had been found a matter of considerable
+difficulty.
+
+In the same year (1828) Mr. Clement began the making of fluted taps
+and dies, and he established a mechanical practice with reference to
+the pitch of the screw, which proved of the greatest importance in
+the economics of manufacture. Before his time, each mechanical
+engineer adopted a thread of his own; so that when a piece of work
+came under repair, the screw-hob had usually to be drilled out, and a
+new thread was introduced according to the usage which prevailed in
+the shop in which the work was executed. Mr. Clement saw a great
+waste of labour in this practice, and he promulgated the idea that
+every screw of a particular length ought to be furnished with its
+appointed number of threads of a settled pitch. Taking the inch as
+the basis of his calculations, he determined the number of threads in
+each case; and the practice thus initiated by him, recommended as it
+was by convenience and economy, was very shortly adopted throughout
+the trade. It may be mentioned that one of Clement's ablest
+journeymen, Mr. Whitworth, has, since his time, been mainly
+instrumental in establishing the settled practice; and Whitworth's
+thread (initiated by Clement) has become recognised throughout the
+mechanical world. To carry out his idea, Clement invented his
+screw-engine lathe, with gearing, mandrill, and sliding-table
+wheel-work, by means of which he first cut the inside screw-tools
+from the left-handed hobs--the reverse mode having before been
+adopted,--while in shaping machines he was the first to use the
+revolving cutter attached to the slide rest. Then, in 1828, he fluted
+the taps for the first time with a revolving cutter,--other makers
+having up to that time only notched them. Among his other inventions
+in screws may be mentioned his headless tap, which, according to Mr.
+Nasmyth, is so valuable an invention, that, "if he had done nothing
+else, it ought to immortalize him among mechanics. It passed right
+through the hole to be tapped, and was thus enabled to do the duty of
+three ordinary screws." By these improvements much greater precision
+was secured in the manufacture of tools and machinery, accompanied by
+a greatly reduced cost of production; the results of which are felt
+to this day.
+
+Another of Mr. Clement's ingenious inventions was his Planing
+Machine, by means of which metal plates of large dimensions were
+planed with perfect truth and finished with beautiful accuracy. There
+is perhaps scarcely a machine about which there has been more
+controversy than this; and we do not pretend to be able to determine
+the respective merits of the many able mechanics who have had a hand
+in its invention. It is exceedingly probable that others besides
+Clement worked out the problem in their own way, by independent
+methods; and this is confirmed by the circumstance that though the
+results achieved by the respective inventors were the same, the
+methods employed by them were in many respects different. As regards
+Clement, we find that previous to the year 1820 he had a machine in
+regular use for planing the triangular bars of lathes and the sides
+of weaving-looms. This instrument was found so useful and so
+economical in its working, that Clement proceeded to elaborate a
+planing machine of a more complete kind, which he finished and set to
+work in the year 1825. He prepared no model of it, but made it direct
+from the working drawings; and it was so nicely constructed, that
+when put together it went without a hitch, and has continued steadily
+working for more than thirty years down to the present day.
+
+Clement took out no patent for his invention, relying for protection
+mainly on his own and his workmen's skill in using it. We therefore
+find no specification of his machine at the Patent Office, as in the
+case of most other capital inventions; but a very complete account of
+it is to be found in the Transactions of the Society of Arts for
+1832, as described by Mr. Varley. The practical value of the Planing
+Machine induced the Society to apply to Mr. Clement for liberty to
+publish a full description of it; and Mr. Varley's paper was the
+result.*
+ [footnote...
+Transactions of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, vol. xlix.
+p.157.
+ ...]
+It may be briefly stated that this engineer's plane differs greatly
+from the carpenter's plane, the cutter of which is only allowed to
+project so far as to admit of a thin shaving to be sliced off,--the
+plane working flat in proportion to the width of the tool, and its
+length and straightness preventing the cutter from descending into
+any hollows in the wood. The engineer's plane more resembles the
+turning-lathe, of which indeed it is but a modification, working up
+on the same principle, on flat surfaces. The tools or cutters in
+Clement's machine were similar to those used in the lathe, varying in
+like manner, but performing their work in right lines,--the tool
+being stationary and the work moving under it, the tool only
+travelling when making lateral cuts. To save time two cutters were
+mounted, one to cut the work while going, the other while returning,
+both being so arranged and held as to be presented to the work in the
+firmest manner, and with the least possible friction. The bed of the
+machine, on which the work was laid, passed under the cutters on
+perfectly true rollers or wheels, lodged and held in their bearings
+as accurately as the best mandrill could be, and having set-screws
+acting against their ends totally preventing all end-motion. The
+machine was bedded on a massive and solid foundation of masonry in
+heavy blocks, the support at all points being so complete as
+effectually to destroy all tendency to vibration, with the object of
+securing full, round, and quiet cuts. The rollers on which the
+planing-machine travelled were so true, that Clement himself used to
+say of them, "If you were to put but a paper shaving under one of the
+rollers, it would at once stop all the rest." Nor was this any
+exaggeration--the entire mechanism, notwithstanding its great size,
+being as true and accurate as that of a watch.
+
+By an ingenious adaptation of the apparatus, which will also be found
+described in the Society of Arts paper, the planing machine might be
+fitted with a lathe-bed, either to hold two centres, or a head with a
+suitable mandrill. When so fitted, the machine was enabled to do the
+work of a turning-lathe, though in a different way, cutting cylinders
+or cones in their longitudinal direction perfectly straight, as well
+as solids or prisms of any angle, either by the longitudinal or
+lateral motion of the cutter; whilst by making the work revolve, it
+might be turned as in any other lathe. This ingenious machine, as
+contrived by Mr. Clement, therefore represented a complete union of
+the turning-lathe with the planing machine and dividing engine, by
+which turning of the most complicated kind might readily be executed.
+For ten years after it was set in motion, Clement's was the only
+machine of the sort available for planing large work; and being
+consequently very much in request, it was often kept going night and
+day,--the earnings by the planing machine alone during that time
+forming the principal income of its inventor. As it took in a piece
+of work six feet square, and as his charge for planing was
+three-halfpence the square inch, or eighteen shillings the square
+foot, he could thus earn by his machine alone some ten pounds for
+every day's work of twelve hours. We may add that since planing
+machines in various forms have become common in mechanical workshops,
+the cost of planing does not amount to more than three-halfpence the
+square foot.
+
+The excellence of Mr. Clement's tools, and his well-known skill in
+designing and executing work requiring unusual accuracy and finish,
+led to his being employed by Mr. Babbage to make his celebrated
+Calculating or Difference Engine. The contrivance of a machine that
+should work out complicated sums in arithmetic with perfect
+precision, was, as may readily be imagined, one of the most difficult
+feats of the mechanical intellect. To do this was in an especial
+sense to stamp matter with the impress of mind, and render it
+subservient to the highest thinking faculty. Attempts had been made
+at an early period to perform arithmetical calculations by mechanical
+aids more rapidly and precisely than it was possible to do by the
+operations of the individual mind. The preparation of arithmetical
+tables of high numbers involved a vast deal of labour, and even with
+the greatest care errors were unavoidable and numerous. Thus in a
+multipltcation-table prepared by a man so eminent as Dr. Hutton for
+the Board of Longitude, no fewer than forty errors were discovered in
+a single page taken at random. In the tables of the Nautical Almanac,
+where the greatest possible precision was desirable and necessary,
+more than five hundred errors were detected by one person; and the
+Tables of the Board of Longitude were found equally incorrect. But
+such errors were impossible to be avoided so long as the ordinary
+modes of calculating, transcribing, and printing continued in use.
+
+The earliest and simplest form of calculating apparatus was that
+employed by the schoolboys of ancient Greece, called the Abacus;
+consisting of a smooth board with a narrow rim, on which they were
+taught to compute by means of progressive rows of pebbles, bits of
+bone or ivory, or pieces of silver coin, used as counters. The same
+board, strewn over with sand, was used for teaching the rudiments of
+writing and the principles of geometry. The Romans subsequently
+adopted the Abacus, dividing it by means of perpendicular lines or
+bars, and from the designation of calculus which they gave to each
+pebble or counter employed on the board, we have derived our English
+word to calculate. The same instrument continued to be employed
+during the middle ages, and the table used by the English Court of
+Exchequer was but a modified form of the Greek Abacus, the chequered
+lines across it giving the designation to the Court, which still
+survives. Tallies, from the French word tailler to cut, were another
+of the mechanical methods employed to record computations, though in
+a very rude way. Step by step improvements were made; the most
+important being that invented by Napier of Merchiston, the inventor
+of logarithms, commonly called Napier's bones, consisting of a number
+of rods divided into ten equal squares and numbered, so that the
+whole when placed together formed the common multiplication table. By
+these means various operations in multiplication and division were
+performed. Sir Samuel Morland, Gunter, and Lamb introduced other
+contrivances, applicable to trigonometry; Gunter's scale being still
+in common use. The calculating machines of Gersten and Pascal were of
+a different kind, working out arithmetical calculations by means of
+trains of wheels and other arrangements; and that contrived by Lord
+Stanhope for the purpose of verifying his calculations with respect
+to the National Debt was of like character. But none of these will
+bear for a moment to be compared with the machine designed by Mr.
+Babbage for performing arithmetical calculations and mathematical
+analyses, as well as for recording the calculations when made,
+thereby getting rid entirely of individual error in the operations of
+calculation, transcription, and printing.
+
+The French government, in their desire to promote the extension of
+the decimal system, had ordered the construction of logarithmical
+tables of vast extent; but the great labour and expense involved in
+the undertaking prevented the design from being carried out. It was
+reserved for Mr. Babbage to develope the idea by means of a machine
+which he called the Difference Engine. This machine is of so
+complicated a character that it would be impossible for us to give
+any intelligible description of it in words . Although Dr. Lardner
+was unrivalled in the art of describing mechanism, he occupied
+twenty-five pages of the 'Edinburgh Review' (vol.59) in endeavouring
+to describe its action, and there were several features in it which
+he gave up as hopeless. Some parts of the apparatus and modes of
+action are indeed extraordinary and perhaps none more so than that
+for ensuring accuracy in the calculated results,--the machine
+actually correcting itself, and rubbing itself back into accuracy,
+when the disposition to err occurs, by the friction of the adjacent
+machinery! When an error is made, the wheels become locked and refuse
+to proceed; thus the machine must go rightly or not at all,--an
+arrangement as nearly resembling volition as anything that brass and
+steel are likely to accomplish.
+
+This intricate subject was taken up by Mr. Babbage in 1821, when he
+undertook to superintend for the British government the construction
+of a machine for calculating and printing mathematical and
+astronomical tables. The model first constructed to illustrate the
+nature of his invention produced figures at the rate of 44 a minute.
+In 1823 the Royal Society was requested to report upon the invention,
+and after full inquiry the committee recommended it as one highly
+deserving of public encouragement. A sum of 1500L. was then placed at
+Mr. Babbage's disposal by the Lords of the Treasury for the purpose
+of enabling him to perfect his invention. It was at this time that he
+engaged Mr. Clement as draughtsman and mechanic to embody his ideas
+in a working machine. Numerous tools were expressly contrived by the
+latter for executing the several parts, and workmen were specially
+educated for the purpose of using them. Some idea of the elaborate
+character of the drawings may be formed from the fact that those
+required for the calculating machinery alone--not to mention the
+printing machinery, which was almost equally elaborate--covered not
+less than four hundred square feet of surface! The cost of executing
+the calculating machine was of course very great, and the progress of
+the work was necessarily slow. The consequence was that the
+government first became impatient, and then began to grumble at the
+expense. At the end of seven years the engineer's bills alone were
+found to amount to nearly 7200L., and Mr. Babbage's costs out of
+pocket to 7000L. more. In order to make more satisfactory progress,
+it was determined to remove the works to the neighbourhood of Mr.
+Babbage's own residence; but as Clement's claims for conducting the
+operations in the new premises were thought exorbitant, and as he
+himself considered that the work did not yield him the average profit
+of ordinary employment in his own trade, he eventually withdrew from
+the enterprise, taking with him the tools which he had constructed
+for executing the machine. The government also shortly after withdrew
+from it, and from that time the scheme was suspended, the Calculating
+Engine remaining a beautiful but unfinished fragment of a great work.
+Though originally intended to go as far as twenty figures, it was
+only completed to the extent of being capable of calculating to the
+depth of five figures, and two orders of differences; and only a
+small part of the proposed printing machinery was ever made. The
+engine was placed in the museum of King's College in 1843, enclosed
+in a glass case, until the year 1862, when it was removed for a time
+to the Great Exhibition, where it formed perhaps the most remarkable
+and beautifully executed piece of mechanism the combined result of
+intellectual and mechanical contrivance--in the entire collection.*
+ [footnote...
+A complete account of the calculating machine, as well as of an
+analytical engine afterwards contrived by Mr. Babbage, of still
+greater power than the other, will be found in the Bibliotheque
+Universelle de Geneve, of which a translation into English, with
+copious original notes, by the late Lady Lovelace, daughter of Lord
+Byron, was published in the 3rd vol. of Taylor's Scientific Memoirs
+(London, 1843). A history of the machine, and of the circumstances
+connected with its construction, will also be found in Weld's History
+of the Royal Society, vol. ii. 369-391. It remains to be added, that
+the perusal by Messrs. Scheutz of Stockholm of Dr. Lardner's account
+of Mr. Babbage's engine in the Edinburgh Review, led those clever
+mechanics to enter upon the scheme of constructing and completing it,
+and the result is, that their machine not only calculates the tables,
+but prints the results. It took them nearly twenty years to perfect
+it, but when completed the machine seemed to be almost capable of
+thinking. The original was exhibited at the Paris Exhibition of 1855.
+A copy of it has since been secured by the English government at a
+cost of 1200L., and it is now busily employed at Somerset House in
+working out annuity and other tables for the Registrar-General. The
+copy was constructed, with several admirable improvements, by the
+Messrs. Donkin, the well-known mechanical engineers, after the
+working drawings of the Messrs. Scheutz.
+ ...]
+
+Clement was on various other occasions invited to undertake work
+requiring extra skill, which other mechanics were unwilling or unable
+to execute. He was thus always full of employment, never being under
+the necessity of canvassing for customers. He was almost constantly
+in his workshop, in which he took great pride. His dwelling was over
+the office in the yard, and it was with difficulty he could be
+induced to leave the premises. On one occasion Mr. Brunel of the
+Great Western Railway called upon him to ask if he could supply him
+with a superior steam-whistle for his locomotives, the whistles which
+they were using giving forth very little sound. Clement examined the
+specimen brought by Brunel, and pronounced it to be "mere
+tallow-chandler's work." He undertook to supply a proper article, and
+after his usual fashion he proceeded to contrive a machine or tool
+for the express purpose of making steam-whistles. They were made and
+supplied, and when mounted on the locomotive the effect was indeed
+"screaming." They were heard miles off, and Brunel, delighted,
+ordered a hundred. But when the bill came in, it was found that the
+charge made for them was very high--as much as 40L. the set. The
+company demurred at the price,--Brunel declaring it to be six times
+more than the price they had before been paying. "That may be;"
+rejoined Clement, "but mine are more than six times better. You
+ordered a first-rate article, and you must be content to pay for it."
+The matter was referred to an arbitrator, who awarded the full sum
+claimed. Mr. Weld mentions a similar case of an order which Clement
+received from America to make a large screw of given dimensions "in
+the best possible manner," and he accordingly proceeded to make one
+with the greatest mathematical accuracy. But his bill amounted to
+some hundreds of pounds, which completely staggered the American, who
+did not calculate on having to pay more than 20L. at the utmost for
+the screw. The matter was, however, referred to arbitrators, who gave
+their decision, as in the former case, in favour of the mechanic.*
+ [footnote...
+History of the Royal Society, ii. 374.
+ ...]
+
+One of the last works which Clement executed as a matter of pleasure,
+was the building of an organ for his own use. It will be remembered
+that when working as a slater at Great Ashby, he had made flutes and
+clarinets, and now in his old age he determined to try his skill at
+making an organ--in his opinion the king of musical instruments. The
+building of it became his hobby, and his greatest delight was in
+superintending its progress. It cost him about two thousand pounds in
+labour alone, but he lived to finish it, and we have been informed
+that it was pronounced a very excellent instrument.
+
+Clement was a heavy-browed man, without any polish of manner or
+speech; for to the last he continued to use his strong Westmoreland
+dialect. He was not educated in a literary sense; for he read but
+little, and could write with difficulty. He was eminently a mechanic,
+and had achieved his exquisite skill by observation, experience, and
+reflection. His head was a complete repertory of inventions, on which
+he was constantly drawing for the improvement of mechanical practice.
+Though he had never more than thirty workmen in his factory, they
+were all of the first class; and the example which Clement set before
+them of extreme carefulness and accuracy in execution rendered his
+shop one of the best schools of its time for the training of
+thoroughly accomplished mechanics. Mr. Clement died in 1844, in his
+sixty-fifth year; after which his works were carried on by Mr.
+Wilkinson, one of his nephews; and his planing machine still
+continues in useful work.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+FOX OF DERBY - MURRAY OF LEEDS - ROBERTS AND WHITWORTH OF MANCHESTER.
+
+"Founders and senators of states and cities, lawgivers, extirpers of
+tyrants, fathers of the people, and other eminent persons in civil
+government, were honoured but with titles of Worthies or demi-gods;
+whereas, such as were inventors and authors of new arts, endowments,
+and commodities towards man's life, were ever consecrated amongst the
+gods themselves."--BACON, Advancement of Learning.
+
+
+While such were the advances made in the arts of tool-making and
+engine-construction through the labours of Bramah, Maudslay, and
+Clement, there were other mechanics of almost equal eminence who
+flourished about the same time and subsequently in several of the
+northern manufacturing towns. Among these may be mentioned James Fox
+of Derby; Matthew Murray and Peter Fairbairn of Leeds; Richard
+Roberts, Joseph Whitworth, James Nasmyth, and William Fairbairn of
+Manchester; to all of whom the manufacturing industry of Great
+Britain stands in the highest degree indebted.
+
+James Fox, the founder of the Derby firm of mechanical engineers, was
+originally a butler in the service of the Rev. Thomas Gisborne, of
+Foxhall Lodge, Staffordshire. Though a situation of this kind might
+not seem by any means favourable for the display of mechanical
+ability, yet the butler's instinct for handicraft was so strong that
+it could not be repressed; and his master not only encouraged him in
+the handling of tools in his leisure hours, but had so genuine an
+admiration of his skill as well as his excellent qualities of
+character, that he eventually furnished him with the means of
+beginning business on his own account.
+
+The growth and extension of the cotton, silk, and lace trades, in the
+neighbourhood of Derby, furnished Fox with sufficient opportunities
+for the exercise of his mechanical skill; and he soon found ample
+scope for its employment. His lace machinery became celebrated, and
+he supplied it largely to the neighbouring town of Nottingham; he
+also obtained considerable employment from the great firms of
+Arkwright and Strutt-- the founders of the modem cotton manufacture.
+Mr. Fox also became celebrated for his lathes, which were of
+excellent quality, still maintaining their high reputation; and
+besides making largely for the supply of the home demand, he exported
+much machinery abroad, to France, Russia, and the Mauritius.
+
+The present Messrs. Fox of Derby, who continue to carry on the
+business of the firm, claim for their grandfather, its founder, that
+he made the first planing machine in 1814,*
+ [footnote...
+Engineer, Oct. 10th, 1862.
+ ...]
+and they add that the original article continued in use until quite
+recently. We have been furnished by Samuel Hall, formerly a workman
+at the Messrs. Fox's, with the following description of the
+machine: -- " It was essentially the same in principle as the planing
+machine now in general use, although differing in detail. It had a
+self-acting ratchet motion for moving the slides of a compound slide
+rest, and a self-acting reversing tackle, consisting of three bevel
+wheels, one a stud, one loose on the driving shaft, and another on a
+socket, with a pinion on the opposite end of the driving shaft
+running on the socket. The other end was the place for the driving
+pulley. A clutch box was placed between the two opposite wheels,
+which was made to slide on a feather, so that by means of another
+shaft containing levers and a tumbling ball, the box on reversing was
+carried from one bevel wheel to the opposite one." The same James Fox
+is also said at a very early period to have invented a screw-cutting
+machine, an engine for accurately dividing and cutting the teeth of
+wheels, and a self-acting lathe. But the evidence as to the dates at
+which these several inventions are said to have been made is so
+conflicting that it is impossible to decide with whom the merit of
+making them really rests. The same idea is found floating at the same
+time in many minds, the like necessity pressing upon all, and the
+process of invention takes place in like manner: hence the
+contemporaneousness of so many inventions, and the disputes that
+arise respecting them, as described in a previous chapter.
+
+There are still other claimants for the merit of having invented the
+planing machine; among whom may be mentioned more particularly
+Matthew Murray of Leeds, and Richard Roberts of Manchester. We are
+informed by Mr. March, the present mayor of Leeds, head of the
+celebrated tool-manufacturing firm of that town, that when he first
+went to work at Matthew Murray's, in 1814, a planing machine of his
+invention was used to plane the circular part or back of the D valve,
+which he had by that time introduced in the steam-engine. Mr. March
+says, "I recollect it very distinctly, and even the sort of framing
+on which it stood. The machine was not patented, and like many
+inventions in those days, it was kept as much a secret as possible,
+being locked up in a small room by itself, to which the ordinary
+workmen could not obtain access. The year in which I remember it
+being in use was, so far as I am aware, long before any
+planing-machine of a similar kind had been invented."
+
+Matthew Murray was born at Stockton-on-Tees in the year 1763. His
+parents were of the working class, and Matthew, like the other
+members of the family, was brought up with the ordinary career of
+labour before him. When of due age his father apprenticed him to the
+trade of a blacksmith, in which he very soon acquired considerable
+expertness. He married before his term had expired; after which,
+trade being slack at Stockton, he found it necessary to look for work
+elsewhere. Leaving his wife behind him, he set out for Leeds with his
+bundle on his back, and after a long journey on foot, he reached that
+town with not enough money left in his pocket to pay for a bed at the
+Bay Horse inn, where he put up. But telling the landlord that he
+expected work at Marshall's, and seeming to be a respectable young
+man, the landlord trusted him; and he was so fortunate as to obtain
+the job which he sought at Mr. Marshall's, who was then beginning the
+manufacture of flax, for which the firm has since become so famous.
+
+Mr. Marshall was at that time engaged in improving the method of
+manufacture,*
+ [footnote...
+We are informed in Mr. Longstaffe's Annals and Characteristics of
+Darlington, that the spinning of flax by machinery was first begun by
+one John Kendrew, an ingenious self-taught mechanic of that town, who
+invented a machine for the purpose, for which he took out a patent in
+1787. Mr. Marshall went over from Leeds to see his machine, and
+agreed to give him so much per spindle for the right to use it. But
+ceasing to pay the patent right, Kendrew commenced an action against
+him for a sum of nine hundred pounds alleged to be due under the
+agreement. The claim was disputed, and Kendrew lost his action; and
+it is added in Longstaffe's Annals, that even had he succeeded, it
+would have been of no use; for Mr. Marshall declared that he had not
+then the money wherewith to pay him. It is possible that Matthew
+Murray may have obtained some experience of flax-machinery in working
+for Kendrew, which afterwards proved of use to him in Mr. Marshall's
+establishment.
+ ...]
+and the young blacksmith was so fortunate or rather so dexterous as
+to be able to suggest several improvements in the machinery which
+secured the approval of his employer, who made him a present of 20L.,
+and very shortly promoted him to be the first mechanic in the
+workshop. On this stroke of good fortune Murray took a house at the
+neighbouring village of Beeston, sent to Stockton for his wife, who
+speedily joined him, and he now felt himself fairly started in the
+world. He remained with Mr. Marshall for about twelve years, during
+which he introduced numerous improvements in the machinery for
+spinning flax, and obtained the reputation of being a first-rate
+mechanic. This induced Mr. James Fenton and Mr. David Wood to offer
+to join him in the establishment of an engineering and machine-making
+factory at Leeds; which he agreed to, and operations were commenced
+at Holbeck in the year 1795.
+
+As Mr. Murray had obtained considerable practical knowledge of the
+steam-engine while working at Mr. Marshall's, he took principal
+charge of the engine-building department, while his partner Wood
+directed the machine-making. In the branch of engine-building Mr.
+Murray very shortly established a high reputation, treading close
+upon the heels of Boulton and Watt--so close, indeed, that that firm
+became very jealous of him, and purchased a large piece of ground
+close to his works with the object of preventing their extension.*
+ [footnote...
+The purchase of this large piece of ground, known as Camp Field, had
+the effect of "plugging up" Matthew Murray for a time; and it
+remained disused, except for the deposit of dead dogs and other
+rubbish, for more than half a century. It has only been enclosed
+during the present year, and now forms part of the works of Messrs.
+Smith, Beacock, and Tannet, the eminent tool-makers.
+ ...]
+His additions to the steam-engine were of great practical value, one
+of which, the self-acting apparatus attached to the boiler for the
+purpose of regulating the intensity of fire under it, and
+consequently the production of steam, is still in general use. This
+was invented by him as early as 1799. He also subsequently invented
+the D slide valve, or at least greatly improved it, while he added to
+the power of the air-pump, and gave a new arrangement to the other
+parts, with a view to the simplification of the powers of the engine.
+To make the D valve work efficiently, it was found necessary to form
+two perfectly plane surfaces, to produce which he invented his
+planing machine. He was also the first to adopt the practice of
+placing the piston in a horizontal position in the common condensing
+engine. Among his other modifications in the steam-engine, was his
+improvement of the locomotive as invented by Trevithick; and it ought
+to be remembered to his honour that he made the first locomotive that
+regularly worked upon any railway.
+
+This was the engine erected by him for Blenkinsop, to work the
+Middleton colliery railway near Leeds, on which it began to run in
+1812, and continued in regular use for many years. In this engine he
+introduced the double cylinder--Trevithick's engine being provided
+with only one cylinder, the defects of which were supplemented by the
+addition of a fly-wheel to carry the crank over the dead points.
+
+But Matthew Murray's most important inventions, considered in their
+effects on manufacturing industry, were those connected with the
+machinery for heckling and spinning flax, which he very greatly
+improved. His heckling machine obtained for him the prize of the gold
+medal of the Society of Arts; and this as well as his machine for wet
+flax-spinning by means of sponge weights proved of the greatest
+practical value. At the time when these inventions were made the flax
+trade was on the point of expiring, the spinners being unable to
+produce yarn to a profit; and their almost immediate effect was to
+reduce the cost of production, to improve immensely the quality of
+the manufacture, and to establish the British linen trade on a solid
+foundation. The production of flax-machinery became an important
+branch of manufacture at Leeds, large quantities being made for use
+at home as well as for exportation, giving employment to an
+increasing number of highly skilled mechanics.*
+ [footnote...
+Among more recent improvers of flax-machinery, the late Sir Peter
+Fairbairn is entitled to high merit: the work turned out by him being
+of first-rate excellence, embodying numerous inventions and
+improvements of great value and importance.
+ ...]
+Mr. Murray's faculty for organising work, perfected by experience,
+enabled him also to introduce many valuable improvements in the
+mechanics of manufacturing. His pre-eminent skill in mill-gearing
+became generally acknowledged, and the effects of his labours are
+felt to this day in the extensive and still thriving branches of
+industry which his ingenuity and ability mainly contributed to
+establish. All the machine tools used in his establishment were
+designed by himself, and he was most careful in the personal
+superintendence of all the details of their construction. Mr. Murray
+died at Leeds in 1826, in his sixty-third year.
+
+We have not yet exhausted the list of claimants to the invention of
+the Planing Machine, for we find still another in the person of
+Richard Roberts of Manchester, one of the most prolific of modem
+inventors. Mr. Roberts has indeed achieved so many undisputed
+inventions, that he can readily afford to divide the honour in this
+case with others. He has contrived things so various as the
+self-acting mule and the best electro-magnet, wet gas-meters and dry
+planing machines, iron billard-tables and turret-clocks, the
+centrifugal railway and the drill slotting-machine, an apparatus for
+making cigars and machinery for the propulsion and equipment of
+steamships; so that he may almost be regarded as the Admirable
+Crichton of modem mechanics.
+
+Richard Roberts was born in 1789, at Carreghova in the parish of
+Llanymynech. His father was by trade a shoemaker, to which he
+occasionally added the occupation of toll-keeper. The house in which
+Richard was born stood upon the border line which then divided the
+counties of Salop and Montgomery; the front door opening in the one
+county, and the back door in the other. Richard, when a boy, received
+next to no education, and as soon as he was of fitting age was put to
+common labouring work. For some time he worked in a quarry near his
+father's dwelling; but being of an ingenious turn, he occupied his
+leisure in making various articles of mechanism, partly for amusement
+and partly for profit. One of his first achievements, while working
+as a quarryman, was a spinning-wheel, of which he was very proud, for
+it was considered "a good job." Thus he gradually acquired dexterity
+in handling tools, and he shortly came to entertain the ambition of
+becoming a mechanic.
+
+There were several ironworks in the neighbour hood, and thither he
+went in search of employment. He succeeded in finding work as a
+pattern-maker at Bradley, near Bilston; under John Wilkinson, the
+famous ironmaster--a man of great enterprise as well as mechanical
+skill; for he was the first man, as already stated, that Watt could
+find capable of boring a cylinder with any approach to truth, for the
+purposes of his steam-engines. After acquiring some practical
+knowledge of the art of working in wood as well as iron, Roberts
+proceeded to Birmingham, where he passed through different shops,
+gaining further experience in mechanical practice. He tried his hand
+at many kinds of work, and acquired considerable dexterity in each.
+He was regarded as a sort of jack-of-all-trades; for he was a good
+turner, a tolerable wheel-wright, and could repair mill-work at a
+pinch.
+
+He next moved northward to the Horsley ironworks, Tipton, where he
+was working as a pattern-maker when he had the misfortune to be drawn
+in his own county for the militia. He immediately left his work and
+made his way homeward to Llanymynech, determined not to be a soldier
+or even a militiaman. But home was not the place for him to rest in,
+and after bidding a hasty adieu to his father, he crossed the country
+northward on foot and reached Liverpool, in the hope of finding work
+there. Failing in that, he set out for Manchester and reached it at
+dusk, very weary and very miry in consequence of the road being in
+such a wretched state of mud and ruts. He relates that, not knowing a
+person in the town, he went up to an apple-stall ostensibly to buy a
+pennyworth of apples, but really to ask the stall-keeper if he knew
+of any person in want of a hand. Was there any turner in the
+neighbourhood? Yes, round the corner. Thither he went at once, found
+the wood-turner in, and was promised a job on the following morning.
+He remained with the turner for only a short time, after which he
+found a job in Salford at lathe and tool-making. But hearing that the
+militia warrant-officers were still searching for him, he became
+uneasy and determined to take refuge in London.
+
+He trudged all the way on foot to that great hiding-place, and first
+tried Holtzapffel's, the famous tool-maker's, but failing in his
+application he next went to Maudslay's and succeeded in getting
+employment. He worked there for some time, acquiring much valuable
+practical knowledge in the use of tools, cultivating his skill by
+contact with first-class workmen, and benefiting by the spirit of
+active contrivance which pervaded the Maudslay shops. His manual
+dexterity greatly increased, and his inventive ingenuity fully
+stimulated, he determined on making his way back to Manchester,
+which, even more than London itself, at that time presented abundant
+openings for men of mechanical skill. Hence we find so many of the
+best mechanics trained at Maudslay's and Clement's--Nasmyth, Lewis,
+Muir, Roberts, Whitworth, and others--shortly rising into distinction
+there as leading mechanicians and tool-makers.
+
+The mere enumeration of the various results of Mr. Roberts's
+inventive skill during the period of his settlement at Manchester as
+a mechanical engineer, would occupy more space than we can well
+spare. But we may briefly mention a few of the more important. In
+1816, while carrying on business on his own account in Deansgate, he
+invented his improved sector for correctly sizing wheels in blank
+previously to their being cut, which is still extensively used. In
+the same year he invented his improved screw-lathe; and in the
+following year, at the request of the boroughreeve and constables of
+Manchester, he contrived an oscillating and rotating wet gas meter of
+a new kind, which enabled them to sell gas by measure. This was the
+first meter in which a water lute was applied to prevent the escape
+of gas by the index shaft, the want of which, as well as its great
+complexity, had prevented the only other gas meter then in existence
+from working satisfactorily. The water lute was immediately adopted
+by the patentee of that meter. The planing machine, though claimed,
+as we have seen, by many inventors, was constructed by Mr. Roberts
+after an original plan of his own in 1817, and became the tool most
+generally employed in mechanical workshops--acting by means of a
+chain and rack--though it has since been superseded to some extent by
+the planing machine of Whitworth, which works both ways upon an
+endless screw. Improvements followed in the slide-lathe (giving a
+large range of speed with increased diameters for the same size of
+headstocks, &c.), in the wheel-cutting engine, in the scale-beam (by
+which, with a load of 2 oz. on each end, the fifteen-hundredth part
+of a grain could be indicated), in the broaching-machine, the
+slotting-machine, and other engines.
+
+But the inventions by which his fame became most extensively known
+arose out of circumstances connected with the cotton manufactures of
+Manchester and the neighbourhood. The great improvements which he
+introduced in the machine for making weavers' reeds, led to the
+formation of the firm of Sharp, Roberts, and Co., of which Mr.
+Roberts was the acting mechanical partner for many years. Not less
+important were his improvements in power-looms for weaving fustians,
+which were extensively adopted. But by far the most famous of his
+inventions was unquestionably his Self-acting Mule, one of the most
+elaborate and beautiful pieces of machinery ever contrived. Before
+its invention, the working of the entire machinery of the
+cotton-mill, as well as the employment of the piecers, cleaners, and
+other classes of operatives, depended upon the spinners, who, though
+receiving the highest rates of pay, were by much the most given to
+strikes; and they were frequently accustomed to turn out in times
+when trade was brisk, thereby bringing the whole operations of the
+manufactories to a standstill, and throwing all the other operatives
+out of employment. A long-continued strike of this sort took place in
+1824, when the idea occurred to the masters that it might be possible
+to make the spinning-mules run out and in at the proper speed by
+means of self-acting machinery, and thus render them in some measure
+independent of the more refractory class of their workmen. It seemed,
+however, to be so very difficult a problem, that they were by no
+means sanguine of success in its solution. Some time passed before
+they could find any mechanic willing so much as to consider the
+subject. Mr. Ashton of Staley-bridge made every effort with this
+object, but the answer he got was uniformly the same. The thing was
+declared to be impracticable and impossible. Mr. Ashton, accompanied
+by two other leading spinners, called on Sharp, Roberts, and Co., to
+seek an interview with Mr. Roberts. They introduced the subject to
+him, but he would scarcely listen to their explanations, cutting them
+short with the remark that he knew nothing whatever about
+cotton-spinning. They insisted, nevertheless, on explaining to him
+what they required, but they went away without being able to obtain
+from him any promise of assistance in bringing out the required
+machine.
+
+The strike continued, and the manufacturers again called upon Mr.
+Roberts, but with no better result. A third time they called and
+appealed to Mr. Sharp, the capitalist of the firm, who promised to
+use his best endeavours to induce his mechanical partner to take the
+matter in hand. But Mr. Roberts, notwithstanding his reticence, had
+been occupied in carefully pondering the subject since Mr. Ashton's
+first interview with him. The very difficulty of the problem to be
+solved had tempted him boldly to grapple with it, though he would not
+hold out the slightest expectation to the cotton-spinners of his
+being able to help them in their emergency until he saw his way
+perfectly clear. That time had now come; and when Mr. Sharp
+introduced the subject, he said he had turned the matter over and
+thought he could construct the required self-acting machinery. It was
+arranged that he should proceed with it at once, and after a close
+study of four months he brought out the machine now so extensively
+known as the self-acting mule. The invention was patented in 1825,
+and was perfected by subsequent additions, which were also patented.
+
+Like so many other inventions, the idea of the self-acting mule was
+not new. Thus Mr. William Strutt of Derby, the father of Lord Belper,
+invented a machine of this sort at an early period; Mr. William
+Belly, of the New Lanark Mills, invented a second; and various other
+projectors tried their skill in the same direction; but none of these
+inventions came into practical use. In such cases it has become
+generally admitted that the real inventor is not the person who
+suggests the idea of the invention, but he who first works it out
+into a practicable process, and so makes it of practical and
+commercial value. This was accomplished by Mr. Roberts, who, working
+out the idea after his own independent methods, succeeded in making
+the first self-acting mule that would really act as such; and he is
+therefore fairly entitled to be regarded as its inventor.
+
+By means of this beautiful contrivance, spindle-carriages; bearing
+hundreds of spindles, run themselves out and in by means of automatic
+machinery, at the proper speed, without a hand touching them; the
+only labour required being that of a few boys and girls to watch them
+and mend the broken threads when the carriage recedes from the roller
+beam, and to stop it when the cop is completely formed, as is
+indicated by the bell of the counter attached to the working gear.
+Mr. Baines describes the self-acting mule while at work as "drawing
+out, twisting, and winding up many thousand threads, with unfailing
+precision and indefatigable patience and strength--a scene as magical
+to the eye which is not familiarized with it, as the effects have
+been marvellous in augmenting the wealth and population of the
+country."*
+ [footnote...
+EDWARD BAINES, Esq., M.P., History of the Cotton Manufacture, 212.
+ ...]
+
+Mr. Roberts's great success with the self-acting mule led to his
+being often appealed to for help in the mechanics of manufacturing.
+In 1826, the year after his patent was taken out, he was sent for to
+Mulhouse, in Alsace, to design and arrange the machine establishment
+of Andre Koechlin and Co.; and in that and the two subsequent years
+he fairly set the works a-going, instructing the workmen in the
+manufacture of spinning-machinery, and thus contributing largely to
+the success of the French cotton manufacture. In 1832 he patented his
+invention of the Radial Arm for "winding on" in the self-acting mule,
+now in general use; and in future years he took out sundry patents
+for roving, slubbing, spinning, and doubling cotton and other fibrous
+materials; and for weaving, beetling, and mangling fabrics of various
+sorts.
+
+A considerable branch of business carried on by the firm of Sharp,
+Roberts, and Co. was the manufacture of iron billiard-tables, which
+were constructed with almost perfect truth by means of Mr. Roberts's
+planing-machine, and became a large article of export. But a much
+more important and remunerative department was the manufacture of
+locomotives, which was begun by the firm shortly after the opening of
+the Liverpool and Manchester Railway had marked this as one of the
+chief branches of future mechanical engineering. Mr. Roberts adroitly
+seized the opportunity presented by this new field of invention and
+enterprise, and devoted himself for a time to the careful study of
+the locomotive and its powers. As early as the year 1829 we find him
+presenting to the Manchester Mechanics' Institute a machine
+exhibiting the nature of friction upon railroads, in solution of the
+problem then under discussion in the scientific journals. In the
+following year he patented an arrangement for communicating power to
+both driving-wheels of the locomotive, at all times in the exact
+proportions required when turning to the right or left,--an
+arrangement which has since been adopted in many road locomotives and
+agricultural engines. In the same patent will be found embodied his
+invention of the steam-brake, which was also a favourite idea of
+George Stephenson, since elaborated by Mr. MacConnell of the London
+and North-Western Railway. In 1834, Sharp, Roberts, and Co. began the
+manufacture of locomotives on a large scale; and the compactness of
+their engines, the excellence of their workmanship, and the numerous
+original improvements introduced in them, speedily secured for the
+engines of the Atlas firm a high reputation and a very large demand.
+Among Mr. Roberts's improvements may be mentioned his method of
+manufacturing the crank axle, of welding the rim and tyres of the
+wheels, and his arrangement and form of the wrought-iron framing and
+axle-guards. His system of templets and gauges, by means of which
+every part of an engine or tender corresponded with that of every
+other engine or tender of the same class, was as great an improvement
+as Maudslay's system of uniformity of parts in other descriptions of
+machinery.
+
+In connection with the subject of railways, we may allude in passing
+to Mr. Roberts's invention of the Jacquard punching machine--a
+self-acting tool of great power, used for punching any required
+number of holes, of any pitch and to any pattern, with mathematical
+accuracy, in bridge or boiler plates. The origin of this invention
+was somewhat similar to that of the self-acting mule. The contractors
+for the Conway Tubular Bridge while under construction, in 1848, were
+greatly hampered by combinations amongst the workmen, and they
+despaired of being able to finish the girders within the time
+specified in the contract. The punching of the iron plates by hand
+was a tedious and expensive as well as an inaccurate process; and the
+work was proceeding so slowly that the contractors found it
+absolutely necessary to adopt some new method of punching if they
+were to finish the work in time. In their emergency they appealed to
+Mr. Roberts, and endeavoured to persuade him to take the matter up.
+He at length consented to do so, and evolved the machine in question
+during his evening's leisure--for the most part while quietly sipping
+his tea. The machine was produced, the contractors were enabled to
+proceed with the punching of the plates independent of the refractory
+men, and the work was executed with a despatch, accuracy, and
+excellence that would not otherwise have been possible. Only a few
+years since Mr. Roberts added a useful companion to the Jacquard
+punching machine, in his combined self-acting machine for shearing
+iron and punching both webs of angle or T iron simultaneously to any
+required pitch; though this machine, like others which have proceeded
+from his fertile brain, is ahead even of this fast-manufacturing age,
+and has not yet come into general use, but is certain to do so before
+many years have elapsed.
+
+These inventions were surely enough for one man to have accomplished;
+but we have not yet done. The mere enumeration of his other
+inventions would occupy several pages. We shall merely allude to a
+few of them. One was his Turret Clock, for which he obtained the
+medal at the Great Exhibition of 1851. Another was his Prize
+Electro-Magnet of 1845. When this subject was first mentioned to him,
+he said he did not know anything of the theory or practice of
+electro-magnetism, but he would try and find out. The result of his
+trying was that he won the prize for the most powerful
+electro-magnet: one is placed in the museum at Peel Park, Manchester,
+and another with the Scottish Society of Arts, Edinburgh. In 1846 he
+perfected an American invention for making cigars by machinery;
+enabling a boy, working one of his cigar-engines, to make as many as
+5000 in a day. In 1852 he patented improvements in the construction,
+propelling, and equipment of steamships, which have, we believe, been
+adopted to a certain extent by the Admiralty; and a few years later,
+in 1855, we find him presenting the Secretary of War with plans of
+elongated rifle projectiles to be used in smooth-bore ordnance with a
+view to utilize the old-pattern gun. His head, like many inventors of
+the time, being full of the mechanics of war, he went so far as to
+wait upon Louis Napoleon, and laid before him a plan by which
+Sebastopol was to be blown down. In short, upon whatever subject he
+turned his mind, he left the impress of his inventive faculty. If it
+was imperfect, he improved it; if incapable of improvement, and
+impracticable, he invented something entirely new, superseding it
+altogether. But with all his inventive genius, in the exercise of
+which Mr. Roberts has so largely added to the productive power of the
+country, we regret to say that he is not gifted with the commercial
+faculty. He has helped others in their difficulties, but forgotten
+himself. Many have profited by his inventions, without even
+acknowledging the obligations which they owed to him. They have used
+his brains and copied his tools, and the "sucked orange" is all but
+forgotten. There may have been a want of worldly wisdom on his part,
+but it is lamentable to think that one of the most prolific and
+useful inventors of his time should in his old age be left to fight
+with poverty.
+
+Mr. Whitworth is another of the first-class tool-makers of Manchester
+who has turned to excellent account his training in the workshops of
+Maudslay and Clement. He has carried fully out the system of
+uniformity in Screw Threads which they initiated; and he has still
+further improved the mechanism of the planing machine, enabling it to
+work both backwards and forwards by means of a screw and roller
+motion. His "Jim Crow Machine," so called from its peculiar motion in
+reversing itself and working both ways, is an extremely beautiful
+tool, adapted alike for horizontal, vertical, or angular motions. The
+minute accuracy of Mr. Whitworth's machines is not the least of their
+merits; and nothing will satisfy him short of perfect truth. At the
+meeting of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers at Glasgow in 1856
+he read a paper on the essential importance of possessing a true
+plane as a standard of reference in mechanical constructions, and he
+described elaborately the true method of securing it,--namely, by
+scraping, instead of by the ordinary process of grinding. At the same
+meeting he exhibited a machine of his invention by which he stated
+that a difference of the millionth part of an inch in length could at
+once be detected. He also there urged his favourite idea of
+uniformity, and proper gradations of size of parts, in all the
+various branches of the mechanical arts, as a chief means towards
+economy of production--a principle, as he showed, capable of very
+extensive application. To show the progress of tools and machinery in
+his own time, Mr. Whitworth cited the fact that thirty years since
+the cost of labour for making a surface of cast-iron true--one of the
+most important operations in mechanics--by chipping and filing by the
+hand, was 12s. a square foot; whereas it is now done by the planing
+machine at a cost for labour of less than a penny. Then in machinery,
+pieces of 74 reed printing-cotton cloth of 29 yards each could not be
+produced at less cost than 30s. 6d. per piece; whereas the same
+description is now sold for 3s. 9d. Mr. Whitworth has been among the
+most effective workers in this field of improvement, his tools taking
+the first place in point of speed, accuracy, and finish of work, in
+which respects they challenge competition with the world. Mr.
+Whitworth has of late years been applying himself with his accustomed
+ardour to the development of the powers of rifled guns and
+projectiles,--a branch of mechanical science in which he confessedly
+holds a foremost place, and in perfecting which he is still occupied.
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+JAMES NASMYTH.
+
+ "By Hammer and Hand
+ All Arts doth stand."
+ Hammermen's Motto.
+
+
+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.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+WILLIAM FAIRBAIRN.
+
+"In science there is work for all hands, more or less skilled; and he
+is usually the most fit to occupy the higher posts who has risen from
+the ranks, and has experimentally acquainted himself with the nature
+of the work to be done in each and every, even the humblest
+department." J. D. Forbes.
+
+
+The development of the mechanical industry of England has been so
+rapid, especially as regards the wonders achieved by the
+machine-tools above referred to, that it may almost be said to have
+been accomplished within the life of the present generation. "When I
+first entered this city, said Mr.Fairbairn, in his inaugural address
+as President of the British Association at Manchester in 1861, "the
+whole of the machinery was executed by hand. There were neither
+planing, slotting, nor shaping machines; and, with the exception of
+very imperfect lathes and a few drills, the preparatory operations of
+construction were effected entirely by the hands of the workmen. Now,
+everything is done by machine-tools with a degree of accuracy which
+the unaided hand could never accomplish. The automaton or self-acting
+machine-tool has within itself an almost creative power; in fact, so
+great are its powers of adaptation, that there is no operation of the
+human hand that it does not imitate." In a letter to the author, Mr.
+Fairbairn says, "The great pioneers of machine-tool-making were
+Maudslay, Murray of Leeds, Clement and Fox of Derby, who were ably
+followed by Nasmyth, Roberts, and Whitworth, of Manchester, and Sir
+Peter Fairbairn of Leeds; and Mr. Fairbairn might well have added, by
+himself,--for he has been one of the most influential and successful
+of mechanical engineers.
+
+William Fairbairn was born at Kelso on the 19th of February, 1787.
+His parents occupied a humble but respectable position in life. His
+father, Andrew Fairbairn, was the son of a gardener in the employment
+of Mr. Baillie of Mellerston, and lived at Smailholm, a village lying
+a few miles west of Kelso. Tracing the Fairbairns still further back,
+we find several of them occupying the station of "portioners," or
+small lairds, at Earlston on the Tweed, where the family had been
+settled since the days of the Solemn League and Covenant. By his
+mother's side, the subject of our memoir is supposed to be descended
+from the ancient Border family of Douglas.
+
+While Andrew Fairbairn (William's father) lived at Smailholm, Walter
+Scott was living with his grandmother in Smailholm or Sandyknowe
+Tower, whither he had been sent from Edinburgh in the hope that
+change of air would help the cure of his diseased hip-joint; and
+Andrew, being nine years his senior, and a strong youth for his age,
+was accustomed to carry the little patient about in his arms, until
+he was able to walk by himself. At a later period, when Miss Scott,
+Walter's aunt, removed from Smailholm to Kelso, the intercourse
+between the families was renewed. Scott was then an Edinburgh
+advocate, engaged in collecting materials for his Minstrelsy of the
+Scottish Border, or, as his aunt described his pursuit, "running
+after the auld wives of the country gatherin' havers." He used
+frequently to read over by the fireside in the evening the results of
+his curious industry, which, however, were not very greatly
+appreciated by his nearest relatives; and they did not scruple to
+declare that for the "Advocate" to go about collecting "ballants" was
+mere waste of time as well as money.
+
+William Fairbairn's first schoolmaster was a decrepit old man who
+went by the name of "Bowed Johnnie Ker,"--a Cameronian, with a nasal
+twang, which his pupils learnt much more readily than they did his
+lessons in reading and arithmetic, notwithstanding a liberal use of
+"the tawse." Yet Johnnie had a taste for music, and taught his pupils
+to SING their reading lessons, which was reckoned quite a novelty in
+education. After a short time our scholar was transferred to the
+parish-school of the town, kept by a Mr. White, where he was placed
+under the charge of a rather severe helper, who, instead of the
+tawse, administered discipline by means of his knuckles, hard as
+horn, which he applied with a peculiar jerk to the crania of his
+pupils. At this school Willie Fairbairn lost the greater part of the
+singing accomplishments which he had acquired under "Bowed Johnnie,"
+but he learnt in lieu of them to read from Scott and Barrow's
+collections of prose and poetry, while he obtained some knowledge of
+arithmetic, in which he proceeded as far as practice and the rule of
+three. This constituted his whole stock of school-learning up to his
+tenth year. Out of school-hours he learnt to climb the ruined walls
+of the old abbey of the town, and there was scarcely an arch, or
+tower, or cranny of it with which he did not become familiar.
+
+When in his twelfth year, his father, who had been brought up to
+farm-work, and possessed considerable practical knowledge of
+agriculture, was offered the charge of a farm at Moy in Ross-shire,
+belonging to Lord Seaforth of Brahan Castle. The farm was of about
+300 acres, situated on the banks of the river Conan, some five miles
+from the town of Dingwall. The family travelled thither in a covered
+cart, a distance of 200 miles, through a very wild and hilly country,
+arriving at their destination at the end of October, 1799. The farm,
+when reached, was found overgrown with whins and brushwood, and
+covered in many places with great stones and rocks; it was, in short,
+as nearly in a state of nature as it was possible to be. The house
+intended for the farmer's reception was not finished, and Andrew
+Fairbairn, with his wife and five children, had to take temporary
+refuge in a miserable hovel, very unlike the comfortable house which
+they had quitted at Kelso. By next spring, however, the new house was
+ready; and Andrew Fairbairn set vigorously to work at the reclamation
+of the land. After about two years' labours it exhibited an
+altogether different appearance, and in place of whins and stones
+there were to be seen heavy crops of barley and turnips. The barren
+years of 1800 and 1801, however, pressed very hardly on Andrew
+Fairbairn as on every other farmer of arable land. About that time,
+Andrew's brother Peter, who acted as secretary to Lord Seaforth, and
+through whose influence the former had obtained the farm, left Brahan
+Castle for the West Indies with his Lordship, who--notwithstanding
+his being both deaf and dumb -- had been appointed to the
+Governorship of Barbadoes; and in consequence of various difficulties
+which occurred shortly after his leaving, Andrew Fairbairn found it
+necessary to give up his holding, whereupon he engaged as steward to
+Mackenzie of Allengrange, with whom he remained for two years.
+
+While the family lived at Moy, none of the boys were put to school.
+They could not be spared from the farm and the household. Those of
+them that could not work afield were wanted to help to nurse the
+younger children at home. But Andrew Fairbairn possessed a great
+treasure in his wife, who was a woman of much energy of character,
+setting before her children an example of patient industry, thrift,
+discreetness, and piety, which could not fail to exercise a powerful
+influence upon them in after-life; and this, of itself, was an
+education which probably far more than compensated for the boys' loss
+of school-culture during their life at Moy. Mrs. Fairbairn span and
+made all the children's clothes, as well as the blankets and
+sheeting; and, while in the Highlands, she not only made her own and
+her daughters' dresses, and her sons' jackets and trowsers, but her
+husband's coats and waistcoats; besides helping her neighbours to cut
+out their clothing for family wear.
+
+One of William's duties at home was to nurse his younger brother
+Peter, then a delicate child under two years old; and to relieve
+himself of the labour of carrying him about, he began the
+construction of a little waggon in which to wheel him. This was,
+however, a work of some difficulty, as all the tools he possessed
+were only a knife, a gimlet, and an old saw. With these implements, a
+piece of thin board, and a few nails, he nevertheless contrived to
+make a tolerably serviceable waggon-body. His chief difficulty
+consisted in making the wheels, which he contrived to surmount by
+cutting sections from the stem of a small alder-tree, and with a
+red-hot poker he bored the requisite holes in their centres to
+receive the axle. The waggon was then mounted on its four wheels, and
+to the great joy of its maker was found to answer its purpose
+admirably. In it he wheeled his little brother--afterwards well known
+as Sir Peter Fairbairn, mayor of Leeds -- in various directions about
+the farm, and sometimes to a considerable distance from it; and the
+vehicle was regarded on the whole as a decided success. His father
+encouraged him in his little feats of construction of a similar kind,
+and he proceeded to make and rig miniature boats and ships, and then
+miniature wind and water mills, in which last art he acquired such
+expertness that he had sometimes five or six mills going at a time.
+The machinery was all made with a knife, the water-spouts being
+formed by the bark of a tree, and the millstones represented by round
+discs of the same material. Such were the first constructive efforts
+of the future millwright and engineer.
+
+When the family removed to Allengrange in 1801, the boys were sent to
+school at Munlachy, about a mile and a half distant from the farm.
+The school was attended by about forty barefooted boys in tartan
+kilt's, and about twenty girls, all of the poorer class. The
+schoolmaster was one Donald Frazer, a good teacher, but a severe
+disciplinarian. Under him, William made some progress in reading,
+writing, and arithmetic; and though he himself has often lamented the
+meagreness of his school instruction, it is clear, from what he has
+since been enabled to accomplish, that these early lessons were
+enough at all events to set him fairly on the road of self-culture,
+and proved the fruitful seed of much valuable intellectual labour, as
+well as of many excellent practical books.
+
+After two years' trial of his new situation, which was by no means
+satisfactory, Andrew Fairbairn determined again to remove southward
+with his family; and, selling off everything, they set sail from
+Cromarty for Leith in June, 1803. Having seen his wife and children
+temporarily settled at Kelso, he looked out for a situation, and
+shortly after proceeded to undertake the management of Sir William
+Ingleby's farm at Ripley in Yorkshire. Meanwhile William was placed
+for three months under the charge of his uncle William, the parish
+schoolmaster of Galashiels, for the purpose of receiving instruction
+in book-keeping and land-surveying, from which he derived
+considerable benefit. He could not, however, remain longer at school;
+for being of the age of fourteen, it was thought necessary that he
+should be set to work without further delay. His first employment was
+on the fine new bridge at Kelso, then in course of construction after
+the designs of Mr. Rennie; but in helping one day to carry a
+handbarrow-load of stone, his strength proving insufficient, he gave
+way under it, and the stones fell upon him, one of them inflicting a
+serious wound on his leg, which kept him a cripple for months. In the
+mean time his father, being dissatisfied with his prospects at
+Ripley, accepted the appointment of manager of the Percy Main
+Colliery Company's farm in the neighbourhood of Newcastle-on-Tyne,
+whither he proceeded with his family towards the end of 1803, William
+joining them in the following February, when the wound in his leg had
+sufficiently healed to enable him to travel.
+
+Percy Main is situated within two miles of North Shields, and is one
+of the largest collieries in that district. William was immediately
+set to work at the colliery, his first employment being to lead coals
+from behind the screen to the pitmen's houses. His Scotch accent, and
+perhaps his awkwardness, exposed him to much annoyance from the "pit
+lads," who were a very rough and profligate set; and as boxing was a
+favourite pastime among them, our youth had to fight his way to their
+respect, passing through a campaign of no less than seventeen pitched
+battles. He was several times on the point of abandoning the work
+altogether, rather than undergo the buffetings and insults to which
+he was almost a daily martyr, when a protracted contest with one of
+the noted boxers of the colliery, in which he proved the victor, at
+length relieved him from further persecution.
+
+In the following year, at the age of sixteen, he was articled as an
+engineer for five years to the owners of Percy Main, and was placed
+under the charge of Mr. Robinson, the engine-wright of the colliery.
+His wages as apprentice were 8s. a week; but by working over-hours,
+making wooden wedges used in pit-work, and blocking out segments of
+solid oak required for walling the sides of the mine, he considerably
+increased his earnings, which enabled him to add to the gross income
+of the family, who were still struggling with the difficulties of
+small means and increasing expenses. When not engaged upon over-work
+in the evenings, he occupied himself in self-education. He drew up a
+scheme of daily study with this object, to which he endeavoured to
+adhere as closely as possible,-- devoting the evenings of Mondays to
+mensuration and arithmetic; Tuesdays to history and poetry;
+Wednesdays to recreation, novels, and romances; Thursdays to algebra
+and mathematics; Fridays to Euclid and trigonometry; Saturdays to
+recreation; and Sundays to church, Milton, and recreation. He was
+enabled to extend the range of his reading by the help of the North
+Shields Subscription Library, to which his father entered him a
+subscriber. Portions of his spare time were also occasionally devoted
+to mechanical construction, in which he cultivated the useful art of
+handling tools. One of his first attempts was the contrivance of a
+piece of machinery worked by a weight and a pendulum, that should at
+the same time serve for a timepiece and an orrery; but his want of
+means, as well as of time, prevented him prosecuting this contrivance
+to completion. He was more successful with the construction of a
+fiddle, on which he was ambitious to become a performer. It must have
+been a tolerable instrument, for a professional player offered him
+20s. for it. But though he succeeded in making a fiddle, and for some
+time persevered in the attempt to play upon it, he did not succeed in
+producing any satisfactory melody, and at length gave up the attempt,
+convinced that nature had not intended him for a musician.*
+ [footnote...
+Long after, when married and settled at Manchester, the fiddle, which
+had been carefully preserved, was taken down from the shelf for the
+amusement of the children; but though they were well enough pleased
+with it, the instrument was never brought from its place without
+creating alarm in the mind of their mother lest anybody should hear
+it. At length a dancing-master, who was giving lessons in the
+neighbourhood, borrowed the fiddle, and, to the great relief of the
+family, it was never returned. Many years later Mr.Fairbairn was
+present at the starting of a cotton mill at Wesserling in Alsace
+belonging to Messrs. Gros, Deval, and Co., for which his Manchester
+firm had provided the mill-work and water-wheel (the first erected in
+France on the suspension principle, when the event was followed by an
+entertainment. During dinner Mr. Fairbairn had been explaining to M.
+Gros, who spoke a little English, the nature of home-brewed beer,
+which he much admired, having tasted it when in England. The dinner
+was followed by music, in the performance of which the host himself
+took part; and on Mr. Fairbairn's admiring his execution on the
+violin, M. Gros asked him if he played. "A little," was the almost
+unconscious reply. "Then you must have the goodness to play some,"
+and the instrument was in a moment placed in his hands, amidst urgent
+requests from all sides that he should play. There was no
+alternative; so he proceeded to perform one of his best tunes--"The
+Keel Row." The company listened with amazement, until the performer's
+career was suddenly cut short by the host exclaiming at the top of
+his voice, "Stop, stop, Monsieur, by gar that be HOME-BREWED MUSIC!"
+ ...]
+
+In due course of time our young engineer was removed from the
+workshop, and appointed to take charge of the pumps of the mine and
+the steam-engine by which they were kept in work. This employment was
+more to his taste, gave him better "insight," and afforded him
+greater opportunities for improvement. The work was, however, very
+trying, and at times severe, especially in winter, the engineer being
+liable to be drenched with water every time that he descended the
+shaft to regulate the working of the pumps; but, thanks to a stout
+constitution, he bore through these exposures without injury, though
+others sank under them. At this period he had the advantage of
+occasional days of leisure, to which he was entitled by reason of his
+nightwork; and during such leisure he usually applied himself to
+reading and study.
+
+It was about this time that William Fairbairn made the acquaintance
+of George Stephenson, while the latter was employed in working the
+ballast-engine at Willington Quay. He greatly admired George as a
+workman, and was accustomed in the summer evenings to go over to the
+Quay occasionally and take charge of George's engine, to enable him
+to earn a few shillings extra by heaving ballast out of the collier
+vessels. Stephenson's zeal in the pursuit of mechanical knowledge
+probably was not without its influence in stimulating William
+Fairbairn himself to carry on so diligently the work of self-culture.
+But little could the latter have dreamt, while serving his
+apprenticeship at Percy Main, that his friend George Stephenson, the
+brakesman, should yet be recognised as among the greatest engineers
+of his age, and that he himself should have the opportunity, in his
+capacity of President of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers at
+Newcastle, of making public acknowledgment of the opportunities for
+education which he had enjoyed in that neighbourhood in his early
+years.*
+ [footnote...
+"Although not a native of Newcastle," he then said, "he owed almost
+everything to Newcastle. He got the rudiments of his education there,
+such as it was; and that was (something like that of his revered
+predecessor George Stephenson) at a colliery. He was brought up as an
+engineer at the Percy Main Colliery. He was there seven years; and if
+it had not been for the opportunities he then enjoyed, together with
+the use of the library at North Shields, he believed he would not
+have been there to address them. Being self-taught, but with some
+little ambition, and a determination to improve himself, he was now
+enabled to stand before them with some pretensions to mechanical
+knowledge, and the persuasion that he had been a useful contributor
+to practical science and objects connected with mechanical
+engineering."--Meeting of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers at
+Newcastle-on-Tyne, 1858.
+ ...]
+
+Having finished his five years' apprenticeship at Percy Main, by
+which time he had reached his twenty-first year, William Fairbairn
+shortly after determined to go forth into the world in search of
+experience. At Newcastle he found employment as a millwright for a
+few weeks, during which he worked at the erection of a sawmill in the
+Close. From thence he went to Bedlington at an advanced wage. He
+remained there for six months, during which he was so fortunate as to
+make the acquaintance of Miss Mar, who five years after, when his
+wanderings had ceased, became his wife. On the completion of the job
+on which he had been employed, our engineer prepared to make another
+change. Work was difficult to be had in the North, and, joined by a
+comrade, he resolved to try his fortune in London. Adopting the
+cheapest route, he took passage by a Shields collier, in which he
+sailed for the Thames on the 11th of December, 1811. It was then
+war-time, and the vessel was very short-handed, the crew consisting
+only of three old men and three boys, with the skipper and mate; so
+that the vessel was no sooner fairly at sea than both the passenger
+youths had to lend a hand in working her, and this continued for the
+greater part of the voyage. The weather was very rough, and in
+consequence of the captain's anxiety to avoid privateers he hugged
+the shore too close, and when navigating the inside passage of the
+Swin, between Yarmouth and the Nore, the vessel very narrowly escaped
+shipwreck. After beating about along shore, the captain half drunk
+the greater part of the time, the vessel at last reached the Thames
+with loss of spars and an anchor, after a tedious voyage of fourteen
+days.
+
+On arriving off Blackwall the captain went ashore ostensibly in
+search of the Coal Exchange, taking our young engineer with him. The
+former was still under the influence of drink; and though he failed
+to reach the Exchange that night, he succeeded in reaching a public
+house in Wapping, beyond which he could not be got. At ten o'clock
+the two started on their return to the ship; but the captain took the
+opportunity of the darkness to separate from his companion, and did
+not reach the ship until next morning. It afterwards came out that he
+had been taken up and lodged in the watch-house. The youth, left
+alone in the streets of the strange city, felt himself in an awkward
+dilemma. He asked the next watchman he met to recommend him to a
+lodging, on which the man took him to a house in New Gravel Lane,
+where he succeeded in finding accommodation. What was his horror next
+morning to learn that a whole family--the Williamsons--had been
+murdered in the very next house during the night! Making the best of
+his way back to the ship, he found that his comrade, who had suffered
+dreadfully from sea-sickness during the voyage, had nearly recovered,
+and was able to accompany him into the City in search of work. They
+had between them a sum of only about eight pounds, so that it was
+necessary for them to take immediate steps to obtain employment.
+
+They thought themselves fortunate in getting the promise of a job
+from Mr. Rennie, the celebrated engineer, whose works were situated
+at the south end of Blackfriars Bridge. Mr. Rennie sent the two young
+men to his foreman, with the request that he should set them to work.
+The foreman referred them to the secretary of the Millwrights'
+Society, the shop being filled with Union men, who set their
+shoulders together to exclude those of their own grade, however
+skilled, who could not produce evidence that they had complied with
+the rules of the trade. Describing his first experience of London
+Unionists, nearly half a century later, before an assembly of working
+men at Derby, Mr. Fairbairn said, "When I first entered London, a
+young man from the country had no chance whatever of success, in
+consequence of the trade guilds and unions. I had no difficulty in
+finding employment, but before I could begin work I had to run the
+gauntlet of the trade societies; and after dancing attendance for
+nearly six weeks, with very little money in my pocket, and having to
+'box Harry' all the time, I was ultimately declared illegitimate, and
+sent adrift to seek my fortune elsewhere. There were then three
+millwright societies in London: one called the Old Society, another
+the New Society, and a third the Independent Society. These societies
+were not founded for the protection of the trade, but for the
+maintenance of high wages, and for the exclusion of all those who
+could not assert their claims to work in London and other corporate
+towns. Laws of a most arbitrary character were enforced, and they
+were governed by cliques of self-appointed officers, who never failed
+to take care of their own interests."*
+ [footnote...
+Useful Information for Engineers, 2nd series, 1860, p. 211.
+ ...]
+
+Their first application for leave to work in London having thus
+disastrously ended, the two youths determined to try their fortune in
+the country, and with aching hearts they started next morning before
+daylight. Their hopes had been suddenly crushed, their slender funds
+were nearly exhausted, and they scarce knew where to turn. But they
+set their faces bravely northward, and pushed along the high road,
+through slush and snow, as far as Hertford, which they reached after
+nearly eight hours' walking, on the moderate fare during their
+journey of a penny roll and a pint of ale each. Though wet to the
+skin, they immediately sought out a master millwright, and applied
+for work. He said he had no job vacant at present; but, seeing their
+sorry plight, he had compassion upon them, and said, "Though I cannot
+give you employment, you seem to be two nice lads;" and he concluded
+by offering Fairbairn a half-crown. But his proud spirit revolted at
+taking money which he had not earned; and he declined the proffered
+gift with thanks, saying he was sorry they could not have work. He
+then turned away from the door, on which his companion, mortified by
+his refusal to accept the half-crown at a time when they were reduced
+almost to their last penny, broke out in bitter remonstrances and
+regrets. Weary, wet, and disheartened, the two turned into Hertford
+churchyard, and rested for a while upon a tombstone, Fairbairn's
+companion relieving himself by a good cry, and occasional angry
+outbursts of "Why didn't you take the half-crown?" "Come, come, man!"
+said Fairbairn, "it's of no use crying; cheer up; let's try another
+road; something must soon cast up." They rose, and set out again, but
+when they reached the bridge, the dispirited youth again broke down;
+and, leaning his back against the parapet, said, "I winna gang a bit
+further; let's get back to London." Against this Fairbairn
+remonstrated, saying "It's of no use lamenting; we must try what we
+can do here; if the worst comes to the worst, we can 'list; you are a
+strong chap--they'll soon take you; and as for me, I'll join too; I
+think I could fight a bit." After this council of war, the pair
+determined to find lodgings in the town for the night, and begin
+their search for work anew on the morrow.
+
+Next day, when passing along one of the back streets of Hertford,
+they came to a wheelwright's shop, where they made the usual
+enquiries. The wheelwright, said that he did not think there was any
+job to be had in the town; but if the two young men pushed on to
+Cheshunt, he thought they might find work at a windmill which was
+under contract to be finished in three weeks, and where the
+millwright wanted hands. Here was a glimpse of hope at last; and the
+strength and spirits of both revived in an instant. They set out
+immediately; walked the seven miles to Cheshunt; succeeded in
+obtaining the expected employment; worked at the job a fortnight; and
+entered London again with nearly three pounds in their pockets.
+
+Our young millwright at length succeeded in obtaining regular
+employment in the metropolis at good wages. He worked first at
+Grundy's Patent Ropery at Shadwell, and afterwards at Mr. Penn's of
+Greenwich, gaining much valuable insight, and sedulously improving
+his mind by study in his leisure hours. Among the acquaintances he
+then made was an enthusiastic projector of the name of Hall, who had
+taken out one patent for making hemp from bean-stalks, and
+contemplated taking out another for effecting spade tillage by steam.
+The young engineer was invited to make the requisite model, which he
+did, and it cost him both time and money, which the out-at-elbows
+projector was unable to repay; and all that came of the project was
+the exhibition of the model at the Society of Arts and before the
+Board of Agriculture, in whose collection it is probably still to be
+found. Another more successful machine constructed By Mr. Fairbairn
+about the same time was a sausage-chopping machine, which he
+contrived and made for a pork-butcher for 33l. It was the first order
+he had ever had on his own account; and, as the machine when made did
+its work admirably, he was naturally very proud of it. The machine
+was provided with a fly-wheel and double crank, with connecting rods
+which worked a cross head. It contained a dozen knives crossing each
+other at right angles in such a way as to enable them to mince or
+divide the meat on a revolving block. Another part of the apparatus
+accomplished the filling of the sausages in a very expert manner, to
+the entire satisfaction of the pork-butcher.
+
+As work was scarce in London at the time, and our engineer was bent
+on gathering further experience in his trade, he determined to make a
+tour in the South of England and South Wales; and set out from London
+in April 1813 with 7l. in his pocket. After visiting Bath and Frome,
+he settled to work for six weeks at Bathgate; after which he
+travelled by Bradford and Trowbridge --- always on foot--to Bristol.
+From thence he travelled through South Wales, spending a few days
+each at Newport, Llandaff, and Cardiff, where he took ship for
+Dublin. By the time he reached Ireland his means were all but
+exhausted, only three-halfpence remaining in his pocket; but, being
+young, hopeful, skilful, and industrious, he was light of heart, and
+looked cheerfully forward. The next day he succeeded in finding
+employment at Mr. Robinson's, of the Phoenix Foundry, where he was
+put to work at once upon a set of patterns for some nail-machinery.
+Mr. Robinson was a man of spirit and enterprise, and, seeing the
+quantities of English machine-made nails imported into Ireland, he
+was desirous of giving Irish industry the benefit of the manufacture.
+The construction of the nail-making machinery occupied Mr. Fairbairn
+the entire summer; and on its completion he set sail in the month of
+October for Liverpool. It may be added, that, notwithstanding the
+expense incurred by Mr. Robinson in setting up the new
+nail-machinery, his workmen threatened him with a strike if he
+ventured to use it. As he could not brave the opposition of the
+Unionists, then all-powerful in Dublin, the machinery was never set
+to work; the nail-making trade left Ireland, never to return; and the
+Irish market was thenceforward supplied entirely with English-made
+nails. The Dublin iron-manufacture was ruined in the same way; not
+through any local disadvantages, but solely by the prohibitory
+regulations enforced by the workmen of the Trades Unions.
+
+Arrived at Liverpool, after a voyage of two days--which was then
+considered a fair passage--our engineer proceeded to Manchester,
+which had already become the principal centre of manufacturing
+operations in the North of England. As we have already seen in the
+memoirs of Nasmyth, Roberts, and Whitworth, Manchester offered great
+attractions for highly-skilled mechanics; and it was as fortunate for
+Manchester as for William Fairbairn himself that he settled down
+there as a working millwright in the year 1814, bringing with him no
+capital, but an abundance of energy, skill, and practical experience
+in his trade. Afterwards describing the characteristics of the
+millwright of that time, Mr, Fairbairn said--"In those days a good
+millwright was a man of large resources; he was generally well
+educated, and could draw out his own designs and work at the lathe;
+he had a knowledge of mill machinery, pumps, and cranes, and could
+turn his hand to the bench or the forge with equal adroitness and
+facility. If hard pressed, as was frequently the case in country
+places far from towns, he could devise for himself expedients which
+enabled him to meet special requirements, and to complete his work
+without assistance. This was the class of men with whom I associated
+in early life--proud of their calling, fertile in resources, and
+aware of their value in a country where the industrial arts were
+rapidly developing."*
+ [footnote...
+Lecture at Derby--Useful Information for Engineers, 2nd series, p.
+212.
+ ...]
+
+When William Fairbairn entered Manchester he was twenty-four years of
+age; and his hat still "covered his family." But, being now pretty
+well satiated with his "wandetschaft,"--as German tradesmen term
+their stage of travelling in search of trade experience,--he desired
+to settle, and, if fortune favoured him, to marry the object of his
+affections, to whom his heart still faithfully turned during all his
+wanderings. He succeeded in finding employment with Mr. Adam
+Parkinson, remaining with him for two years, working as a millwright,
+at good wages. Out of his earnings he saved sufficient to furnish a
+two-roomed cottage comfortably; and there we find him fairly
+installed with his wife by the end of 1816. As in the case of most
+men of a thoughtful turn, marriage served not only to settle our
+engineer, but to stimulate him to more energetic action. He now began
+to aim at taking a higher position, and entertained the ambition of
+beginning business on his own account. One of his first efforts in
+this direction was the preparation of the design of a cast-iron
+bridge over the Irwell, at Blackfriars, for which a prize was
+offered. The attempt was unsuccessful, and a stone bridge was
+eventually decided on; but the effort made was creditable, and proved
+the beginning of many designs. The first job he executed on his own
+account was the erection of an iron conservatory and hothouse for Mr.
+J. Hulme, of Clayton, near Manchester; and he induced one of his
+shopmates, James Lillie, to join him in the undertaking. This proved
+the beginning of a business connection which lasted for a period of
+fifteen years, and laid the foundation of a partnership, the
+reputation of which, in connection with mill-work and the
+construction of iron machinery generally, eventually became known all
+over the civilized world.
+
+Although the patterns for the conservatory were all made, and the
+castings were begun, the work was not proceeded with, in consequence
+of the notice given by a Birmingham firm that the plan after which it
+was proposed to construct it was an infringement of their patent. The
+young firm were consequently under the necessity of looking about
+them for other employment. And to be prepared for executing orders,
+they proceeded in the year 1817 to hire a small shed at a rent of
+l2s. a week, in which they set up a lathe of their own making,
+capable of turning shafts of from 3 to 6 inches diameter; and they
+hired a strong Irishman to drive the wheel and assist at the heavy
+work. Their first job was the erection of a cullender, and their next
+a calico-polishing machine; but orders came in slowly, and James
+Lillie began to despair of success. His more hopeful partner
+strenuously urged him to perseverance, and so buoyed him up with
+hopes of orders, that he determined to go on a little longer. They
+then issued cards among the manufacturers, and made a tour of the
+principal firms, offering their services and soliciting work.
+
+Amongst others, Mr. Fairbairn called upon the Messrs. Adam and George
+Murray, the large cotton-spinners, taking with him the designs of his
+iron bridge. Mr. Adam Murray received him kindly, heard his
+explanations, and invited him to call on the following day with his
+partner. The manufacturer must have been favourably impressed by this
+interview, for next day, when Fairbairn and Lillie called, he took
+them over his mill, and asked whether they felt themselves competent
+to renew with horizontal cross-shafts the whole of the work by which
+the mule-spinning machinery was turned. This was a formidable
+enterprise for a young firm without capital and almost without plant
+to undertake; but they had confidence in themselves, and boldly
+replied that they were willing and able to execute the work. On this,
+Mr. Murray said he would call and see them at their own workshop, to
+satisfy himself that they possessed the means of undertaking such an
+order. This proposal was by no means encouraging to the partners, who
+feared that when Mr. Murray spied "the nakedness of the land " in
+that quarter, he might repent him of his generous intentions. He paid
+his promised visit, and it is probable that he was more favourably
+impressed by the individual merits of the partners than by the
+excellence of their machine-tools--of which they had only one, the
+lathe which they had just made and set up; nevertheless he gave them
+the order, and they began with glad hearts and willing hands and
+minds to execute this their first contract. It may be sufficient to
+state that by working late and early--from 5 in the morning until 9
+at night for a considerable period--they succeeded in completing the
+alterations within the time specified, and to Mr. Murray's entire
+satisfaction. The practical skill of the young men being thus proved,
+and their anxiety to execute the work entrusted to them to the best
+of their ability having excited the admiration of their employer, he
+took the opportunity of recommending them to his friends in the
+trade, and amongst others to Mr. John Kennedy, of the firm of
+MacConnel and Kennedy, then the largest spinners in the kingdom.
+
+The Cotton Trade had by this time sprung into great importance, and
+was increasing with extraordinary rapidity. Population and wealth
+were pouring into South Lancashire, and industry and enterprise were
+everywhere on foot. The foundations were being laid of a system of
+manufacturing in iron, machinery, and textile fabrics of nearly all
+kinds, the like of which has perhaps never been surpassed in any
+country. It was a race of industry, in which the prizes were won by
+the swift, the strong, and the skilled. For the most part, the early
+Lancashire manufacturers started very nearly equal in point of
+worldly circumstances, men originally of the smallest means often
+coming to the front - work men, weavers, mechanics, pedlers, farmers,
+or labourers--in course of time rearing immense manufacturing
+concerns by sheer force of industry, energy, and personal ability.
+The description given by one of the largest employers in Lancashire,
+of the capital with which he started, might apply to many of them:
+"When I married," said he, "my wife had a spinning-wheel, and I had a
+loom--that was the beginning of our fortune." As an illustration of
+the rapid rise of Manchester men from small beginnings, the following
+outline of John Kennedy's career, intimately connected as he was with
+the subject of our memoir--may not be without interest in this place.
+
+John Kennedy was one of five young men of nearly the same age, who
+came from the same neighbourhood in Scotland, and eventually settled
+in Manchester as cottons-pinners about the end of last century. The
+others were his brother James, his partner James MacConnel, and the
+brothers Murray, above referred to--Mr. Fairbairn's first extensive
+employers. John Kennedy's parents were respectable peasants,
+possessed of a little bit of ground at Knocknalling, in the stewartry
+of Kirkcudbright, on which they contrived to live, and that was all.
+John was one of a family of five sons and two daughters, and the
+father dying early, the responsibility and the toil of bringing up
+these children devolved upon the mother. She was a strict
+disciplinarian, and early impressed upon the minds of her boys that
+they had their own way to make in the world. One of the first things
+she made them think about was, the learning of some useful trade for
+the purpose of securing an independent living; "for," said she, "if
+you have gotten mechanical skill and intelligence, and are honest and
+trustworthy, you will always find employment and be ready to avail
+yourselves of opportunities for advancing yourselves in life." Though
+the mother desired to give her sons the benefits of school education,
+there was but little of that commodity to be had in the remote
+district of Knocknalling. The parish-school was six miles distant,
+and the teaching given in it was of a very inferior sort--usually
+administered by students, probationers for the ministry, or by
+half-fledged dominies, themselves more needing instruction than able
+to impart it. The Kennedys could only attend the school during a few
+months in summer-time, so that what they had acquired by the end of
+one season was often forgotten by the beginning of the next. They
+learnt, however, to read the Testament, say their catechism, and
+write their own names.
+
+As the children grew up, they each longed for the time to come when
+they could be put to a trade. The family were poorly clad; stockings
+and shoes were luxuries rarely indulged in; and Mr. Kennedy used in
+after-life to tell his grandchildren of a certain Sunday which he
+remembered shortly after his father died, when he was setting out for
+Dalry church, and had borrowed his brother Alexander's stockings, his
+brother ran after him and cried, "See that you keep out of the dirt,
+for mind you have got my stockings on!" John indulged in many
+day-dreams about the world that lay beyond the valley and the
+mountains which surrounded the place of his birth. Though a mere boy,
+the natural objects, eternally unchangeable, which daily met his
+eyes--the profound silence of the scene, broken only by the bleating
+of a solitary sheep, or the crowing of a distant cock, or the
+thrasher beating out with his flail the scanty grain of the black
+oats spread upon a skin in the open air, or the streamlets leaping
+from the rocky clefts, or the distant church-bell sounding up the
+valley on Sundays-- all bred in his mind a profound melancholy and
+feeling of loneliness, and he used to think to himself, "What can I
+do to see and know something of the world beyond this?" The greatest
+pleasure he experienced during that period was when packmen came
+round with their stores of clothing and hardware, and displayed them
+for sale; he eagerly listened to all that such visitors had to tell
+of the ongoings of the world beyond the valley.
+
+The people of the Knocknalling district were very poor. The greater
+part of them were unable to support the younger members, whose custom
+it was to move off elsewhere in search of a living when they arrived
+at working years,--some to America, some to the West Indies, and some
+to the manufacturing districts of the south. Whole families took
+their departure in this way, and the few friendships which Kennedy
+formed amongst those of his own age were thus suddenly snapped, and
+only a great blank remained. But he too could follow their example,
+and enter upon that wider world in which so many others had ventured
+and succeeded. As early as eight years of age, his mother still
+impressing upon her boys the necessity of learning to work, John
+gathered courage to say to her that he wished to leave home and
+apprentice himself to some handicraft business. Having seen some
+carpenters working in the neighbourhood, with good clothes on their
+backs, and hearing the men's characters well spoken of, he thought it
+would be a fine thing to be a carpenter too, particularly as the
+occupation would enable him to move from place to place and see the
+world. He was as yet, however, of too tender an age to set out on the
+journey of life; but when he was about eleven years old, Adam Murray,
+one of his most intimate acquaintances, having gone off to serve an
+apprenticeship in Lancashire with Mr. Cannan of Chowbent, himself a
+native of the district, the event again awakened in him a strong
+desire to migrate from Knocknalling. Others had gone after Murray,
+James MacConnel and two or three more; and at length, at about
+fourteen years of age, Kennedy himself left his native home for
+Lancashire. About the time that he set out, Paul Jones was ravaging
+the coasts of Galloway, and producing general consternation
+throughout the district. Great excitement also prevailed through the
+occurrence of the Gordon riots in London, which extended into remote
+country places; and Kennedy remembered being nearly frightened out of
+his wits on one occasion by a poor dominie whose school he attended,
+who preached to his boys about the horrors that were coming upon the
+land through the introduction of Popery. The boy set out for England
+on the 2nd of February, 1784, mounted upon a Galloway, his little
+package of clothes and necessaries strapped behind him. As he passed
+along the glen, recognising each familiar spot, his heart was in his
+mouth, and he dared scarcely trust himself to look back. The ground
+was covered with snow, and nature quite frozen up. He had the company
+of his brother Alexander as far as the town of New Galloway, where he
+slept the first night. The next day, accompanied by one of his future
+masters, Mr. James Smith, a partner of Mr. Cannan's, who had
+originally entered his service as a workman, they started on ponyback
+for Dumfries. After a long day's ride, they entered the town in the
+evening, and amongst the things which excited the boy's surprise were
+the few street-lamps of the town, and a waggon with four horses and
+four wheels. In his remote valley carts were as yet unknown, and even
+in Dumfries itself they were comparative rarities; the common means
+of transport in the district being what were called "tumbling cars."
+The day after, they reached Longtown, and slept there; the boy noting
+ANOTHER lamp. The next stage was to Carlisle, where Mr. Smith, whose
+firm had supplied a carding engine and spinning-jenny to a small
+manufacturer in the town, went to "gate" and trim them. One was put
+up in a small house, the other in a small room; and the sight of
+these machines was John Kennedy's first introduction to
+cotton-spinning. While going up the inn-stairs he was amazed and not
+a little alarmed at seeing two men in armour--he had heard of the
+battles between the Scots and English--and believed these to be some
+of the fighting men; though they proved to be but effigies. Five more
+days were occupied in travelling southward, the resting places being
+at Penrith, Kendal, Preston, and Chorley, the two travellers arriving
+at Chowbent on Sunday the 8th of February, 1784. Mr. Cannan seems to
+have collected about him a little colony of Scotsmen, mostly from the
+same neighbourhood, and in the evening there was quite an assembly of
+them at the "Bear's Paw," where Kennedy put up, to hear the tidings
+from their native county brought by the last new comer. On the
+following morning the boy began his apprenticeship as a carpenter
+with the firm of Cannan and Smith, serving seven years for his meat
+and clothing. He applied himself to his trade, and became a good,
+steady workman. He was thoughtful and self-improving, always
+endeavouring to acquire knowledge of new arts and to obtain insight
+into new machines. "Even in early life," said he, in the account of
+his career addressed to his children, "I felt a strong desire to know
+what others knew, and was always ready to communicate what little I
+knew myself; and by admitting at once my want of education, I found
+that I often made friends of those on whom I had no claims beyond
+what an ardent desire for knowledge could give me."
+
+His apprenticeship over, John Kennedy commenced business*
+ [footnote...
+One of the reasons which induced Kennedy thus early to begin the
+business of mule-spinning has been related as follows. While employed
+as apprentice at Chowbent, he happened to sleep over the master's
+apartment; and late one evening, on the latter returning from market,
+his wife asked his success. "I've sold the eightys," said he, "at a
+guinea a pound." "What," exclaimed the mistress, in a loud voice,
+"sold the eightys for ONLY a guinea a pound! I never heard of such a
+thing." The apprentice could not help overhearing the remark, and it
+set him a-thinking. He knew the price of cotton and the price of
+labour, and concluded there must be a very large margin of profit. So
+soon as he was out of his time, therefore, he determined that he
+should become a cotton spinner.
+ ...]
+in a small way in Manchester in 1791, in conjunction with two other
+workmen, Sandford and MacConnel. Their business was machine-making
+and mule-spinning, Kennedy taking the direction of the machine
+department. The firm at first put up their mules for spinning in any
+convenient garrets they could hire at a low rental. After some time,
+they took part of a small factory in Canal Street, and carried on
+their business on a larger scale. Kennedy and MacConnel afterwards
+occupied a little factory in the same street,--since removed to give
+place to Fairbairn's large machine works. The progress of the firm
+was steady and even rapid, and they went on building mills and
+extending their business--Mr. Kennedy, as he advanced in life,
+gathering honour, wealth, and troops of friends. Notwithstanding the
+defects of his early education, he was one of the few men of his
+class who became distinguished for his literary labours in connexion
+principally with the cotton trade. Towards the close of his life, he
+prepared several papers of great interest for the Literary and
+Philosophical Society of Manchester, which are to be found printed in
+their Proceedings; one of these, on the Invention of the Mule by
+Samuel Crompton, was for a long time the only record which the public
+possessed of the merits and claims of that distinguished inventor.
+His knowledge of the history of the cotton manufacture in its various
+stages, and of mechanical inventions generally, was most extensive
+and accurate. Among his friends he numbered James Watt, who placed
+his son in his establishment for the purpose of acquiring knowledge
+and experience of his profession. At a much later period he numbered
+George Stephenson among his friends, having been one of the first
+directors of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, and one of the
+three judges (selected because of his sound judgment and proved
+impartiality, as well as his knowledge of mechanical engineering) to
+adjudicate on the celebrated competition of Locomotives at Rainhill.
+By these successive steps did this poor Scotch boy become one of the
+leading men of Manchester, closing his long and useful life in 1855
+at an advanced age, his mental faculties remaining clear and
+unclouded to the last. His departure from life was happy and
+tranquil--so easy that it was for a time doubtful whether he was dead
+or asleep.
+
+To return to Mr. Fairbairn's career, and his progress as a millwright
+and engineer in Manchester. When he and his partner undertook the
+extensive alterations in Mr. Murray's factory, both were in a great
+measure unacquainted with the working of cotton-mills, having until
+then been occupied principally with corn-mills, and printing and
+bleaching works; so that an entirely new field was now opened to
+their united exertions. Sedulously improving their opportunities, the
+young partners not only thoroughly mastered the practical details of
+cotton-mill work, but they were very shortly enabled to introduce a
+series of improvements of the greatest importance in this branch of
+our national manufactures. Bringing their vigorous practical minds to
+bear on the subject, they at once saw that the gearing of even the
+best mills was of a very clumsy and imperfect character. They found
+the machinery driven by large square cast-iron shafts, on which huge
+wooden drums, some of them as much as four feet in diameter, revolved
+at the rate of about forty revolutions a minute; and the couplings
+were so badly fitted that they might be heard creaking and groaning a
+long way off. The speeds of the driving-shafts were mostly got up by
+a series of straps and counter drums, which not only crowded the
+rooms, but seriously obstructed the light where most required for
+conducting the delicate operations of the different machines. Another
+serious defect lay in the construction of the shafts, and in the mode
+of fixing the couplings, which were constantly giving way, so that a
+week seldom passed without one or more breaks-down. The repairs were
+usually made on Sundays, which were the millwrights' hardest working
+days, to their own serious moral detriment; but when trade was good,
+every consideration was made to give way to the uninterrupted running
+of the mills during the rest of the week.
+
+It occurred to Mr. Fairbairn that the defective arrangements thus
+briefly described, might be remedied by the introduction of lighter
+shafts driven at double or treble the velocity, smaller drums to
+drive the machinery, and the use of wrought-iron wherever
+practicable, because of its greater lightness and strength compared
+with wood. He also provided for the simplification of the hangers and
+fixings by which the shafting was supported, and introduced the
+"half-lap coupling" so well known to millwrights and engineers. His
+partner entered fully into his views; and the opportunity shortly
+presented itself of carrying them into effect in the large new mill
+erected in 1818, for the firm of MacConnel and Kennedy. The machinery
+of that concern proved a great improvement on all that had preceded
+it; and, to Messrs. Fairbairn and Lillie's new system of gearing Mr.
+Kennedy added an original invention of his own in a system of double
+speeds, with the object of giving an increased quantity of twist in
+the finer descriptions of mule yarn.
+
+The satisfactory execution of this important work at once placed the
+firm of Fairbairn and Lillie in the very front rank of engineering
+millwrights. Mr. Kennedy's good word was of itself a passport to fame
+and business, and as he was more than satisfied with the manner in
+which his mill machinery had been planned and executed, he sounded
+their praises in all quarters. Orders poured in upon them so rapidly,
+that they had difficulty in keeping pace with the demands of the
+trade. They then removed from their original shed to larger premises
+in Matherstreet, where they erected additional lathes and other
+tool-machines, and eventually a steam-engine. They afterwards added a
+large cellar under an adjoining factory to their premises; and from
+time to time provided new means of turning out work with increased
+efficiency and despatch. In due course of time the firm erected a
+factory of their own, fitted with the most improved machinery for
+turning out millwork; and they went on from one contract to another,
+until their reputation as engineers became widely celebrated. In
+1826-7, they supplied the water-wheels for the extensive cotton-mills
+belonging to Kirkman Finlay and Company, at Catrine Bank in Ayrshire.
+These wheels are even at this day regarded as among the most perfect
+hydraulic machines in Europe. About the same time they supplied the
+mill gearing and water-machinery for Messrs. Escher and Company's
+large works at Zurich, among the largest cotton manufactories on the
+continent.
+
+In the mean while the industry of Manchester and the neighbourhood,
+through which the firm had risen and prospered, was not neglected,
+but had the full benefit of the various improvements which they were
+introducing in mill machinery. In the course of a few years an entire
+revolution was effected in the gearing. Ponderous masses of timber
+and cast-iron, with their enormous bearings and couplings, gave place
+to slender rods of wrought-iron and light frames or hooks by which
+they were suspended. In like manner, lighter yet stronger wheels and
+pulleys were introduced, the whole arrangements were improved, and,
+the workmanship being greatly more accurate, friction was avoided,
+while the speed was increased from about 40 to upwards of 300
+revolutions a minute. The fly-wheel of the engine was also converted
+into a first motion by the formation of teeth on its periphery, by
+which a considerable saving was effected both in cost and power.
+
+These great improvements formed quite an era in the history of mill
+machinery; and exercised the most important influence on the
+development of the cotton, flax, silk, and other branches of
+manufacture. Mr. Fairbairn says the system introduced by his firm was
+at first strongly condemned by leading engineers, and it was with
+difficulty that he could overcome the force of their opposition; nor
+was it until a wheel of thirty tons weight for a pair of engines of
+100-horse power each was erected and set to work, that their
+prognostications of failure entirely ceased. From that time the
+principles introduced by Mr. Fairbairn have been adopted wherever
+steam is employed as a motive power in mills.
+
+Mr. Fairbairn and his partner had a hard uphill battle to fight while
+these improvements were being introduced; but energy and
+perseverance, guided by sound judgment, secured their usual reward,
+and the firm became known as one of the most thriving and
+enterprising in Manchester. Long years after, when addressing an
+assembly of working men, Mr. Fairbairn, while urging the necessity of
+labour and application as the only sure means of self-improvement,
+said, "I can tell you from experience, that there is no labour so
+sweet, none so consolatory, as that which is founded upon an honest,
+straightforward, and honourable ambition." The history of any
+prosperous business, however, so closely resembles every other, and
+its details are usually of so monotonous a character, that it is
+unnecessary for us to pursue this part of the subject; and we will
+content ourselves with briefly indicating the several further
+improvements introduced by Mr. Fairbairn in the mechanics of
+construction in the course of his long and useful career.
+
+His improvements in water-wheels were of great value, especially as
+regarded the new form of bucket which he introduced with the object
+of facilitating the escape of the air as the water entered the bucket
+above, and its readmission as the water emptied itself out below.
+This arrangement enabled the water to act upon the wheel with the
+maximum of effect in all states of the river; and it so generally
+recommended itself, that it very soon became adopted in most
+water-mills both at home and abroad.*
+ [footnote...
+The subject will be found fully treated in Mr. Fairbairn's own work,
+A Treatise on Mills and Mill-Work, embodying the results of his large
+experience.
+ ...]
+His labours were not, however, confined to his own particular calling
+as a mill engineer, but were shortly directed to other equally
+important branches of the constructive art. Thus he was among the
+first to direct his attention to iron ship building as a special
+branch of business. In 1829, Mr. Houston, of Johnstown, near Paisley,
+launched a light boat on the Ardrossan Canal for the purpose of
+ascertaining the speed at which it could be towed by horses with two
+or three persons on board. To the surprise of Mr. Houston and the
+other gentlemen present, it was found that the labour the horses had
+to perform in towing the boat was mach greater at six or seven, than
+at nine miles an hour. This anomaly was very puzzling to the
+experimenters, and at the request of the Council of the Forth and
+Clyde Canal, Mr. Fairbairn, who had already become extensively known
+as a scientific mechanic, was requested to visit Scotland and
+institute a series of experiments with light boats to determine the
+law of traction, and clear up, if possible, the apparent anomalies in
+Mr. Houston's experiments. This he did accordingly, and the results
+of his experiments were afterwards published, The trials extended
+over a series of years, and were conducted at a cost of several
+thousand pounds. The first experiments were made with vessels of
+wood, but they eventually led to the construction of iron vessels
+upon a large scale and on an entirely new principle of construction,
+with angle iron ribs and wrought-iron sheathing plates. The results
+proved most valuable, and had the effect of specially directing the
+attention of naval engineers to the employment of iron in ship
+building.
+
+Mr. Fairbairn himself fully recognised the value of the experiments,
+and proceeded to construct an iron vessel at his works at Manchester,
+in 1831, which went to sea the same year. Its success was such as to
+induce him to begin iron shipbuilding on a large scale, at the same
+time as the Messrs. Laird did at Birkenhead; and in 1835, Mr.
+Fairbairn established extensive works at Millwall, on the
+Thames,--afterwards occupied by Mr. Scott Russell, in whose yard the
+"Great Eastern" steamship was erected,-- where in the course of some
+fourteen years he built upwards of a hundred and twenty iron ships,
+some of them above 2000 tons burden. It was in fact the first great
+iron shipbuilding yard in Britain, and led the way in a branch of
+business which has since become of first-rate magnitude and
+importance. Mr. Fairbairn was a most laborious experimenter in iron,
+and investigated in great detail the subject of its strength, the
+value of different kinds of riveted joints compared with the solid
+plate, and the distribution of the material throughout the structure,
+as well as the form of the vessel itself. It would indeed be
+difficult to over-estimate the value of his investigations on these
+points in the earlier stages of this now highly important branch of
+the national industry.
+
+To facilitate the manufacture of his iron-sided ships, Mr. Fairbairn,
+about the year 1839, invented a machine for riveting boiler plates by
+steam-power. The usual method by which this process had before been
+executed was by hand-hammers, worked by men placed at each side of
+the plate to be riveted, acting simultaneously on both sides of the
+bolt. But this process was tedious and expensive, as well as clumsy
+and imperfect; and some more rapid and precise method of fixing the
+plates firmly together was urgently wanted. Mr. Fairbairn's machine
+completely supplied the want. By its means the rivet was driven into
+its place, and firmly fastened there by a couple of strokes of a
+hammer impelled by steam. Aided by the Jacquard punching-machine of
+Roberts, the riveting of plates of the largest size has thus become
+one of the simplest operations in iron-manufacturing.
+
+The thorough knowledge which Mr. Fairbairn possessed of the strength
+of wrought-iron in the form of the hollow beam (which a wrought-iron
+ship really is) naturally led to his being consulted by the late
+Robert Stephenson as to the structures by means of which it was
+proposed to span the estuary of the Conway and the Straits of Menai;
+and the result was the Conway and Britannia Tubular Bridges, the
+history of which we have fully described elsewhere.*
+ [footnote...
+Lives of the Engineers, vol. iii. 416-40. See also An Account of the
+Construction of the Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges. By William
+Fairbairn, C.E. 1849.
+ ...]
+There is no reason to doubt that by far the largest share of the
+merit of working out the practical details of those structures, and
+thus realizing Robert Stephenson's magnificent idea of the tubular
+bridge, belongs to Mr. Fairbairn.
+
+In all matters connected with the qualities and strength of iron, he
+came to be regarded as a first-rate authority, and his advice was
+often sought and highly valued. The elaborate experiments instituted
+by him as to the strength of iron of all kinds have formed the
+subject of various papers which he has read before the British
+Association, the Royal Society, and the Literary and Philosophical
+Society of Manchester. His practical inquries as to the strength of
+boilers have led to his being frequently called upon to investigate
+the causes of boiler explosions, on which subject he has published
+many elaborate reports. The study of this subject led him to
+elucidate the law according to which the density of steam varies
+throughout an extensive range of pressures and atmospheres,--in
+singular confirmation of what had before been provisionally
+calculated from the mechanical theory of heat. His discovery of the
+true method of preventing the tendency of tubes to collapse, by
+dividing the flues of long boilers into short lengths by means of
+stiffening rings, arising out of the same investigation, was one of
+the valuable results of his minute study of the subject; and is
+calculated to be of essential value in the manufacturing districts by
+diminishing the chances of boiler explosions, and saving the
+lamentable loss of life which has during the last twenty years been
+occasioned by the malconstruction of boilers. Among Mr. Fairbairn's
+most recent, inquiries are those conducted by him at the instance of
+the British Government relative to the construction of iron-plated
+ships, his report of which has not yet been made public, most
+probably for weighty political reasons.
+
+We might also refer to the practical improvements which Mr. Fairbairn
+has been instrumental in introducing in the construction of buildings
+of various kinds by the use of iron. He has himself erected numerous
+iron structures, and pointed out the road which other manufacturers
+have readily followed. "I am one of those," said he, in his 'Lecture
+on the Progress of Engineering,' "who have great faith in iron walls
+and iron beams; and although I have both spoken and written much on
+the subject, I cannot too forcibly recommend it to public attention.
+It is now twenty years since I constructed an iron house, with the
+machinery of a corn-mill, for Halil Pasha, then Seraskier of the
+Turkish army at Constantinople. I believe it was the first iron house
+built in this country; and it was constructed at the works at
+Millwall, London, in 1839."*
+ [footnote...
+Useful Information for Engineers, 2nd series, 225. The mere list of
+Mr. Fairbairn's writings would occupy considerable space; for,
+notwithstanding his great labours as an engineer, he has also been an
+industrious writer. His papers on Iron, read at different times
+before the British Association, the Royal Society, and the Literary
+and Philosophical Institution of Manchester, are of great value. The
+treatise on "Iron" in the Encyclopaedia Britannica is from his pen,
+and he has contributed a highly interesting paper to Dr. Scoffern's
+Useful Metals and their Alloys on the Application of Iron to the
+purposes of Ordnance, Machinery, Bridges, and House and Ship
+Building. Another valuable but less-known contribution to Iron
+literature is his Report on Machinery in General, published in the
+Reports on the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1855. The experiments
+conducted by Mr. Fairbairn for the purpose of proving the excellent
+properties of iron for shipbuilding--the account of which was
+published in the Trans actions of the Royal Society eventually led to
+his further experiments to determine the strength and form of the
+Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges, plate-girders, and other
+constructions, the result of which was to establish quite a new era
+in the history of bridge as well as ship building.
+ ...]
+
+Since then iron structures of all kinds have been erected: iron
+lighthouses, iron-and-crystal palaces, iron churches, and iron
+bridges. Iron roads have long been worked by iron locomotives; and
+before many years have passed a telegraph of iron wire will probably
+be found circling the globe. We now use iron roofs, iron bedsteads,
+iron ropes, and iron pavement; and even the famous "wooden walls of
+England" are rapidly becoming reconstructed of iron. In short, we are
+in the midst of what Mr. Worsaae has characterized as the Age of
+Iron.
+
+At the celebration of the opening of the North Wales Railway at
+Bangor, almost within sight of his iron bridge across the Straits of
+Menai, Robert Stephenson said, "We are daily producing from the
+bowels of the earth a raw material, in its crude state apparently of
+no worth, but which, when converted into a locomotive engine, flies
+over bridges of the same material, with a speed exceeding that of the
+bird, advancing wealth and comfort throughout the country. Such are
+the powers of that all-civilizing instrument, Iron."
+
+Iron indeed plays a highly important part in modem civilization. Out
+of it are formed alike the sword and the ploughshare, the cannon and
+the printing-press; and while civilization continues partial and
+half-developed, as it still is, our liberties and our industry must
+necessarily in a great measure depend for their protection upon the
+excellence of our weapons of war as well as on the superiority of our
+instruments of peace. Hence the skill and ingenuity displayed in the
+invention of rifled guns and artillery, and iron-sided ships and
+batteries, the fabrication of which would be impossible but for the
+extraordinary development of the iron-manufacture, and the marvellous
+power and precision of our tool-making machines, as described in
+preceding chapters.
+
+"Our strength, wealth, and commerce," said Mr. Cobden in the course
+of a recent debate in the House of Commons, "grow out of the skilled
+labour of the men working in metals. They are at the foundation of
+our manufacturing greatness; and in case you were attacked, they
+would at once be available, with their hard hands and skilled brains,
+to manufacture your muskets and your cannon, your shot and your
+shell. What has given us our Armstrongs, Whitworths, and Fairbairns,
+but the free industry of this country? If you can build three times
+more steam-engines than any other country, and have threefold the
+force of mechanics, to whom and to what do you owe that, but to the
+men who have trained them, and to those principles of commerce out of
+which the wealth of the country has grown? We who have some hand in
+doing that, are not ignorant that we have been and are increasing the
+strength of the country in proportion as we are raising up skilled
+artisans."*
+ [footnote...
+House of Commons Debate, 7th July, 1862.
+ ...]
+
+The reader who has followed us up to this point will have observed
+that handicraft labour was the first stage of the development of
+human power, and that machinery has been its last and highest. The
+uncivilized man began with a stone for a hammer, and a splinter of
+flint for a chisel, each stage of his progress being marked by an
+improvement in his tools. Every machine calculated to save labour or
+increase production was a substantial addition to his power over the
+material resources of nature, enabling him to subjugate them more
+effectually to his wants and uses; and every extension of machinery
+has served to introduce new classes of the population to the
+enjoyment of its benefits. In early times the products of skilled
+industry were for the most part luxuries intended for the few,
+whereas now the most exquisite tools and engines are employed in
+producing articles of ordinary consumption for the great mass of the
+community. Machines with millions of fingers work for millions of
+purchasers--for the poor as well as the rich; and while the machinery
+thus used enriches its owners, it no less enriches the public with
+its products.
+
+Much of the progress to which we have adverted has been the result of
+the skill and industry of our own time. "Indeed," says Mr. Fairbairn,
+"the mechanical operations of the present day could not have been
+accomplished at any cost thirty years ago; and what was then
+considered impossible is now performed with an exactitude that never
+fails to accomplish the end in view." For this we are mainly indebted
+to the almost creative power of modern machine-tools, and the
+facilities which they present for the production and reproduction of
+other machines. We also owe much to the mechanical agencies employed
+to drive them. Early inventors yoked wind and water to sails and
+wheels, and made them work machinery of various kinds; but modern
+inventors have availed themselves of the far more swift and powerful,
+yet docile force of steam, which has now laid upon it the heaviest
+share of the burden of toil, and indeed become the universal drudge.
+Coal, water, and a little oil, are all that the steam-engine, with
+its bowels of iron and heart of fire, needs to enable it to go on
+working night and day, without rest or sleep. Yoked to machinery of
+almost infinite variety, the results of vast ingenuity and labour,
+the Steam-engine pumps water, drives spindles, thrashes corn, prints
+books, hammers iron, ploughs land, saws timber, drives piles, impels
+ships, works railways, excavates docks; and, in a word, asserts an
+almost unbounded supremacy over the materials which enter into the
+daily use of mankind, for clothing, for labour, for defence, for
+household purposes, for locomotion, for food, or for instruction.
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of "Industrial Biography" by Smiles
+
+
+
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