were placed under Mr. Telford's
charge; and an
admirable road was
very
shortly under
construction between Carlisle and Glasgow.
That part of it between Hamilton and Glasgow, eleven miles in length,
was however left in the hands of local trustees, as was the
diversion of thirteen miles at the
boundary of the counties of
Lanark and Dumfries, for which a
previous Act had been obtained.
The length of new line constructed by Mr. Telford was sixty-nine
miles, and it was probably the finest piece of road which up to
that time had been made.
His ordinary method of road-making in the Highlands was, first to
level and drain; then, like the Romans, to lay a solid
pavement of
large stones, the round or broad end
downwards, as close as they
could be set. The points of the latter were then broken off, and a
layer of stones broken to about the size of walnuts, was laid upon
them, and over all a little
gravel if at hand. A road thus formed
soon became bound together, and for ordinary purposes was very
durable.
But where the
traffic, as in the case of the Carlisle and Glasgow
road, was expected to be very heavy, Telford took much greater
pains. Here he paid
especial attention to two points: first, to lay
it out as nearly as possible upon a level, so as to reduce the
draught to horses dragging heavy vehicles,--one in thirty being
about the severest gradient at any part of the road. The next point
was to make the
working, or middle
portion of the road, as firm and
substantial as possible, so as to bear, without shrinking, the
heaviest weight likely to be brought over it. With this object he
specified that the metal bed was to be formed in two layers, rising
about four inches towards the centre the bottom course being of
stones (whinstone,
limestone, or hard freestone), seven inches in
depth. These were to be carefully set by hand, with the broadest
ends
downwards, all crossbonded or jointed, no stone being more
than three inches wide on the top. The spaces between them were
then to be filled up with smaller stones, packed by hand, so as to
bring the whole to an even and firm surface. Over this a top course
was to be laid, seven inches in depth, consisting of properly
broken hard whinstones, none
exceeding six ounces in weight, and
each to be able to pass through a
circular ring, two inches and a
half in
diameter; a
binding of
gravel, about an inch in thickness,
being placed over all. A drain crossed under the bed of the bottom
layer to the outside ditch in every hundred yards. The result was
an
admirably easy, firm, and dry road,
capable of being travelled
upon in all weathers, and
standing in
comparatively small need of
repairs.
A similar practice was introduced in England about the same time by
Mr. Macadam; and, though his method was not so
thorough as that of
Telford, it was usefully employed on most of the high roads
throughout the kingdom. Mr. Macadam's notice was first called to
the subject while
acting as one of the trustees of a road in
Ayrshire. Afterwards, while employed as Government agent for
victualling the navy in the
western parts of England, he continued
the study of road-making, keeping in view the
essential conditions
of a
compact and
durable substance and a smooth surface. At that
time the attention of the Legislature was not so much directed to
the proper making and mending of the roads, as to suiting the
vehicles to them such as they were; and they legislated backwards
and forwards for nearly half a century as to the
breadth of wheels.
Macadam was, on the other hand, of opinion that the main point was
to attend to the nature of the roads on which the vehicles were to
travel. Most roads were then made with
gravel, or flints tumbled
upon them in their natural state, and so rounded that they had no
points of
contact, and
rarely became consolidated. When a heavy
vehicle of any sort passed over them, their loose structure
presented no
resistance; the material was thus completely
disturbed, and they often became almost impassable. Macadam's
practice was this: to break the stones into angular fragments, so
that a bed several inches in depth should be formed, the material
best adapted for the purpose being fragments of granite,
greenstone, or basalt; to watch the repairs of the road carefully
during the process of consolidation, filling up the inequalities
caused by the
traffic passing over it, until a hard and level
surface had been obtained. Thus made, the road would last for
years without further attention. in 1815 Mr. Macadam devoted
himself with great
enthusiasm to road-making as a
profession, and
being appointed surveyor-general of the Bristol roads, he had full
opportunities of exemplifying his
system. It proved so successful
that the example set by him was quickly followed over the entire
kingdom. Even the streets of many large towns were Macadamised.
In carrying out his improvements, however, Mr. Macadam spent several
thousand pounds of his own money, and in 1825, having proved this
expenditure before a Committee of the House of Commons, the amount
was reimbursed to him, together with an honorary
tribute of two
thousand pounds. Mr. Macadam died poor, but, as he himself said,
"a least an honest man." By his indefatigable exertions and his
success as a road-maker, by greatly saving animal labour,
facilitating
commercialintercourse, and rendering travelling easy
and expeditious, he entitled himself to the
reputation of a public
benefactor.
[Image] J. L. Macadam.
Owing to the
mountainous nature of the country through which
Telford's Carlisle and Glasgow road passes, the
bridges are
unusually numerous and of large dimensions. Thus, the Fiddler's
Burn Bridge is of three arches, one of 150 and two of 105 feet span
each. There are fourteen other
bridges, presenting from one to
three arches, of from 20 to 90 feet span. But the most picturesque
and
remarkablebridge constructed by Telford in that district was
upon another line of road
subsequently carried out by him, in the
upper part of the county of Lanark, and crossing the main line of
the Carlisle and Glasgow road almost at right angles. Its northern
and eastern part formed a direct line of
communication between the
great cattle markets of Falkirk, Crief, and Doune, and Carlisle and
the West of England. It was carried over deep
ravines by several
lofty
bridges, the most
formidable of which was that across the
Mouse Water at Cartland Crags, about a mile to the west of Lanark.
The
stream here flows through a deep rocky chasm, the sides of
which are in some places about four hundred feet high. At a point
where the
height of the rocks is
considerably less, but still most
formidable, Telford spanned the
ravine with the beautiful
bridgerepresented in the
engraving facing this page, its parapet being
129 feet above the surface of the water beneath.
[Image] Cartland Crags Bridge.
The re
construction of the
western road from Carlisle to Glasgow,
which Telford had thus
satisfactorily carried out,
shortly led to
similar demands from the population on the eastern side of the
kingdom. The spirit of road
reform was now fairly on foot.
Fast coaches and wheel-
carriages of all kinds had become greatly
improved, so that the usual rate of travelling had
advanced from
five or six to nine or ten miles an hour. The desire for the rapid
communication of political and
commercialintelligence was found to
increase with the facilities for supplying it; and, urged by the
public wants, the Post-Office authorities were stimulated to
unusual efforts in this direction. Numerous surveys were made and
roads laid out, so as to improve the main line of
communicationbetween London and Edinburgh and the
intermediate towns. The first
part of this road taken in hand was the worst--that lying to the
north of Catterick Bridge, in Yorkshire. A new line was surveyed by
West Auckland to Hexham, passing over Garter Fell to Jedburgh, and
thence to Edinburgh; but was rejected as too
crooked and uneven.
Another was tried by Aldstone Moor and Bewcastle, and rejected for
the same reason. The third line proposed was
eventually adopted as
the best, passing from Morpeth, by Wooler and Cold
stream,
to Edinburgh; saving rather more than fourteen miles between the
two points, and securing a line of road of much more favourable
gradients.
The
principalbridge on this new
highway was at Pathhead, over the
Tyne, about eleven miles south of Edinburgh. To
maintain the
level, so as to avoid the winding of the road down a steep descent
on one side of the
valley and up an
equally steep
ascent on the