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His literary studies and compositions
CHAPTER VII. Iron and other Bridges

Use of iron in bridge-building
Design of a Lyons architect

First iron bridge erected at Coalbrookdale
Tom paine's iron bridge

Wear iron bridge, Sunderland
Telford's iron bridge at Buildwas

His iron lock-gates and turn-bridges
Projects a one-arched bridge of iron over the Thames

Bewdley stone bridge
Tougueland Bridge

Extension of Telford's engineering buisness
Literary friendships

Thomas Campbell
Miscellaneous reading

CHAPTER VIII. Higland Roads and Bridges
Progress of Scotch agriculture

Romilly's account
State of the Highlands

Want of roads
Use of the Cas-chrom

Emigration
Telford's survey of Scotland

Lord Cockburn's account of the difficulties of travelling
the North Circuit

Parliamentary Commission of Highland Roads and Bridges appointed
Dunkeld Bridge built

920 miles of new roads constucted
Craigellachie Bridge

Travelling facilitated
Agriculture improved

Moral results of Telford's Highland contracts
Rapid progress of the Lowlands

Results of parish schools
CHAPTER IX. Telford's Scotch Harbours

Highland harbours
Wick and Pulteney Town

Columnar pier work
Peterhead Harbour

Frazerburgh Harbour
Bannf Harbour

Old history of Aberdeen, its witch-burning and slave-trading
Improvements of its harbour

Telford's design carried out
Dundee Harbour

CHAPTER X. Caledonian and other Canals
Canal projected through the Great Glen of the Highlands

Survey by James Watt
Survey by Telford

Tide-basin at Corpach
Neptune's Staircase

Dock at Clachnaharry
The chain of lochs

Construction of the works
Commercial failure of the canal

Telford's disappointment
Glasgow and Ardrossan Canal

Weaver Navigation
Gotha Canal, Sweden

Gloucester and Berkeley, and other canals
Harecastle Tunnel

Birmingham Canal
Macclesfield Canal

Birmingham and Liverpool Junction Canal
Telford's pride in his canals

CHAPTER XI. Telford as a road-maker
Increase of road-traffic

Improvement of the main routes between the principal towns
Carlisle and Glasgow road

Telford's principles of road-construction
Macadam

Cartland Crags Bridge
Improvement of the London and Edinburgh post road

Communications with Ireland
Wretched state of the Welsh roads

Telford's survey of the Shrewsbury and Holyhead road
Its construction

Roads and railways
London and Shrewsbury post road

Roads near London
Coast road, North Wales

CHAPTER XII. The Menai and Conway Bridges
Bridges projected over the Menai Straits

Telford's designs
Ingenious plan of suspended centering

Design of a suspensionbridge over the Mersey at Runcorn
Design of suspensionbridge at Menai

The works begun
The main piers

The suspension chains
Hoisting of the first main chain

Progress of the works to completion
The bridgeformally opened

Conway Suspension Bridge
CHAPTER XIII. Docks, Drainage, and Bridges

Resume of English engineering
General increase in trade and poulation

The Thames
St. Katherine's Docks

Tewkesburg Bridge
Gloucester Bridge

Dean Bridge, Edinburgh
Glasgow Bridge

Telford's works of drainage in the Fens
The North Level

The Nene Outfall
Effects of Fen drainage

CHAPTER XIV. Southey's tour in the highlands
Southey sets out to visit the Highlands in Telford's company

Works at Dundee Harbour
Bervie Harbour

Mitchell and Gibbs
Aberdeen Harbour

Approach to Banff
Cullen Harbour

The Forres road
Beauly Bridge

Bonar Bridge
Fleet Mound

Southey's description of the Caledonian Canal and works
John Mitchell

Takes leave of Telford
Results of Highland road-making

CHAPTER XV. Mr Telford's later years--His death and character
Telford's residence in London

Leaves the Salopian
First President of Institute of Civil Engineers

Consulted by foreign Governments as to roads and bridges
His views on railways

Failure of health
Consulted as to Dover Harbour

Illness and death
His character

His friends
Integrity

Views on money-making
Benevolence

Patriotism
His Will

Libraries in Eskdale supported by his bequests
PREFACE

The present is a revised and in some respects enlarged edition of
the 'Life of Telford,' originally" target="_blank" title="ad.本来;独创地">originally published in the 'Lives of the

Engineers,' to which is prefixed an account of the early roads and
modes of travelling in Britain.

From this volume, read in connection with the Lives of George and
Robert Stephenson, in which the origin and extension of Railways is

described, an idea may be formed of the extraordinary progress
which has been made in opening up the internal communications of

this country during the last century.
Among the principal works executed by Telford in the course of his

life, were the great highways constructed by him in North Wales and
the Scotch Highlands, through districts formerly almost inaccessible,

but which are now as easily traversed as any English county.
By means of these roads, and the facilities afforded by railways,

the many are now enabled to visit with ease and comfort magnificent
mountain scenery, which before was only the costlyprivilege of the

few; at the same time that their construction has exercised a most
beneficial influence on the population of the districts themselves.

The Highland roads, which were constructed with the active
assistance of the Government, and were maintained partly at the

public expense until within the last few years, had the effect of
stimulating industry, improving agriculture, and converting a

turbulent because unemployed population into one of the most loyal
and well-conditioned in the empire;-- the policy thus adopted with

reference to the Highlands, and the beneficial results which have
flowed from it, affording the strongest encouragement to Government

in dealing in like manner with the internal communications of
Ireland.

While the construction of the Highland roads was in progress,
the late Robert Southey, poet laureate, visited the Highlands in

company with his friend the engineer, and left on record an
interesting account of his visit, in a, manuscript now in the

possession of Robert Rawlinson, C.E., to whom we are indebted for
the extracts which are made from it in the present volume.

London, October, 1867.
EARLY ROADS AND MODES OF TRAVELLING.

CHAPTER I. OLD ROADS.
Roads have in all times been among the most influential agencies of

society; and the makers of them, by enabling men readily to
communicate with each other, have properly been regarded as among

the most effective pioneers of civilization.
Roads are literally the pathways not only of industry, but of

social and national intercourse. Wherever a line of communication
between men is formed, it renders commercepracticable; and,

wherevercommerce penetrates, it creates a civilization and leaves
a history.

Roads place the city and the town in connection with the village
and the farm, open up markets for field produce, and provide

outlets for manufactures. They enable the natural resources of a
country to be developed, facilitate travelling and intercourse,

break down local jealousies, and in all ways tend to bind together
society and bring out fully that healthy spirit of industry which

is the life and soul of every nation.
The road is so necessary an instrument of social wellbeing,

that in every new colony it is one of the first things thought of.
First roads, then commerce, institutions, schools, churches,

and newspapers. The new country, as well as the old, can only be
effectually "opened up," as the common phrase is, by roads

and until these are made, it is virtually closed.


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