The Life of Thomas Telford, Civil Engineer
With an Introductory History of Roads and Travelling in Great Britain
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:17th Jul '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This 1867 biography combines a history of roads with Thomas Telford's career as a builder of roads, bridges and canals.
This biography of civil engineer Thomas Telford (1757–1834) was published in 1867 by Samuel Smiles, author of Self-Help. Deriving from Smiles' three-volume Lives of the Engineers, it brings together accounts of road travel by earlier writers, and of Telford's own career as a builder of roads, bridges and canals.This biography of the civil engineer Thomas Telford (1757–1834) was published in 1867 by Samuel Smiles (1812–1904), the author of Self-Help and of other biographies of engineers and innovators. Smiles had already written about Telford's life and achievements in Volume 2 of his Lives of the Engineers (which is also reissued in this series), but in returning to the topic he adds to this new edition an introductory section (taken from Volume 1 of Lives of the Engineers) on the history of roads in Britain, from prehistoric trackways, via the Romans, to the modern road-building system pioneered by John Metcalf (the extraordinary 'Blind Jack of Knaresborough') and Telford himself. This illustrated work gives engaging accounts from earlier writers of the perils of road travel, and also deals in detail with Telford's own career as a builder of roads, bridges and canals.
ISBN: 9781108067898
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 21mm
Weight: 470g
368 pages