The Life of Robert Stephenson, F.R.S. Etc. Etc: Late President of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Volume 1Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, & Green, 1864 |
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Page xiv
... respect of Railway Developement - Results - Proposal for Railway Farmers - Proposal for a Railway Bank - - 263 CHAPTER XIV . THE ATMOSPHERIC SYSTEM OF RAILWAY PROPULSION . - Remarkable Episode in the History of Railways - Correction of ...
... respect of Railway Developement - Results - Proposal for Railway Farmers - Proposal for a Railway Bank - - 263 CHAPTER XIV . THE ATMOSPHERIC SYSTEM OF RAILWAY PROPULSION . - Remarkable Episode in the History of Railways - Correction of ...
Page 8
... respect his career sadly resembled the lot of his father , and years afterwards it was mournfully reproduced in the experiences of his only son . But the young father was not the man to crouch at the first blast of adversity . If his ...
... respect his career sadly resembled the lot of his father , and years afterwards it was mournfully reproduced in the experiences of his only son . But the young father was not the man to crouch at the first blast of adversity . If his ...
Page 15
... respect an excellent woman ) had become the wife of his * The Long Benton registers con- tain the following entries : : - 1. Frances Stephenson , West Moor Colliery , d . of George Stephenson and Frances his wife , late Henderson . Died ...
... respect an excellent woman ) had become the wife of his * The Long Benton registers con- tain the following entries : : - 1. Frances Stephenson , West Moor Colliery , d . of George Stephenson and Frances his wife , late Henderson . Died ...
Page 47
... respects , a young man even to the last , anxious for fresh know- ledge , capable after a struggle of relinquishing old errors , and moreover endowed with high animal spirits . * Robert Stephenson was apprenticed to Mr. Nicholas Wood ...
... respects , a young man even to the last , anxious for fresh know- ledge , capable after a struggle of relinquishing old errors , and moreover endowed with high animal spirits . * Robert Stephenson was apprenticed to Mr. Nicholas Wood ...
Page 50
... respect to alter it . Never did woman more cordially devote herself to the interests of her hus- band and husband's child . Entering the Killingworth cottage , which ' Aunt Eleanor ' had left to marry an honest and well - reputed ...
... respect to alter it . Never did woman more cordially devote herself to the interests of her hus- band and husband's child . Entering the Killingworth cottage , which ' Aunt Eleanor ' had left to marry an honest and well - reputed ...
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Common terms and phrases
amongst Ann Henderson apparatus appointed Atmospheric Railway atmospheric system Bill Birmingham Birmingham line Birmingham Railway Black Callerton boiler brakesman bridge Camden Town canal carriages chimney colliery Colombian Mining commenced Committee consequence construction cost cottage course Croydon Dalkey Darlington line difficulty directors engineer-in-chief experiments father favour feet George Hudson George Stephenson Henderson Hill House inches interest invention John Killingworth La Guayra labour letter Liverpool and Manchester locomotive locomotive engine London and Birmingham Long Benton Longridge Manchester Railway Mariquita ment Messrs miles an hour multitubular Newcastle Parliament parliamentary passed pipe piston present principal projectors proposed railroad rails Railway Company railway mania Rainhill road Robert Stephen Robert Stephenson Rocket Samuda South speed Stanhope and Tyne stationary engines steam Stockton and Darlington tion tons took traffic trains tube tunnel vacuum valve velocity weight West Moor whilst Willington Quay wrote Wylam young
Popular passages
Page 198 - ... or mentioned in the said books of reference, or any correction thereof, such temporary or permanent inclined planes, tunnels, embankments, aqueducts, bridges, roads, ways, passages, conduits, drains, piers, arches, cuttings and fences as they think proper.
Page 203 - Street, Somers Town, in the parish of St. Pancras, in the county of Middlesex...
Page 170 - That the case for the promoters of the bill having been concluded, it does not appear to the Committee that they have made out such a case as would warrant the forcing of the proposed railway through the land and property of so great a proportion of dissentient landowners and proprietors.
Page 207 - The great Pyramid of Egypt, that stupendous monument which seems likely to exist to the end of all time, will afford a comparison. After making the necessary allowances for the foundations, galleries...
Page 279 - Little more than a quarter of a century has elapsed, since Parliament first began to legislate for railways. In that period a multitude of laws have been placed upon the statute-book, which will certainly excite the wonder, if they fail to be the admiration, of future ^generations.
Page 125 - Other engines with boilers of a variety of construction, were made, all having in view the increase of the heating surface, as it then became obvious to my father that the speed of the engine could not be increased without increasing the evaporative power of the boiler.
Page 234 - ... with the extinction of man himself. Mr. Cooke, in his turn, touched the keys and returned the answer. ' Never did I feel such a tumultuous sensation before...
Page 123 - 8. The price of the engine which may be accepted, not to exceed £550, delivered on the rail-way; and any engine not approved, to be taken back by the owner.
Page 254 - Edinbro', every other Saturday, or to the black swan in Holborn, every other Monday, at both of which places they may be received in a...
Page 282 - Give us," we say, " a tribunal competent to form a sound opinion. Commit to that tribunal, with any restrictions you think necessary, the whole of the great questions appertaining to our system. Let it protect private interests apart from railways; let it judge of the desirability of all initiatory measures, of all proposals for purchases, amalgamations, or other railway arrangements : delegate to it the power of enforcing such regulations and restrictions as may be thought needful to secure the...