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the Plan- Their Report in its favour-Culminating point of the History -Contests in Parliament-Application of the Atmospheric System in practice-Thames Junction Line-Kingstown and Dalkey Line-Croydon Line-South Devon Line - Paris and St. Germain Line-Summary of Results Mechanical Efficiency - Economy - General Applicability to Railway Traffic-Reasons for its Abandonment-Conclusion

Page 292

ILLUSTRATION IN VOL. I.

PORTRAIT OF ROBERT STEPHENSON, by George Richmond

To face Title.

THE LIFE

OF

UNIV. OF

ROBERT STEPHENSON.

CHAPTER I.

THE STEPHENSON FAMILY.

Various Stephensons of Newcastle-Old Robert Stephenson'-
Mabel Carr-George Stephenson's Birth-Fanny Henderson
George Stephenson moves to Willington- Robert Stephenson's
Birth-The Christening Party at Willington Quay - Mrs. George
Stephenson's delicate Health George Stephenson removes to
Killingworth Township, Long Benton-Site of George Stephenson's
House at Willington-The Stephenson Memorial.'

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HE records of Newcastle show that the name of

THE

Stephenson has been frequent in every rank of the town for the last two hundred and fifty years. But no attempt has ever been made to establish a family connection between the subject of this memoir and the many worthy citizens of Newcastle who, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, bore the same name. A gentleman of high attainments, residing in the neighbourhood of Newcastle, in answer to enquiries for ancestors

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in the male line of George Stephenson, stated that George Stephenson on a certain occasion said that his family were natives of Castleton, in Liddisdale, and that his grandfather came into England in the service of a Scotch gentleman.

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There is no doubt that the grandfather of the greatest engineer of the present century lived and toiled and died in humble circumstances. He worked as fireman to the engines of the various colliery pits in the neighbourhood of Wylam, till an accident deprived him of sight and rendered him dependent on others for his daily bread. Gentle beyond the wont of rude North-countrymen, and fond of spinning out long stories of adventure and romance to village children, he was known as Bob the story-teller.' He is now remembered by the few of his associates who linger on the earth as Old Robert Stephenson.' In early life he married Mabel, the daughter of George Carr, a bleacher and dyer of Ovingham, a village standing on an ascent which rises from the north bank of the Tyne, and faces the ancient ruins of Prudhoe Castle, that crown the hill on the opposite bank. The maiden name of Mabel Carr's mother was Eleanor Wilson. Eleanor was the daughter of a wealthy Northumbrian yeoman, who possessed a good estate in the parishes of Stocksfield and Bywell. Indignant at her marriage with the bleacher and dyer of Ovingham, Mr. Wilson turned his back upon her, and died without bequeathing her a penny.

By his wife Mabel Old Robert Stephenson' had four sons (James, George, Robert, and John) and two daughters (Eleanor and Ann).

James, the eldest son,

closely resembled his father; but George, Robert, and

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