Brunel pictured in front of the chains of the SS Great Britain londoncalling.com |
The Clifton Suspension Bridge, Bristol, England theguardian.com |
His greatest achievement, however, was probably the SS Great Britain, launched in 1843 which was the largest ship in the world at that time. It sailed between Bristol and New York and Brunel also conceived an incredible scheme to extend the Great Western Railway across the Atlantic by utilising steam-powered ships!
The SS Great Britain now restored, pictured in Bristol leeds-uk.com He died of a stroke at the young age of 53 in 1859. |
16 comments:
I saw an article once that asked what profession does the greatest good for the world--the answer: Engineering! Not doctors nor lawyers, but engineers. Learned so much from your post and I think the bridge is elegant, quite an achievement.
That Bridge is sensational! It spans a chasm and is a thrill to drive across - and it's in a very nice part of England!
I think your description of engineering is spot on.
He was a clever man indeed, and I do love bridges. Mind blowing stuff :D
Hi AC: I think the Clifton Bridge is the best in the UK - and there are plenty of candidates with several dozen across the Thames alone!
Hi Bazza,
A great visionary indeed. I seem to remember seeing a 'Great British Railway Journeys' with Michael Portillo where he was enthusing about Brunel, one of his own heroes!
J
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Hey Bazza,
The man was a genius. I totally agree that Brunel was a brilliant engineer. Thanks for the info and photos.
I'm outta' here....
Gary
"...not afraid to fail". Nowadays we're supposed to be perfect, and confident... no room for negatives.
I love that ship. How incredibly lovely. Simply a work of art, as well as of engineering.
bazza, I just had to stop by, and what a find! I'll try not to be the stranger.
Take care, Dixie
Dixie: How nice to hear from you again. You're correct about the ship being a work of art. I should have listed, in addition, to the list of his characteristics 'beauty of design'.
John: I must have missed that one. It sounds like the kind of thing that programm would cover.
Gary: Are you refrring to getting 'outta' your old home?
I hope your new place is good for you. My daughter was in your area last weekend at a wedding in the Stoke Moat House in Hanley!
I had never heard of him. What a brilliant man!
Hi Sherry: In the nineteenth century Victorian Britain was full of eccentric brilliant individuals like Brunel. The nearest USA equivalents I can think of would be Edison and, more recently, Buckminster Fuller.
Hi Bazza - I think Brunel must have been amazing and he really opened up Britain in so many ways: totally inspirational I couldn't agree more.
My grandfather was a bridge builder and I'm sure was inspired by Brunel - he got his first 'contract' after Sir Douglas Fox was given the concession by Edward VII - he is known for the Victoria Falls Bridge and Sydney Harbour, while my uncle was responsible for the Humber Bridge amongst others - sadly I don't know too much as my father was the third son ...
But I do love engineering projects - cheers Hilary
Wow Hilary! You are descended from engineering aristocracy!
Bazza doffs his humble cap to you.
All of my brother ~in~laws are engineers. Where would we be without engineers? Great post, Bazza.
Thanks for commenting on my post. Once authors become famous they tend to forget the people who helped them...not all thankfully.
Denise
Hi Denise: I think, possibly, engineering is becoming a 'sexy' career choice again; and for women too, which is great news.
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