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Life of Robert Stevenson, Civil Engineer

Chapter 74: FOOTNOTES
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About This Book

The biography traces Robert Stevenson’s life and career from his early years through retirement, compiling extracts from professional reports, diary entries, and scientific papers. It documents his lighthouse work including the Bell Rock and Wolf Rock projects and his experiments in illumination such as flashing, intermittent, and dioptric systems. Other chapters cover roads, bridges, harbours, ferries, railways, cranes, marine surveying, timber preservation, and fisheries, supported by plans and plates. Technical descriptions are presented largely unaltered, offering practical detail on 18th–19th century civil engineering practice and urban improvements around Edinburgh.

PRINTED BY T. AND A. CONSTABLE, PRINTERS TO HER MAJESTY,
AT THE EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS.

FOOTNOTES

1 Mr. Randall assumed the name of Davidson after succeeding to the estate of Muirhouse.

2 Account of the Bell Rock Lighthouse. Drawn up by desire of the Commissioners of the Northern Lighthouses, by Robert Stevenson. Edinburgh, 1824.

3 7th September 1807.

4 The tender was named after the great Engineer.

5 Spink’s boat was too large to come close to the rock.

6 Report of the Royal Commission on Lighthouses, 1861, p. 86.

7 Translation also by Dr. Gregory:—“In the reign of George the Third, the father of his country, in the second year of the Provostship of Sir John Marjoribanks, Baronet, of Lees,—The citizens of Edinburgh having made this new and magnificent access over the neighbouring hill to the capital city, according to the plan of Robert Stevenson, Civil Engineer, ordered the name of the Regent, George Augustus Frederick, to be inscribed on this bridge.”

8 From which Fig. 14 has been made.

9 The essays most favourably noticed are those of Mr. Alexander Scott, Mr. George Robertson, Mr. George Douglas, Mr. John Ruthven, Mr. James Dickson, Mr. James Walker (Carron), Mr. James Walker (Lauriston), Mr. John Fraser, Mr. John Wotherspoon, Mr. John Moore, and Mr. John Baird.

10 Notice of the Ravages of Limnoria terebrans on Creosoted Timber.—Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. iv. and vol. viii.

11 Vol. ii. p. 129.

12 Vol. ii. p. 196.

13 A Sketch of the Institution and the progress of the Hydrographical Department of the Admiralty, from its first establishment in the year 1795.

14 Vol. x. p. 57.