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river+fleet

  • 101 Twiss, William

    [br]
    b. 1745
    d. 14 March 1827 Hardon Grange, Bingley, Yorkshire, England.
    [br]
    English army officer and military engineer.
    [br]
    William Twiss entered the Ordnance Department at the age of 15, and in 1762, aged 17, he was appointed Overseer of Works at Gibraltar. At the end of the Seven Years War, in 1763, he was commissioned Ensign in the Engineers, and further promotion followed while he still remained in Gibraltar. In 1771, as a Lieutenant, he returned to England to be employed on Port-smouth's dockyard fortifications. In 1776 he was posted to Canada, where he was soon appointed Controller of Works for the building of a British fleet for Lake Champlain. He was involved in military operations in the American War of Independence and in 1777 was present at the capture of Fort Ticonderoga (New York State). He was taken prisoner shortly afterwards, but was soon exchanged, and a year later he was promoted Captain.
    In 1779 he was given the task of constructing a short canal at Coteau du Lac, Quebec, to bypass rough water at this point in the St Lawrence River between Montreal and Pointe Maligne. This was probably the first locked canal in North America. In 1781, following his appointment as Chief Engineer for all military works in Canada, he supervised further navigational improvements on the St Lawrence with canals at Les Cèdres and the Cascades. In parallel with these projects, he was responsible for an amazing variety of works in Canada, including hospitals, windmills, store-houses, barracks, fortifications, roads, bridges, prisons, ironworks and dams. He was also responsible for a temporary citadel in Quebec.
    In 1783 he returned to England, and from 1794–1810 he served as Lieutenant- Governor of the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, although in 1799 he was sent to Holland as Commanding Engineer to the Duke of York. In 1802 he was promoted Colonel and was in Ireland reporting on the defences there. He became Colonel Commandant, Royal Engineers, in 1809, and retired two years later. In retirement he was promoted Lieu tenant-General in 1812 and General in 1825.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    W.Porter, 1889–1915, History of the Corps of Royal Engineers, London: Longmans.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Twiss, William

  • 102 Watson, George Lennox

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 1851 Glasgow, Scotland
    d. 12 November 1904 Glasgow, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish designer of some of the world's largest sailing and powered yachts, principal technical adviser to the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.
    [br]
    Almost all of Watson's life was spent in or around the City of Glasgow; his formal education was at the city's High School and at the age of 16 he entered the yard and drawing offices of Robert Napier's Govan Shipyard. Three years later he crossed the River Clyde and started work in the design office of the Pointhouse Shipyard of A. \& J.Inglis, and there received the necessary grounding of a naval architect. Dr John Inglis, the Principal of the firm, encouraged Watson, ensured that he was involved in advanced design work and allowed him to build a yacht in a corner of the shipyard in his spare time.
    At the early age of 22 Watson set up as a naval architect with his own company, which is still in existence 120 years later. In 1875, assisted by two carpenters, Watson built the 5-ton yacht Vril to his own design. This vessel was the first with an integral heavy lead keel and its success ensured that design contracts flowed to him for new yachts for the Clyde and elsewhere. His enthusiasm and increasing skill were recognized and soon he was working on the ultimate: the America's Cup challengers Thistle, Valkyrie II, Valkyrie III and Shamrock II. The greatest accolade was the contract for the design of the J Class yacht Britannia, built by D. \& W.Henderson of Glasgow in 1893 for the Prince of Wales.
    The company of G.L.Watson became the world's leading designer of steam yachts, and it was usual for it to offer a full design service as well as supervise construction in any part of the world. Watson took a deep interest in the work of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution and was its technical consultant for many years. One of his designs, the Watson Lifeboat, was a stalwart in its fleet for many years. In public life he lectured, took an active part in the debates on yacht racing and was recognized as Britain's leading designer.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1881, Progress in Yachting and Yacht-Building, Glasgow Naval and Marine Engineering Catalogue, London and Glasgow: Collins.
    1894, The Evolution of the Modern Racing Yacht, Badminton Library of Sports and Pastimes, Vol. 1, London: Longmans Green, pp. 54–109.
    Further Reading
    John Irving, 1937, The King's Britannia. The Story of a Great Ship, London: Seeley Service.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Watson, George Lennox

См. также в других словарях:

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  • River Fleet — The River Fleet is the largest of London s subterranean rivers. It formerly flowed on the surface. It rises from two springs on Hampstead Heath and is directed into two reservoirs constructed in the 18th century, Highgate Ponds and Hampstead… …   Wikipedia

  • Fleet — may refer to:Places Fleet is a geographical name: *Fleet, a village in Dorset, England, sited on The Fleet, a lagoon *Fleet, in the county of Hampshire, England * a Fleet, in Kent, inlet, creek, a name for saline waterways in the Thames marshes * …   Wikipedia

  • River Flotilla of the Serbian Armed Forces — River Flotilla of Serbian Armed Forces Rečna Flotila River Flotilla Unit Emblem and Flag …   Wikipedia

  • Fleet Street — is a street in London, England named after the River Fleet. It was the home of the British press until the 1980s. Even though the last major British news office, Reuters, left in 2005, the street s name continues to be used as a metonym for the… …   Wikipedia

  • Fleet (Begriffsklärung) — Fleet hat folgende Bedeutungen: meist städtische Wassergräben in Norddeutschland; siehe Fleet Vereinigung von Treibnetzen, siehe Treibnetzfischerei Medikament zur Darmspülung vor einer Koloskopie Englisch allgemein für Flotte: Im Geschäftsleben… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Fleet Street — (2008) mit Saint Paul’s Cathedral im Hintergrund Fleet Street ist eine berühmte Straße in London, England. An ihrem westlichen Ende befindet sich der Grenzpunkt Temple Bar. Benannt ist die Straße nach dem Fluss River Fleet, der unterirdisch… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • River Defense Fleet — Infobox Military Unit name=River Defense Fleet dates=March to June 1862 country=Confederate States of America branch=Army (see article) battles=Forts Jackson and St. Philip,Plum Point Bend,MemphisThe River Defense Fleet was a set of fourteen… …   Wikipedia

  • Fleet — 51°30′39″N 0°6′16″O / 51.51083, 0.10444 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Fleet-Gefängnis — Stich des Alten Fleet Gefängnisses mit bettelnden Insassen. Aus dem „Book of Days“ (1869) von Robert Chambers (1802–1871) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • fleet — [OE] Fleet is one of a vast tangled web of words which traces its history back ultimately to Indo European *pleu , denoting ‘flow, float’ (amongst its other English descendants are fly, flood, flow, fledge, fowl, plover, and pluvial). Fleet… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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