Lighting
Scotland's Coasts
A
series of disastrous storms hit the Scottish coasts in 1782 and
the lives of many fishermen were lost. Strong public interest
in improving safety at sea led to the establishment of the Northern
Lighthouse Board in 1786. By 1800 they had built their first four
lighthouses in key locations. The board and Robert Stevenson,
their engineer, then embarked on an ambitious programme for lighting
the whole coast. Stevenson's most notable achievement was the
construction of a lighthouse on the notorious Bell Rock at the
northern approaches to the Tay and Forth estuaries.
Robert
Stevenson's stepfather Thomas Smith was the first engineer to
the Northern Lighthouse Board. Robert was originally taken on
as his partner and then succeeded him. He undertook the design
and construction of the Bell Rock lighthouse. Stevenson was joined
in his consulting civil engineering business by three sons, Alan,
David and Thomas (father of Robert Louis Stevenson, the author).
Each in turn acted as engineer to the board and contributed significantly
to advances in lighthouse construction and illumination.
Although
Robert Stevenson is best remembered for his lighthouses around
the coasts of Scotland and elsewhere, he also practised widely
as a civil engineer on land. Among his commissions were surveys
for canals through Strathmore and from Arbroath to Forfar, and
for railways in Strathmore and the Edinburgh area, including a
line to Galashiels. By 1820 he was recognized as an authority
on railways in Scotland, and he was the first to recommend wrought
iron rather than cast iron rails.
Stevenson
also engineered the eastern approach round Calton Hill to Princes
Street, Edinburgh. He designed many bridges, devising a new form
of suspension bridge which supported the roadway above rather
than below the chains. His proposed bridge at Cramond, near Edinburgh,
was not built, but the principle was later applied in the Hammersmith
Bridge, London, and in Geneva and elsewhere in Europe.
If
you would like to visit Anstruther as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
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