The Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges. CLARK Edwin Resident Engineer 1814-1894. STEPHENSON Robert 1803-1859 Publisher: Day and Son; and John Weale Publish Year: 1850 Publish Place: London: Gate Street, Lincoln's In Fields; and 59 High Holborn. Illustrator: CLARK Edwin. HAWKINS George Category: Miscellaneous, Foreign Travel, Antiquarian Book, History, Reference Book No: 006830 Status: For Sale Book Condition: Good Size: Elephant Folio - over 15 - 23" tall Jacket Condition: Unknown Binding: Hardcover Book Type: Unknown Edition: First Edition Inscription: Unknown £725 Add to Basket Ask a question Refer to a friend Additional information 2 * 8vo text volumes plus later facsimile copy of the folio Atlas, 64 plates. Text volumes in contemporary embossed purple cloth, corners & edges lightly bumped & worn. Re-spined, old laid down (hole in 1), gilt titles. Vol 1, 1850, half title, frontis, [5], (vi-xii), [1] 2-466 pp, 9 pls, errata tipped in. Vol 2, 1850, half title, frontis, [5], (vi-vii), [1], [1], 468-821 pp, [1], (iv) subscribers list, 9 pls. Numerous illustrations within text, ink name to feps (B Price Davis 1933), occasional spotting, corner tip stain to some margins V2, hinges strengthened. (256*157 mm). Vol 3, illustrations (590*455 mm) title leaf, plate leaf, followed by followed by 46 leaves of plates depicting 47 plates, of which 5 are double page, all printed on thick card. Stunning reproductions, sharp & very clear. (probably better that the original!). Vol 1 contains a History of the Design. Section II. The Preliminary Experiments. Section 111. General Principles of Beams. Section IV Specific Experimental Inquiries and numerous tables and sketches within the text block. Volume 2 contains chapters on - Section V. History of the Design. Section VI Details of Construction of the bridges. Section VII The Construction and Erection of the Bridges. Section VIII Strength and Deflection of the Tubes. Section IX The Tides followed by an Appendix, which goes into the Contracts and Cost of the Bridges, Persons Employed in the Works and the Index plus numerous tables and technical sketches amongst the text blocks. (Allibone 333. Anderson 346) Edwin Clark (1814-1894), after acting as mathematical master at Brook Green, and then as a surveyor in the west of England, went to London in 1846 and formed the acquaintance of Robert Stephenson, who appointed him superintending engineer of the Menai Strait Bridge, which was opened on 5 March 1850. In that year he published The Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges (3 vols., the third an atlas). In August 1850 he became engineer to the Electric and International Telegraph Company, and three months later he took out the first of several patents for -electric telegraphs and apparatus connected therewith-. From then on he divided his time between electric and hydraulic engineering. On 4 February 1856 he took out a patent for -suspending insulated electric telegraph wires-, but most of his patents were for improvements in dry docks and floating docks, in the methods of lifting ships out of the water for repairs, and for constructing piers. He was elected a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers on 3 December 1850, and contributed many papers to their Proceedings, being awarded a Telford medal in 1866 for his paper -On the hydraulic lift graving dock-, and a Watt medal in 1868 for those on -The durability of materials-. Two years' residence in Buenos Aires, Paraguay, and Uruguay, provided material for his Visit to South America (1878). (ODNB)