Edward Cruttwell
Edward Cruttwell | |
---|---|
Born | 5 December 1857 |
Died | 10 November 1933 | (aged 75)
Nationality | English |
Education | Clifton College King's College, London |
Occupation | Engineer |
Engineering career | |
Discipline | Civil |
Institutions | Institution of Civil Engineers Institution of Mechanical Engineers Engineering Institute of Canada |
Projects | Blackfriars Railway Bridge, Tower Bridge |
Significant design | Connel Bridge |
George Edward Wilson Cruttwell (5 December 1857 - 10 November 1933), known as Edward, was an English civil engineer. He worked with John Wolfe Barry and Henry Marc Brunel, was the resident engineer in charge of the construction, and then first superintending engineer, of Tower Bridge in London, and remained associated with Tower Bridge until his death in 1933. He became an internationally renowned bridge engineer while also working on docks, harbours, railways and other infrastructure.
Early life and education
Cruttwell was born on 5 December 1857 to Wilson Clement Cruttwell, a solicitor, and Georgiana Daniel, in Frome, Somerset.[1] One of 11 children, his youngest sister was art historian and critic Maud Cruttwell. Like his brothers, he was educated at Clifton College from 1869 to 1874,[2] then King's College London.[2] After graduating, in October 1876 he was apprenticed to railway engineer Robert Pearson Brereton who was responsible for completing many of Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s projects after his 1859 death.[3]
Career
Cruttwell spent a year in Brereton's office before being assigned to harbour, railway and dock works for the Neath Harbour Commissioners as assistant resident engineer under one of Brereton's engineers, William Bell.[4][5]
Cruttwell was only with Brereton until 1878 (or 1879)[5] when he joined the firm of Sir John Wolfe Barry and Henry Marc Brunel.[2] He initially spent four years working in Barry's and Brunel's office. But aged 25 he was appointed resident engineer responsible for the construction of Blackfriars Railway Bridge, a role he held between 1883 and 1886.[6]
In 1886, Barry offered Cruttwell the choice of either becoming his personal assistant or the resident engineer at Tower Bridge.[7] Cruttwell chose Tower Bridge and it was in this role he achieved national prominence as the engineer in charge of its construction[8][9][10] from its inception in 1886 to its opening on 30 June 1894.[11] Appointed to that post aged 28,[12][3] Cruttwell was credited alongside Wolfe Barry (the bridge's chief engineer) with the work on the Bridge having "proceeded entirely under Mr Barry and his able resident engineer Mr Cruttwell."[13] In 1898, after working for Wolfe Barry and Brunel for 16 years, Cruttwell was nominated to become a member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers; Brunel summarised Cruttwell's career to that year:
"[He was educated] at King's College, London (Applied Science Department) from 1874 to 1876... From 1878 to 1894, Cruttwell was employed continuously by Mr (later Sir) John Wolfe Barry and Mr Henry Marc Brunel initially in their office, then in sole charge as resident engineer at Blackfriars Railway Bridge from 1883 to 1886, and then at the Tower Bridge from 1886 to 1894."[2]
Cruttwell would present two substantial papers to the Institution of Civil Engineers on the construction of Tower Bridge which form the basis of much of the current understanding of the engineering. On 28 March 1893 he presented a detailed paper on the foundations,[8] while on 19 November 1896, he presented on the superstructure.[14] The following month, in the usual discussion on papers previously presented, Cruttwell robustly defended the Tower Bridge from its engineering critics, noting in reply to one who suggested that the failure to make it a railway bridge would mean it would have to be pulled down that "As for the day coming when the bridge would have to be pulled down, he could only say it would be a very good thing for engineers, as it would give them some work to do."[15]
After Tower Bridge was opened, the Corporation of London "secured the services of Mr E W Cruttwell who so very ably filled the post of resident engineer during the whole period of construction"[16] as the engineer in charge of the now operational Tower Bridge, for which he received £500 per year. He retained this position until 1897 when the roles of engineer and bridge master were merged.[3][17] Bridge House Estates also appointed him as engineer for Southwark and London bridges.[18]
Also following the opening, the Tower Bridge Subway Company that operated the Tower Subway, a pedestrian tunnel that was the only previous means of crossing the Thames east of London Bridge, sued the Corporation of the City of London for £30,000 for loss of revenue. Cruttwell was one of the key witnesses in the arbitration arguing that the claim was unfounded with the Subway being in a "very neglected condition."[19]
Sole practice
Retaining the role of consulting engineer to Tower Bridge (a position he held until he died in 1933),[3] Cruttwell went into independent practice at 14 Delahay Street, Westminster, in 1897. He became consulting engineer for railways and bridges for the Orange Free State.[2]
In 1900, Cruttwell and architect Andrew Murray were engaged by Bridge House Estates to widen the 'New London Bridge' (built in 1831) from 53 feet 5 inches (16.28 m) to 65 feet 0 inches (19.81 m) to cope with increased traffic.[3][20] The work, which involved new footways mounted on granite corbels, was carried out between 1902 and 1904[21] and was completed without closing the bridge.[3] (In 1968, the granite cladding of the bridge was sold to an American industrialist and transported to the United States for use in the construction of a new bridge in Lake Havasu City in Arizona;[22] the current London Bridge was opened in 1973.)
In 1901, Cruttwell won a £1,000 first prize for his design for Sydney Harbour Bridge, though for financial and political reasons, his design was not constructed.[3][23] Construction of his design would have been more than twice as expensive as the competition's second-placed design by Norman Selfe, though a committee of experts reported that none of the designs were satisfactory.[24] (A second competition in 1902 was won by Selfe but construction of his design never started due to an economic slowdown and a 1904 change of government.)[25]
Sir John Wolfe Barry & Partners
In 1901, Cruttwell was invited by Sir John Wolfe Barry to rejoin his firm as Barry's partner. Cruttwell took responsibility for various harbour and docks projects, overseeing designs for bridges, cranes and machinery at Grangemouth, Grimsby, Immingham, Middlesbrough and Newport docks.[4] He was resident engineer on the Connel Bridge in Scotland,[26] and spent time in India where he was responsible and various bridges on the Bengal Nagpur Railway.[27]
With fellow partner, and Wolfe Barry's second son Kenneth Arthur Wolfe Barry, Cruttwell surveyed over six hundred miles (966 km) of canals and inland navigations for the Royal Commission on Canals and Waterways in 1908 and 1909.[27] By 1911 Cruttwell's name as "someone who occupies a high place in the engineering profession" was known more widely around the world with his arrival in Canada warranting a headline in the Canadian press when Cruttwell arrived to design the Second Narrows Bridge in Vancouver.[28]
In 1912 he designed an ingenious hydraulic drawbridge over the River Hull.[12] In 1913, Cruttwell, with John and K A Wolfe Barry and Anthony G Lyster, was commissioned to report on "'dockizing' the navigable Cut" at Neath Harbour.[29]
Cruttwell's expertise on bridges, docks and rivers would be called on more widely, and nationally, for engineering projects not designed by him or his firm. For example, in May 1911 he was expert witness to the Select Committee of the House of Lords investigating complaints regarding Dundee Harbour.[30] In November 1912 he was advising the inquiry over whether a five miles per hour speed limit should be imposed on Richmond Bridge being noted as "the bridge engineer of the eminent firm of Sir John Wolfe Barry."[31] In May 1914, he was before the inquiry into the impacts of the extraction of water from the River Forth to supply Glasgow.[32] Later that year, in November, he was tasked with providing an independent expert assessment to assist in an arbitration case regarding the Royal Edward Dock in Avonmouth.[33]
During World War I, Cruttwell oversaw the contracts departments at the Department of Explosives Supply.[27] After Sir John Wolfe Barry died in 1918, Cruttwell became senior partner in Sir John Wolfe Barry & Partners, by then long-established as a "world-famous engineering firm".[1][34] He continued to travel widely for major engineering projects around the world, in 1923 arriving in Sydney to tender for Sydney Harbour Bridge with his arrival heralded as the "famous designer arrives."[35] In 1925 he became consulting engineer to the Imperial War Graves Commission which was responsible for all war graves for troops killed during the First World War.[27]
Legacy
In June 2024, previously unseen photographs of Tower Bridge when it first opened to the public, discovered by family descendants of Cruttwell, were displayed on monoliths in an open-air exhibition across the Bridge.[36][37] These photographs and the exhibition formed the centrepiece of "Launching A Landmark", a celebration of the 130th anniversary of Tower Bridge's opening, which also saw the release of a new website highlighting the role of Edward Cruttwell in the building of the Tower Bridge as well as more information about Cruttwell's life unearthed by his family.[7]
Institutions
Proposed by Henry Brunel for membership of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1898, Cruttwell's growing reputation was indicated by those seconding his application which included the noted engineers Beauchamp Tower and Charles Hawksley as well as John Wolfe Barry.[2]
Prior to Cruttwell's membership of the IME, he was an associate member of the Institution of Civil Engineers from 1883, and became a full member in March 1888. He won two Telford Premiums and a George Stephenson Medal for 1890s papers about the design of Tower Bridge. In 1912, he became a member of the Engineering Institute of Canada.[4]
Personal life
Cruttwell was married to Gwenydd Erskine on 21 December 1893 at Bapchild in Kent.[38] Cruttwell had met Erskine through Erskine's brother George Erskine who had been apprenticed to William Bell when Cruttwell was assistant resident engineer at Neath Harbour.[4][5][39] The Cruttwells had three sons: Clement Henry, born on 16 July 1896; Patrick Erskine, born on 28 June 1899; and Colin Edward, born on 19 March 1901.[3]
He was a supporter of votes for women (female suffrage), it being noted in 1909 that he "has written to the three members of parliament in whose constituencies he is entitled to vote...[and] promised to place his votes at the next election in favour of the W.S.P.U."[40]
A keen sailor, he obtained his Yacht Master's Certificate in 1889 for his own yacht Mona, a double masted yawl of 19 tons.[41]
During his career, Cruttwell accumulated considerable wealth. In 1911, his main residence was Bayfield House, Little Bookham, near Leatherhead in Surrey, a substantial property with 45 acres and 15 bedrooms.[4] From there he moved to Fox Mead, also in Little Bookham, and he would die in a nearby cottage called Rosemary in Clinton Road, Leatherhead.[42]
By 1927 he had the 2024 equivalent of around £5 million and owned several properties, but he lost most of his fortune (held in railway shares) during the Great Depression.[12] Cruttwell died on 10 November 1933[1] of cerebral thrombosis and arteriosclerosis.[43]
References
- ^ a b c "Sir John Wolfe Barry and Partners". Grace's Guide. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "Application for Membership". The Institution of Mechanical Engineers. 1 September 1898.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "About Edward Cruttwell". Heritage - Tower Bridge. Retrieved 2024-08-27.
- ^ a b c d e "George Edward Wilson Cruttwell". Grace's Guide To British Industrial History. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
- ^ a b c Richards, Paul (2021), Neath Floating Dock (parts 1 to 4), Neath Antiquarian Society. Retrieved 3 September 2024.
- ^ Cruttwell, George Edward Wilson (21 March 1890). "The New Bridge of the London, Chatham, and Dover Railway Company over the Thames at Blackfriars". The Engineer: 237.
- ^ a b "heritage.towerbridge.org.uk". Tower Bridge Heritage: Launching A Landmark. Retrieved 29 August 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Cruttwell, George Edward Wilson (28 March 1893). "The Foundations of the River-Piers of the Tower Bridge". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Paper 2652.
- ^ "The Tower Bridge". The Daily Telegraph. 26 June 1894. p. 4.
- ^ "The Tower Bridge". The Graphic. 20 February 1892. p. 23.
- ^ "The Tower Bridge - A Private View". The Daily Telegraph. 26 June 1894. p. 4.
- ^ a b c "The forgotten story of one of the men who built Tower Bridge". Southwark News. 2024-06-24. Retrieved 2024-08-27.
- ^ "The New Tower Bridge - Opening by the Prince". The Standard. 2 July 1894. p. 3.
- ^ Cruttwell, George Edward Wilson (10 November 1896). "The Tower Bridge: Superstructure". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers: 35–53.
- ^ "Discussion. Tower Bridge". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. 127 (1897): 60–79. 1897.
- ^ "The Tower Bridge - Two Months Working". Daily News. 6 September 1894. p. 2.
- ^ "Who runs Tower Bridge?". Tower Bridge. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
- ^ "Frome - Mr Edward Cruttwell". Shepton Mallet Journal. 29 June 1894.
- ^ "The Tower Bridge and the Thames Tunnel - Remarkable Claim for Compensation". St James's Gazette. 18 January 1896. p. 6.
- ^ "The Widening of London Bridge". The Engineer. 21 December 1900. pp. 613–614.
- ^ "Bridge building" from The Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3, by Various. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
- ^ Elborough, Travis (2013). London Bridge in America: The tall story of a transatlantic crossing. Random House. pp. 211–212. ISBN 978-1448181674. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
- ^ "Bridge Scheme Failure - Australian Design Prize won by a Londoner". Daily Mail. 9 January 1901.
- ^ "Cablegrams". Zeehan and Dundas Herald. 30 November 1900. p. 3. Retrieved 6 February 2013 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "The North Shore Bridge Competitions: Précis of Correspondence with the Government in the same, moved for in Parliament by Dr Arthur, printed under No 9 Report of Printing Committee, 18 Dec 1907", Papers of Adeline Hicking, State Library of New South Wales, Mitchell Library manuscripts 6537 Archived 19 February 2013 at archive.today. Cited in Freyne (2009)
- ^ Paxton, Roland; Shipway, J (2007). Civil Engineering Heritage Scotland – Highlands and Islands (PDF). Thomas Telford. p. 14. ISBN 9780727734884. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
- ^ a b c d "Obituary - George Edward Wilson Cruttwell". The Engineer. 1933.
- ^ "Engineer Comes to Prepare Plan of Bridge - Mr Edward Cruttwell Arrived Here from London This Morning". The Province. 1 November 1911. p. 14.
- ^ Richards, Paul (2021), Neath Floating Dock (parts 5 to 8), Neath Antiquarian Society. Retrieved 3 September 2024.
- ^ "Dundee Harbour. Complaints Of Lack Of Facilities". The Scotsman. 15 May 1911. p. 11.
- ^ "The Five Mile Limit". Richmond Herald. 9 November 1912. p. 4.
- ^ "Glasgow Water Scheme. Effect On The Forth. The Proposed Impounding Works". The Scotsman. 14 May 1914. p. 16.
- ^ "The Royal Edward Dock Dispute". Western Daily Press. 12 November 1914. p. 6.
- ^ "Engineer Comes to Prepare Plan of Bridge". The Daily Province. 1 November 1911. p. 14.
- ^ "The Bridge - Famous Designer Arrives - Mr E Cruttwell". Sydney Morning Herald. 10 November 1923. p. 17.
- ^ "My family link to Tower Bridge's new 'accessible' exhibition". TTG. Retrieved 2024-08-27.
- ^ "Rare photos of Tower Bridge's opening day unveiled after 130 years". Ian Visits. 21 June 2024. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
- ^ "Weddings". Somerset Standard. 23 December 1893.
- ^ "George Holland Erskine - Graces Guide". Grace's Guide. 30 August 2024. Retrieved 30 August 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "More Liberal Votes Turned". Votes For Women. 9 July 1909. p. 28.
- ^ "Yacht Intelligence". The Field. 2 February 1889. p. 49.
- ^ "Legal Notices". Surrey Mirror. 14 September 1934. p. 6.
- ^ Death Certificate