Robert
Stephenson, the only son of George Stephenson,
was born on 16th October, 1803. The following year the family moved
to Killingworth where George became an enginewright at the local colliery.
Robert's mother died of consumption at Killingworth in 1806.
Robert went to the local village school at Long Benton. George Stephenson's
growing success as a locomotive engineer meant that he could afford
to pay for Robert to have a private education. Between 1814 and 1819
Robert attended the Bruce Academy in Newcastle.
Robert also became a member of the Newcastle Literary and Philosophical
Society.
In 1819 Robert was apprenticed to Nicholas Wood,
the manager of Killingworth Colliery. Three years later he joined
his father to help him survey the Stockton
& Darlington line. The following year Robert attended Edinburgh
University where he met another student, George
Bidder. The two men became close friends and were to work together
on several different railway projects during the next twenty-five
years.
In 1823 Robert Stephenson joined with George
Stephenson and Edward Pease to form
a company to make locomotives. The Robert Stephenson & Company,
at Forth Street, Newcastle-upon-Tyne,
became the world's first locomotive builder. To gain further experience,
Robert went to Columbia in South America in 1824 where he worked at
gold and silver mines. While in Columbia Robert Stephenson met the
inventor, Richard Trevithick, and provided
the funds that he needed to get back to Britain.
After three years in South America, Stephenson was recalled to England
and began work on the Rocket locomotive.
Robert's abilities as an engineer was illustrated by the success of
the Rocket at the Rainhill
Trials in October, 1829. During this period Robert and George
Stephenson were kept busy producing locomotives for the Bolton
& Leigh Railway and the Liverpool
& Manchester Railway. This included locomotives such as the
Northumbrian and the Lancashire
Witch.
In 1833 Robert Stephenson was appointed chief engineer of the London
& Birmingham line. This was the first railway into London
and involved solving difficult engineering problems such as the Blisworth
Cutting and the Kilsby Tunnel.
The London & Birmingham line was
completed in 1838. For the next few years Stephenson was involved
in constructing railways all over the world. He also built bridges,
including those that crossed the Tyne at Newcastle
and the Menai Straits. The Britannia Bridge at Conway was made up
of two huge, rectangular, wrought iron tubes. Stephenson constructed
a similar bridge over the St. Lawrence at Montreal, Canada (1854-59).
For many years, this was the longest bridge in the world.
In the 1847 General Election Stephenson was
elected as the Conservative MP for
Whitby. Stephenson did not take an active role in the House
of Commons and usually only contributed to debates on engineering
issues.
Stephenson never enjoyed good health and early in 1859 he was advised
to retire from business and politics. He took a yachting cruise but
when he arrived in Norway his condition deteriorated and he was rushed
back to England. Robert Stephenson died on 12th October, 1859.
(1)
Samuel Smiles, Life of George Stephenson
(1875)
Robert
Stephenson went to Mr. Bruce's school in Percy Street, Newcastle,
in 1815, when he was about twelve years old. His father bought him
a donkey, on which he rode into Newcastle and back daily. When Richard
went to school he was a shy, unpolished country lad, speaking the
broad dialect of the pitman; and the other boys would tease him. As
a scholar he was steady and diligent, and his master was accustomed
to hold him up to the laggards of the school as an example of good
conduct and industry.
(2)
When Robert Stephenson wrote William James when he heard about his
financial problems (August, 1823)
It
gives rise to feelings of true regret when I reflect on your situation;
but yet a consolation springs up when I consider your preserving spirit
will for ever bear you up in the arms of triumph, instances of which
I have witnessed of too forcible a character to be easily effaced
from my memory.
(3)