William Jessop (23 January
1745 – 18 November 1814) was a noted English
civil engineer, particularly famed for his
work on canals, harbours and early railways
in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Early life
Jessop was
born in Devonport,
Devon
in 1745, the son of Josias Jessop, a foreman
shipwright in the Naval Dockyard. Josias Jessop was
responsible for the repair and maintenance of Rudyerd’s Tower, a
wooden lighthouse on the
Eddystone Rock.
He carried out this task for twenty years until 1755, when the
lighthouse burnt down.
John Smeaton, a
leading civil engineer, drew up plans for a new stone lighthouse
and Josias became responsible for the overseeing the building work.
The two
men became close friends, and when Josias died in 1761, two years
after the completion of the lighthouse, William Jessop was taken on
as a pupil by Smeaton (who also acted as Jessop’s guardian),
working on various canal schemes in Yorkshire
.
Jessop worked as Smeaton’s assistant for a number of years before
beginning to work as an engineer in his own right. He assisted
Smeaton with the Calder and Hebble and the Aire and Calder
navigations in Yorkshire.
Grand Canal of Ireland

The Grand Canal in Dublin.
The first major work that Jessop is known to have carried out was
the
Grand Canal of Ireland.
This had begun as a Government project in 1753, and it had taken
seventeen years to build fourteen miles (21 km) of canal from the
Dublin end. In 1772 a private company was formed to complete the
canal, and consulted John Smeaton. Smeaton sent Jessop to take
control of the project as principal engineer.
Jessop re-surveyed the
proposed line of the canal and carried the canal over the River Liffey
, via the Leinster Aqueduct. He also drove the
canal across the great Bog of Allen, a
feat comparable with George
Stephenson’s crossing of the Chat Moss
bog with the Liverpool and Manchester
Railway. The canal was carried over the bog on a high
embankment. Jessop also identified sources of water and built
reservoirs, so that the canal was in no danger of running dry.
Having seen to all of the important details Jessop returned to
England, leaving a deputy in charge to complete the canal. This was
finally done in 1805. It seems that Jessop was closely involved
with the canal in Ireland until about 1787, after which time, other
work flowed in.
Relationship with other engineers
Jessop was a very modest man, who did not seek self-aggrandisement.
Unlike other engineers, he was not jealous of rising young
engineers, but rather encouraged them. He would also recommend
another engineer if he was too busy to be able to undertake a
commission himself.
He recommended John Rennie for the post of engineer
to the Lancaster
Canal
Company, an appointment that helped to establish
Rennie’s reputation. When Jessop was consulting engineer to the
Ellesmere
Canal
Company, in 1793, the company appointed the
relatively unknown Thomas Telford as
resident engineer. Telford had no previous experience as a
designer of canals, but with Jessop’s advice and guidance, Telford
made a success of the project. He supported Telford, even when the
Company thought that the latter’s designs for aqueducts were too
ambitious.
Cromford Canal

Sketch Map Showing Butterley Tunnel in
Context with the Rest of the Cromford Canal
In 1789
Jessop was appointed chief engineer to the Cromford Canal
Company. The proposed canal was intended to
carry limestone, coal and iron ore from the Derwent and upper
Erewash valleys and join the nearby Erewash Canal.
The important features
of this canal are the Derwent Viaduct, which was a single span
viaduct carrying the canal over the River Derwent, and the Butterley
Tunnel
(formerly the Ripley Tunnel). In 1793, the
Derwent Viaduct partially collapsed, and Jessop shouldered the
blame, saying that he had not made the front walls strong enough.
He had the viaduct repaired and strengthened at his own expense.
The Butterley Tunnel was 2,966 yards (2712m) long, wide and high
and required thirty-three shafts to be sunk from the surface in
order to build it. Jessop built the Butterley Reservoir above the
tunnel, extending for .
Butterley Company

Butterley Company plate in St Pancras
station
In 1790
Jessop founded, jointly with partners Benjamin Outram, Francis Beresford and John
Wright, the Butterley Iron Works
in Derbyshire
to manufacture (amongst other things) cast-iron
edge rails – a design Jessop had used
successfully on a horse-drawn railway
scheme for coal wagons between Nanpantan
and Loughborough
, Leicestershire
(1789). Outram was concerned with the
production of ironwork and equipment for Jessop’s engineering
projects.
Grand Junction Canal

The Cosgrove aqueduct
The
Oxford
Canal
had been built by James
Brindley and carried coal to large parts of southern
England. However it did not provide a sufficiently
direct route between the Midlands
and London
.
As a
result, a new canal was proposed to run from the Oxford Canal at
Braunston
, near Rugby
, and to end at the Thames at
Brentford
, a length of ninety miles. Jessop was
appointed Chief Engineer to the Canal Company in 1793. The canal
was especially difficult to plan because, whereas other canals
tended to follow river valleys and only crossed a watershed when
unavoidable, the new canal had to cross the rivers Ouse, Nene and
others.
An aqueduct was built at Wolverton
to carry the canal across the Ouse valley.
Whilst the three-arch stone aqueduct was being built, a set of nine
temporary locks were used to carry the canal down one side of the
valley and up the other.
The aqueduct failed in 1808, and was
replaced by an iron one in 1811, the iron trough design sharing a
similar structure to the aqueduct at Longdon-on-Tern
and the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct
built by Thomas
Telford. It is known as the
Cosgrove aqueduct and was designed and
built by Bevan.
Two
tunnels also had to be built, at Braunston
and Blisworth
. The Blisworth Tunnel caused great problems,
and was unfinished when the rest of the canal was ready. In fact
Jessop considered abandoning it and using locks to carry the canal
over the ridge. Jessop’s temporary solution was a railway line laid
over the ridge to carry traffic until the tunnel was completed.
The
Grand
Junction Canal
was enormously important in encouraging trade
between London and the Midlands.
West India Docks
The
West India
Docks
, built on the Isle of Dogs
, was the first large wet
docks built in the Port of London
. Between 1800 and 1802 a wet dock area of
was created with a depth of , and accommodating 600 ships. Jessop
was the Chief Engineer for the docks, with Ralph Walker as his
assistant.
Surrey Iron Railway
In 1799
separate proposals were put forward for a canal from London to
Portsmouth
and for a tramway carrying horse-drawn carriages
over the same route. The first part of the proposed Surrey Iron Railway was to be from
Wandsworth
to Croydon
, and Jessop was asked for his opinion on the two
opposing schemes. He declared that the tramway was a better
scheme, as a canal would require too much water and would unduly
reduce the supply in the River Wandle
. It was agreed to build a tramway from
Wandsworth to Croydon, as well a building a basin at Wandsworth.
Jessop was appointed Chief Engineer of the project in 1801. In 1802
the Wandsworth Basin and the line were completed. There seems to be
doubt as to the gauge of the line with some estimates stating and
others stating 4ft 8½in.
In 1803 the next phase was authorised.
This was for a line
from Croydon via Merstham
to Godstone
in Surrey
.
Jessop was again appointed Chief Engineer, with his son
Josias as his assistant. The line reached
Mestham but was never continued to Godstone. The total distance of
the tramway from Wandsworth was . The tramway was eventually
overtaken by the advent of steam locomotives.
Later life

Newark Castle and Bridge in the early
19th century.
From 1784
to 1805 Jessop lived in Newark
in Nottinghamshire
, where he twice served as town mayor.
In his later life, Jessop became increasingly inflicted by a form
of paralysis, and 1805 marked the end of his active career.
He died
at his home, Butterley
Hall
, on 18 November 1814. The
Jessop Memorial was erected a year after his
death , this can be seen east of Ripley in Codnor park. The Doric
column can no longer be scaled due to being unsafe. His son
Josias became a successful engineer in
his own right.
Legacy
Jessop was in the unusual position of bridging the gap between the
canal engineers and the railway engineers who came later. His name
did not gain the lasting fame that it deserved because of his
modesty. Indeed some of his works have been wrongly attributed to
engineers who acted as his assistants. Unlike some engineers, such
as George Stephenson, Jessop did not stoop to undignified wrangles
with fellow professionals. He was highly regarded by almost all
those who had worked with him or for him.
List of Jessop’s engineering projects
External links
See also
References
- Rolt, L.T.C., “Great Engineers”, 1962, G. Bell and Sons Ltd,
ISBN
- Hadfield, C. and Skempton, A. W. William Jessop,
Engineer (Newton Abbot 1979