Great Western Star

Page 73

The Brunel Institute

Brunel’s First Railway Journey? Tim Bryan

Director of the Brunel Institute at the SS Great Britain in Bristol Tim Bryan, describes an intriguing souvenir of I.K.Brunel’s first journey by Train. The first mention in Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s diary of what was to become the Great Western Railway appeared on 21st February 1833 as a marginal reference noted ‘B.R.’, initials that then referred to the ‘Bristol Railway’. Less than a month later, at the age of only 27, Brunel was appointed as engineer of a new railway between Bristol and London that would not only define his career but would also be one of the most significant railway developments of the Victorian era. On the face of it, Brunel would have seemed an unlikely candidate for the job given he had very little direct experience of railway engineering, and his appointment, given the size and importance of the project showed some considerable confidence on the part of the Bristol directors who chose him. Of course, in 1833 railway development was still in its infancy, and so the pool of engineers from which the new railway company might have drawn suitable candidates was necessarily not that large; Brunel biographer L.T.C Rolt noted that other candidates for the job were ‘not very formidable’. Brunel did however have the support of some influential Bristol men including Nicholas Roch, who introduced him to the committee set up to promote the railway, and its chairman Thomas Guppy, who would become a close friend and supporter of Isambard. One cannot however underestimate Brunel’s charisma and powers of persuasion, characteristics that would serve him well throughout his career; he was able to convince the committee that he would survey only one route rather than a number of different costed designs, saying he would design a railway that was the best not the cheapest. Having gained this concession, and undoubtedly confident he could do the job, he was however forced to accept the position on the understanding that a local surveyor W.H Townsend would assist him with the survey of the route. Despite his relative inexperience in railway engineering, a fascinating survival in the National Brunel Collection at the Brunel Institute of the SS Great Britain Trust reveals that some of his grand vision for railway travel had been formed almost two years before his appointment to the GWR job in 1833. In December 1831, Brunel had yet to truly make his mark and was still searching for the commission that would launch his career after his near-fatal accident at the Thames Tunnel, and the abandonment of that project.

Great Western Star Summer 2021

Brunel's personal notebook (undated). The engineer has written his distinctive signature noting that the Liverpool & Manchester carriage was 'going 25'. (By courtesy of the Brunel Institute – a collaboration of the SS Great Britain Trust and University of Bristol)

He travelled around the country extensively during this period and spent time in the north of England, meeting with the promotors of a project to build a new Dock at Monkwearmouth in late November 1831. Brunel’s tour then took him Liverpool Crown Street Station looking east, as seen on a LNWR postcard. Trains were worked by gravity to Edge Hill, so no locomotive is attached to the carriages in the departure platform on the left of picture. (Authors Collection)

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Articles inside

David Holmes

11min
pages 110-113

Control Pack

1min
page 118

Major £6m scheme to revamp Gloucester railway station begins

2min
page 114

A Visit to Tunnel Close Clive Burchell

7min
pages 130-249

The Essence of Swindon Mark Wilson

16min
pages 119-129

A Remarkable Story Jonathan Dunster The 2874 Restoration Journey So Far (restoring ex GWR 28xx no 2874)

6min
pages 107-109

Celebrating one year of ‘We are Railfans’

5min
page 106

Model Railway Engines and Items for Sale

2min
page 103

A Night Owl Emerges from the Dark Part 4 Paul Perton

6min
pages 100-102

“Love Your Railway” Campaign

3min
page 95

Steve Masters

9min
pages 96-99

Not Your Average Tyre Change

2min
page 93

Initial bio-coal trials show promise as HRA member railway takes the lead

3min
pages 91-92

The New Counties David Bradshaw

3min
pages 89-90

Public Transport on Heritage Railways

43min
pages 78-88

Coal for Heritage Steam

15min
pages 75-77

Major track upgrade completed at Bristol East Junction

2min
page 72

The Carriage of Fruit by the GWR/BR(Western National Strategy to Boost Accessibility for

4min
pages 62-63

Centre to the Rail Network

3min
page 74

Disabled Passengers – A Start at Reading Bristol Temple Meads Given a New

6min
pages 64-65

Lease of Life

14min
pages 66-71

Brunel’s First Railway Journey? Tim Bryan

2min
page 73

Class 66 locomotive named

4min
page 61

Welsh Railway History

17min
pages 54-60

Missing Main Lines

7min
pages 44-45

Pandrol Advanced Welding

5min
pages 47-48

Work Continues on South Wales Metro

3min
page 43

Solent to Midlands Multimodal Freight Strategy

3min
page 46

Railway Intelligence - The Broad Gauge The Black Bridge and its Place in

7min
pages 52-53

Speed and Power of the Locomotive

13min
pages 49-51
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