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  • Feb. 23, 1861
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 23, 1861: Page 7

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Literature.

British pluck and sense determined to test the scientific pundit ' s assertion ; the consequence being that the Great Western at once led the van of a continually increasing lino of ocean steamers , ivhich has rendered a voyage to New York in our time less eventful , and moro punctual as to arrival , than a journey to Berlin in the zenith of the learned doctor ' s fame .

While gas , railways , and ocean steamers were as yet things of tho future , a discovery had been made and tested equal in importance , there is hardly room to doubt , to any of these . This was the applicability of steam instead of horse-power on common roads . More than a hundred years ago , the first carriage to try the experiment was constructed by a Frenchman named Cugnofc , since which time

many able engineers havo employed their best energies to perfect the idea . Numerous have been the designs from which these carriages have been built , and frequent the experiments by ivhich to satisfy tho public of their utility . Though scarcely one of the various inventors has incurred the reproach of a failure , while the success of tho greater number has been convincing and remarkable , yet , strango

to say , men in authority , corporations , and other persons of influence , have from time to time , opposed the introduction of this undoubted public improvement , and with too much success . Again and again projectors have brought forward r-iriations of tho same great scheme , to meet with similar defeat and mortification . But though prejudice , bigotry , and selfishness have not ceased to do their worstthe importance

, of the matter has not been lost sight of by thinking men , and protests have been from time to time put forth against burking the project . The question has been again taken up and most ably discussed by Bro . Young in the volume before us , whicli is one of the most interesting treatises upon a purely scientific subject which we have over met with . The ¦ author is deeply impressed with the importance of his

subject , and has looked at it in ahnosfc every point of view ; ifc is studded thickly with tables , plans , and statistics for the hungry philosopher , while the most desultory reader may find much ii : ifc not onl y of information , bufc also of interest and amusement . Our brother commences hy adverting to the increased attention which is now given to the substitution of steam for horse-power , both for transport on common roads and for

farming operations . He proceeds to notice the various experiments which havo been made with a view to this end , with tho reasons for their want of success , and for steam -traction not being in general use . Ho also carefully considers the two systems of " concentrating" and " distributing" the weight ; giving of course the preference to the latter with regard to the transport of heavy loads ,

-though a comparatively small speed is attained in thafc way . Boydcll ' s traction engine , with endless train , appears to _ b ' c the most perfect example yet pi-oduced of judicious distribution of weight over a large surface . Beginning at the beginning , Bro . Young devotes a chapter to tlie history of transport and roads , and thoir influence upon industry and civilisationillustrated by what has been

, done in England and on tho continent , by tho wretched condition of Spain , and by a sketch of tho resources in India which might bo developed by these means . Tho admirable roads of fche Romans , which have never been surpassed in firmness of construction , have lasted in many places for fifteen centuries , without entirely giving way to tho ravages of time and weatherand are no less remarkable ' for

, "fche unbroken lines of communication which they formed , than for tho excellence of thoir construction . Barbarism rapidly increased its power on the- departure of the Romans from this country , and then roads fell speedily into neglect . Through succeeding , ages trifling amendments were made from time to time in the means ¦ an d aids to transport but tho place of tho great

; Roman road-makers was never effectually filled until the genius of M'Adam supplied this country with the magnificent turnpike roads ivhich bear his name . Canals next come under notice , an interesting sketch of thoir history being given , ivith a glance at their commercial capabilities ; the factbeing pointed out that this mode of transport is not susceptible of any particular improvement—at any rate , nofc such :-. s would be necessary to meet the requirements ofthe present day .

The chapter devoted to railroads is tho most interesting , perhaps , to the general reader , and is written in the agreeable narrative style which the contributors to Household Words have rendered so popular and have brought so largely into vogue . Bro . Young gives tho history of railroads in Britain and their promoters , from "Master Beaumont , a gentleman of great ingenuity and rare parts , " in 1649 , down

to Hudson , " fche Yorkshire tape measurer , " whoso smiles were courted by the proudest poors in the land . There is an interesting sketch of the career of Thomas Gray , tho railway prophet-, who , as early as 1816 , put forth the doctrine of travelling by steam on railways , and superseding horses . In 1820 , the Edinburgh Bcuiciv examined his scheme and his books with a critical eye , and with astonishing acumen

pronounced him to be a lunatic , and only fit to bo shut up in Bedlam—a tribute to his genius which delighted Gray , who anticipated success from that moment . That success was fated to enrich others—nofc himself . In 1826 the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Bill was carried , and the line commenced , to be followed by a host of others in different parts of the kingdom . The work of railway extension has

continued to the present day , ivith results of the utmost importance to the nation ; bufc for more than a quarter of a century Gray was doomed to sou his own ideas ancl suggestions adopted , and other men enriched bv them , while

ho himself was neglected and left fco pine in miserable poverty . Ifc may , indeed , be considered as no more than characteristic of the manner in which railway enterprise has hitherto been carried out , that one who had done so much for them should receive such a reward ; for railway making , as our author observes , has given rise to such conduct and revelations as havo caused tho honour and

integrity of . Englishmen to appear in anything but a favourable light ., The author gives some excellent reasons why those gigantic English railways do not pay , from the Great AVestcrn ( with its shares afc thirty per cent , discount ) , downwards . This he considers is not owing to fche great value of land so much as to the extravagant costliness and magnificence of tho

works , ancl above all , to our defective system of railway legislation . The proportionate cost of railways is taking England as 4 ; Prance , 3 ; Germany , 2 ; America , ! . Branch lines in England , instead of proving " feeders" to the trunk line , are too frequently " suckers , " tending to diminish profits ; while all tho trunk lines , with their branches , still leave many extensive districts totally unprovided with

accommodation . The ruinous opposition of rival main lines with their branches swell the general loss , and yet leave the railway system as a whole , limited , exceptional , and incomplete . Looking afc the railway mania of 184-5 , Bro . Young says : —

" The waste of capital directly and indirectly in the formation ol railways has been estimated at not less than £ 12 , 000 , 000 ! apart from the loss which has been incurred in the support of unsuccessful Jiills , and the maintenance of unsuccessful opposition . This sum ivould have been sufficient to construct a railway six hundred miles long , at the rate of £ 20 , 000 a mile ; while the interest which has to be paid by the public in the increased cost of existing lines amounts , at 5 per cent ., fo £ 000 , 000 .

" Ot the cost of projects ivhich were ultimately unsuccessful , a single illustration may be given . In the celebrated battle of the Stour and Rugby Ilailway , the inquiry continued during sixty-six sitting days , from 1 ' ebruai'y to August , 1839 , and having been renewed in tlie following year , the Bill ivas finally defeated at an expense to its promoters of iCl-16 , 000 1 " To show what advantage the " gentlemen learned in the law " obtained from this state of affairsit is mentioned that the bill of

, the solicitor of a certain line leading out of London , contained ten thousand folios , occupied twelve months in taxation before tho master , and amounted to the exceedingly modest sum of £ 210 , 000 ! "Another company had to light so hard for their Dill that they found , when at length they reached the last stage , thafc of receiving the lioyal assent , that their preliminary undertakings had cost nearly lialf-a million of money ! and that before a single yard of line had been , or could be constructed . "

The actual dishonesty ( indeed , flagrant robbery it may be called ) which existed in tho management of many of these schemes is touched upon with no light hand , and the objects of railroad " cookery " are very fairly and wittily shown up : —

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-02-23, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23021861/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS VICINAGE. Article 2
THE GRAVE S OF BROS. JACKSON AND POLK. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
Literature. Article 6
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 9
Poetry. Article 10
I'M GROWING OLD. Article 10
A LAMENT. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE HIGHER DEGREES. Article 11
THE ROYAL ARCH DEGREE. Article 11
THE WEST LANCASHIRE BALL. Article 11
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
WEST INDIES Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Literature.

British pluck and sense determined to test the scientific pundit ' s assertion ; the consequence being that the Great Western at once led the van of a continually increasing lino of ocean steamers , ivhich has rendered a voyage to New York in our time less eventful , and moro punctual as to arrival , than a journey to Berlin in the zenith of the learned doctor ' s fame .

While gas , railways , and ocean steamers were as yet things of tho future , a discovery had been made and tested equal in importance , there is hardly room to doubt , to any of these . This was the applicability of steam instead of horse-power on common roads . More than a hundred years ago , the first carriage to try the experiment was constructed by a Frenchman named Cugnofc , since which time

many able engineers havo employed their best energies to perfect the idea . Numerous have been the designs from which these carriages have been built , and frequent the experiments by ivhich to satisfy tho public of their utility . Though scarcely one of the various inventors has incurred the reproach of a failure , while the success of tho greater number has been convincing and remarkable , yet , strango

to say , men in authority , corporations , and other persons of influence , have from time to time , opposed the introduction of this undoubted public improvement , and with too much success . Again and again projectors have brought forward r-iriations of tho same great scheme , to meet with similar defeat and mortification . But though prejudice , bigotry , and selfishness have not ceased to do their worstthe importance

, of the matter has not been lost sight of by thinking men , and protests have been from time to time put forth against burking the project . The question has been again taken up and most ably discussed by Bro . Young in the volume before us , whicli is one of the most interesting treatises upon a purely scientific subject which we have over met with . The ¦ author is deeply impressed with the importance of his

subject , and has looked at it in ahnosfc every point of view ; ifc is studded thickly with tables , plans , and statistics for the hungry philosopher , while the most desultory reader may find much ii : ifc not onl y of information , bufc also of interest and amusement . Our brother commences hy adverting to the increased attention which is now given to the substitution of steam for horse-power , both for transport on common roads and for

farming operations . He proceeds to notice the various experiments which havo been made with a view to this end , with tho reasons for their want of success , and for steam -traction not being in general use . Ho also carefully considers the two systems of " concentrating" and " distributing" the weight ; giving of course the preference to the latter with regard to the transport of heavy loads ,

-though a comparatively small speed is attained in thafc way . Boydcll ' s traction engine , with endless train , appears to _ b ' c the most perfect example yet pi-oduced of judicious distribution of weight over a large surface . Beginning at the beginning , Bro . Young devotes a chapter to tlie history of transport and roads , and thoir influence upon industry and civilisationillustrated by what has been

, done in England and on tho continent , by tho wretched condition of Spain , and by a sketch of tho resources in India which might bo developed by these means . Tho admirable roads of fche Romans , which have never been surpassed in firmness of construction , have lasted in many places for fifteen centuries , without entirely giving way to tho ravages of time and weatherand are no less remarkable ' for

, "fche unbroken lines of communication which they formed , than for tho excellence of thoir construction . Barbarism rapidly increased its power on the- departure of the Romans from this country , and then roads fell speedily into neglect . Through succeeding , ages trifling amendments were made from time to time in the means ¦ an d aids to transport but tho place of tho great

; Roman road-makers was never effectually filled until the genius of M'Adam supplied this country with the magnificent turnpike roads ivhich bear his name . Canals next come under notice , an interesting sketch of thoir history being given , ivith a glance at their commercial capabilities ; the factbeing pointed out that this mode of transport is not susceptible of any particular improvement—at any rate , nofc such :-. s would be necessary to meet the requirements ofthe present day .

The chapter devoted to railroads is tho most interesting , perhaps , to the general reader , and is written in the agreeable narrative style which the contributors to Household Words have rendered so popular and have brought so largely into vogue . Bro . Young gives tho history of railroads in Britain and their promoters , from "Master Beaumont , a gentleman of great ingenuity and rare parts , " in 1649 , down

to Hudson , " fche Yorkshire tape measurer , " whoso smiles were courted by the proudest poors in the land . There is an interesting sketch of the career of Thomas Gray , tho railway prophet-, who , as early as 1816 , put forth the doctrine of travelling by steam on railways , and superseding horses . In 1820 , the Edinburgh Bcuiciv examined his scheme and his books with a critical eye , and with astonishing acumen

pronounced him to be a lunatic , and only fit to bo shut up in Bedlam—a tribute to his genius which delighted Gray , who anticipated success from that moment . That success was fated to enrich others—nofc himself . In 1826 the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Bill was carried , and the line commenced , to be followed by a host of others in different parts of the kingdom . The work of railway extension has

continued to the present day , ivith results of the utmost importance to the nation ; bufc for more than a quarter of a century Gray was doomed to sou his own ideas ancl suggestions adopted , and other men enriched bv them , while

ho himself was neglected and left fco pine in miserable poverty . Ifc may , indeed , be considered as no more than characteristic of the manner in which railway enterprise has hitherto been carried out , that one who had done so much for them should receive such a reward ; for railway making , as our author observes , has given rise to such conduct and revelations as havo caused tho honour and

integrity of . Englishmen to appear in anything but a favourable light ., The author gives some excellent reasons why those gigantic English railways do not pay , from the Great AVestcrn ( with its shares afc thirty per cent , discount ) , downwards . This he considers is not owing to fche great value of land so much as to the extravagant costliness and magnificence of tho

works , ancl above all , to our defective system of railway legislation . The proportionate cost of railways is taking England as 4 ; Prance , 3 ; Germany , 2 ; America , ! . Branch lines in England , instead of proving " feeders" to the trunk line , are too frequently " suckers , " tending to diminish profits ; while all tho trunk lines , with their branches , still leave many extensive districts totally unprovided with

accommodation . The ruinous opposition of rival main lines with their branches swell the general loss , and yet leave the railway system as a whole , limited , exceptional , and incomplete . Looking afc the railway mania of 184-5 , Bro . Young says : —

" The waste of capital directly and indirectly in the formation ol railways has been estimated at not less than £ 12 , 000 , 000 ! apart from the loss which has been incurred in the support of unsuccessful Jiills , and the maintenance of unsuccessful opposition . This sum ivould have been sufficient to construct a railway six hundred miles long , at the rate of £ 20 , 000 a mile ; while the interest which has to be paid by the public in the increased cost of existing lines amounts , at 5 per cent ., fo £ 000 , 000 .

" Ot the cost of projects ivhich were ultimately unsuccessful , a single illustration may be given . In the celebrated battle of the Stour and Rugby Ilailway , the inquiry continued during sixty-six sitting days , from 1 ' ebruai'y to August , 1839 , and having been renewed in tlie following year , the Bill ivas finally defeated at an expense to its promoters of iCl-16 , 000 1 " To show what advantage the " gentlemen learned in the law " obtained from this state of affairsit is mentioned that the bill of

, the solicitor of a certain line leading out of London , contained ten thousand folios , occupied twelve months in taxation before tho master , and amounted to the exceedingly modest sum of £ 210 , 000 ! "Another company had to light so hard for their Dill that they found , when at length they reached the last stage , thafc of receiving the lioyal assent , that their preliminary undertakings had cost nearly lialf-a million of money ! and that before a single yard of line had been , or could be constructed . "

The actual dishonesty ( indeed , flagrant robbery it may be called ) which existed in tho management of many of these schemes is touched upon with no light hand , and the objects of railroad " cookery " are very fairly and wittily shown up : —

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