- Huntingdon Beaumont
Huntingdon Beaumont ("c."1560-1624) was an innovative entrepreneur in
coal mining , who built what is currently credited as the world's firstwagonway . Regrettably he was less successful as a businessman and died having been imprisoned for debt.Huntingdon Beaumont was the youngest of four sons born to Sir Nicholas Beaumont and his wife Ann (Saunders). They were an aristocratic family in the English East Midlands. There were several branches to the Beaumont dynasty and this was the one based at
Coleorton in Leicestershire. He was therefore of gentleman status in the formal Elizabethan sense.The family owned coal bearing lands and worked them. Huntingdon was involved in this coal working and eventually in the late 16th century during the reign of Elizabeth I he began working in his own right in the Nottingham area. During his partnership with
Sir Percival Willoughby , Lord of theWollaton Manor, in 1603-4 he constructed the Wollaton Wagonway. The WW may not be the world's firstwagonway but as it is the oldest with surviving provenace it is therefore currently credited as the world's first.The Wollaton Wagonway ran from Strelley where he held mining leases to Wollaton Lane. Huntingdon Beaumont can therefore be credited with the title of the "Great Grandfather of railways". He had also worked in the
Wollaton andLenton areas previously.Huntingdon Beaumont was a successful finder of coal and an innovator in the development of mining techniques. A key innovation currently attributed to him is the introduction of boring rods to assist in finding coal without sinking a shaft. He also built the first
wagonway which is why he features on this site. His working life covered involvement in coal mining activities inWarwickshire ,Leicestershire ,Nottinghamshire andNorthumberland . His coal mining and waggonway activities in the early 1600s near Blyth inNorthumberland were, like most of his ventures, unprofitable. However the boring rod and wagonway technology he took with him was implemented by others to significant effect. Thewagonway evolutionary chain he started in the English north east was to later encompassGeorge Stephenson and change the world forever.Regrettably Huntingdon Beaumont was not a successful businessman. He lost his several family members considerable sums of money and died in
Nottingham Gaol in 1624 having been imprisoned for debt.References
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*Harvard reference | Surname= Lewis | Given=M. J. T. | Title=Early Wooden Railways | Publisher=Routledge Keegan Paul (out of print) | Place=London, England | Year=1970 .
*Harvard reference | Surname=Smith | Given= R. S. | Title=Early Coal Mining Around Nottingham 1500 - 1650 | Publisher=University of Nottingham (out of print) | Year=1989 .
*Harvard reference | Surname=New | Given=J. R. | Title=400 years of English railways - Huntingdon Beaumont and the early years | Journal=Backtrack | Volume=18 | Issue=11 | Year=2004 | Page=660 to 665 .External links
[http://www.waggonways.fsnet.co.uk/ Waggonway Research Circle website] .
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