- Edward Leader Williams
Infobox Person
name = Edward Leader Williams
image_size = 180px
caption = Photograph taken in the 1880s, during construction of the Manchester Ship Canal
birth_date =28 April 1828
birth_place =Worcester ,England
death_date =1 January 1910
death_place = Bowdon,Greater Manchester , England
education =
occupation =Civil engineer
title =
spouse = Ellen Maria Popplewell (1852–1860)
Catherine Louisa Clinch (1862)
parents = Edward Leader Williams and Sarah Whiting
children =
nationality = English
website =Sir Edward Leader Williams (
28 April 1828 –1 January 1910 ) was an Englishcivil engineer , chiefly remembered as the designer of theManchester Ship Canal , but also heavily involved in othercanal projects in northCheshire .cite web |first=W. F. |last=Spear |coauthors=rev. Farnie, D. A. |title=Williams, Sir Edward Leader (1828–1910) |work=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/36920 |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2004 |accessdate=2008-05-11]Early life
Williams was born in
Worcester on28 April 1828 , the son of a Worcester-based civil engineer also named Edward (responsible for works to make theRiver Severn navigable; also a keen amateur artist and friend ofJohn Constable ) and hisQuaker wife Sarah Whiting. His brotherBenjamin Williams Leader became a famous landscape artist. The family lived at Diglis House in Worcester (today the Diglis Hotel).Career
After attending the
Royal Grammar School Worcester Williams became anapprentice to his father. In 1856 he was chosen out of 110 applicants to be chief engineer for the development of the navigable northern section of theRiver Weaver inCheshire . He began to specialise in canal construction and in 1865 produced plans for enlarging the Weston Canal, a short stretch of canal linking the river nearFrodsham to docks atWeston Point ,Runcorn .On
1 September 1872 , he joined the Bridgewater Navigation Company and worked on theBridgewater Canal .Manchester Ship Canal
After submitting proposals in competition with another engineer (Hamilton Fulton), Williams was then appointed by
Daniel Adamson in 1882 to design a new ship canal linkingManchester with theIrish Sea . Williams became chief designer and chief engineer, helping the Manchester Ship Canal Company formulate its proposals for the necessaryAct of Parliament . From its initial reading in 1883, it took two years for the Bill to receiveRoyal Assent , and a further two years before the first construction work started, in November 1887.The canal opened in 1894, and has been described as "a feat without precedent in modern history". [Farnie (1980), p. 1.] As well as the canal itself, major engineering landmarks of the scheme included the
Barton Swing Aqueduct (carrying the Bridgewater Canal over the Ship Canal) and a neighbouringswing bridge for road traffic at Barton.Williams was knighted by Queen Victoria at the official opening of the Manchester Ship Canal on
21 May 1894 .Williams' other works include the
Anderton Boat Lift (1875) nearNorthwich inCheshire , which links the navigable stretch of the River Weaver with theTrent and Mersey Canal .ee also
*
Delamere Dock References
Notes
Bibliography
*cite book |last=Farnie |first=D. A. |title=The Manchester Ship Canal and the rise of the Port of Manchester |year=1980 |publisher=Manchester University Press |isbn=0-7190-0795-X
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