TELFER
Parents
John TELFER1 = Janet JACKSON2
Married Friday 7 March 1755, Westerkirk3
John TELFER:
Born Sunday 30 June 1728, Westerkirk4
Died November 1757, Glendinning, Westerkirk5
Buried Westerkirk churchyard6
Occupation: shepherd in Ewes and Glendinning
gravestone of John Telford, Westerkirk Cemetery
Janet JACKSON:
Alias Janet TELFER
Born EST 1723, Westerkirk, other possibilities7
Died 1794, Westerkirk?8
child of family Thomas JACKSON and Janet GIBSON
Children
Thomas (infant death) TELFER
Born Wednesday 11 February 1756, Langholm9
Died 1756, Langholm10
Thomas TELFER/TELFORD
Born Tuesday 9 August 1757, Bentpath, Westerkirk, Dumfrieshire11
Died Tuesday 2 September 1834, Abingdon Street, Westminster London12
Buried Westminster Abbey
Occupation: Stone Mason, Civil Engineer
only child, unmarried, lived at Crooks Cottage, Glendinning as a child
see http://members.fortunecity.com/zeemeeboy/thomas_telford.htm#Journeyman%20at%20Langholm for biography
1782 Thomas leaves Langholm to seek fortune in London as a stonemason
from http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/usbiography/thomastelford/index.html
Thomas Telford was born on 9 August 1757 near Westerkirk in Dumfries-shire, the posthumous son of a shepherd. He spent his childhood supplementing the family's limited income by shepherding and left his parish school at the age of 14 to become an apprentice stonemason in Langholm. In 1780 he went to Edinburgh to work as a mason on the development of the New Town.
In 1782 Telford moved to London to work on the greatest construction project of the day, Somerset House. His ability, his desire to better himself, and the strong impression he made on an increasing number of influential people allowed him rapidly to catch up on his missed education, and to moved from stonemason to engineer.
By 1784 he was managing construction works at Portsmouth Dockyard. In 1788, through the influence of the MP for Shropshire, William Pulteney, he was appointed Surveyor of Public Works in Shropshire.
He returned to Scotland in 1790 to survey harbours and piers on behalf of the British Fisheries Society, for whom he had designed Ullapool in 1788, but by 1793 was back in Shropshire, building the Ellsmere Canal, including the spectacular Pontcysyllte Aqueduct.
In 1801 the Government asked Thomas Telford to develop his earlier work on harbours and piers with a survey of roads across Scotland. This revealed a network that barely existed north and west of the Great Glen. Over the 20 years from 1804 Telford followed up his survey with the construction of over 920 miles of road and 120 bridges in the Highlands. During this period he also built many harbours and jetties in Scotland as well as the Caledonian Canal, although this took much longer than planned, and was overtaken by developments in shipbuilding by the time it opened. Meanwhile he also continued his work south of the border, notably on the London to Holyhead road. He also worked abroad, designing the Gotha Canal for the King of Sweden.
In 1818 Thomas Telford was made first President of the Institute of Civil Engineers. He was back in Scotland in 1823 to begin construction of 32 standardised "Parliamentary Churches" across the Highlands and Islands, each comprising a T-shaped church and an accompanying manse. When completed in 1830 this programme had cost a total of £54,500.
Telford was still working when he died in London on 2 September 1834 at the age of 77. He was buried in Westminster Abbey. As an engineer he had made a huge and lasting impression on his native Scotland, and far beyond. His major achievements were, despite its problems, the Caledonian Canal in Scotland and the Menai Suspension Bridge linking Anglesey to Wales. But his influence is really felt through the huge number of roads, bridges, harbours and churches he left behind him, many of which still stand today, 200 years later. And in Shropshire the town of Telford is named in his memory.
Achievements in Scotland
1788 Designs Ullapool for the British Fisheries Society.
1804-1824 Builds 920 miles of "Parliamentary Road" and 120 bridges across Scotland. These include:
Bridges: The River Don Bridge at Alford; Tongland Bridge; Dunkeld Bridge; Bonar Bridge; Craigellachie Bridge; Ballater Bridge; Roy Bridge; and the Clachan or Atlantic Bridge to Seil.
Roads: Carlisle to Glasgow; Carlisle to Portpatrick; Fort William to Arisaig; Perth to Inverness; Invergarry to Loch Hourn; Ardgour to Acharacle; Glen Shiel; Dingwall to Lochcarron and Shieldaig; Dingwall to Tongue; Dingwall to Dornoch, Wick and John o' Groats; Carrbridge to Banff; Fort William to Kingussie; Kyleakin to Portree and Uig; and the "String Road" across Arran.
1798-1825 Builds or improves harbours across Scotland, including those at Kirkwall, Wick, Portmahomack, Dingwall, Invergordon, Fortrose, Nairn, Burghead, Cullen, Banff, Fraserburgh, Peterhead, Aberdeen, Dundee, Leith, Tayvallich, Portree, Tobermory, and Port Logan.
1803-1822 Builds the Caledonian Canal.
1816 Redesigns the Crinan Canal.
1823-1830 Builds 32 "Parliamentary Churches", 19 in the Highlands and 13 in the Islands. Most of these churches are still standing, including those at Tomintoul, Acharacle, Strontian, Plockton, Poolewe, Ullapool, Kinlochbervie, Iona and Strathy.
1829-1831 Builds Dean Bridge, Edinburgh.
1833-1836 Builds Glasgow Bridge at Broomielaw.
Major Achievements outside Scotland
1793 Ellsmere Canal and Pontcysyllte Aqueduct.
1796 Bildwas Bridge, River Severn.
1808 Gotha Canal in Sweden.
1819-1826 Menai Straits Suspension Bridge.
Thomas Telford, 1831
Tomb of Thomas Telford, Westminster Abbey nave
Family
John dies shortly after birth of surviving son Thomas
Scottish naming convention 1st son after mothers father (Thomas)
Sources
1 :
OPR Westerkirk
2 :
mother of Thomas Telford
3 :
OPR Index Marriages
1755 Feb 14th John Telfer in Ewis parish and Janet Jackson in this gave in their names desiring the benefit of proclamation in order to marriage. married 7th March
4 :
OPR Westerkirk
should be 1724 according to MI
If DOB is 19 Jul 1734 Langholm (error of 10 years) then parents are Thomas Telfer and Ellizabeth Murray who are married 1732
5 :
headstone carved by Thomas Telford; died 1757 age 33
6 :
headstone carved by Thomas Telford; died 1757 age 33
IN MEMORY OF JOHN TELFORD
WHO AFTER LIVING 33 YEARS
AN UNBLAMEABLE SHEPHERD
DIED AT GLENDINNING NOVEMBER 1757
7 :
possibles
Chr 24 Feb 1723 Westerkirk f Thomas (source IGI) old for first child at 33 but similar age to father if b 1724
Chr 8 Nov 1730 Dumfries f William (source IGI) marriage and child mid-20's?
Chr 21 July 1735 Annan Dumfrieshire f John m Isobel Rae (source IGI) marriage and child early 20's
8 :
Westerkirk Genealogy - Parry
Gibb 1935 Story of Telford Ch 1, p1
9 :
OPR Index
10 :
first child of John Telfer/Janet Jackson unnamed and will be an infant death as Thomas Telford known to be an only child
11 :
OPR Index Westerkirk
12 :
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=73462&tocid=0
Superscripted numbers are references to source citations at the bottom of this page.