William Mackenzie (contractor)
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William Mackenzie | |
Born | 20 March 1794 Nelson, Lancashire, England |
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Died | 29 October 1851 74 Grove Street, Liverpool, England |
Burial place | St Andrew's Church, Rodney Street, Liverpool |
Residence | 74 Grove Street, Liverpool |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Civil engineer, Contractor |
Known for | Civil engineering contractor |
Religious beliefs | Presbyterian |
Spouse | Mary Dalziel Sarah Dewhurst |
Parents | Alexander Mackenzie Mary Roberts |
William Mackenzie (20 March 1794–29 October 1851) was a British civil engineer and civil engineering contractor who was one of the leading European contractors in the 1840s.[1]
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[edit] Early life
Mackenzie was born near Nelson, Lancashire, England, the eldest of the 11 children of Alexander Mackenzie, a Scottish contractor, and Mary née Roberts. He started his career as an apprentice weaver but changed to civil engineering, becoming a pupil of a lock carpenter on the Leeds and Liverpool Canal in 1811. He continued his training on a dry dock at Troon harbour, on Craigellachie Bridge and as an agent on the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal.[1]
[edit] Career
In 1822 he became an agent for the completion of the Gloucester and Berkeley Canal. Soon after this he was appointed resident engineer for Thomas Telford's Mythe Bridge at Tewkesbury, then resident engineer to the improvements to the Birmingham canals, again under Telford. Following this he returned to contracting, his profitable contracts including tunnels on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway between Edge Hill and Lime Street, and contracts for the Grand Union, North Union, Midland Counties and Glasgow, Paisley and Greenock railways. Non-railway contracts included Liverpool Haymarket, the Manchester and Sheffield Junction Canal and the Shannon navigation.[1]
In 1840 Mackenzie was invited by Joseph Locke to tender for works on the Paris to Rouen railway. He tendered jointly with Thomas Brassey and together they were granted the contract.[2][3] When this was complete he built more railways in France, Spain, the Italian states and Belgium. Also in partnership with Brassey he built further railways in France, England, Wales and Scotland. Mackenzie also made investments, which included ironworks in Wales and France, housing in Liverpool and estates in Scotland.[1]
[edit] Personal life
In 1819 Mackenzie married Mary Dalziel, daughter of a Glasgow commission agent. Mary died in 1836 and in 1839 he married Sarah Dewhurst. Mackenzie maintained offices in Paris and in Liverpool and from 1843 he lived at 74 Grove Street, Liverpool, where he died in 1851. He was buried in St Andrew's Church, Rodney Street, Liverpool. His estate amounted to £341,848, almost all of which was left to his youngest brother, Edward. He had no children.[1]
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b c d e Chrimes, Mike 'Mackenzie, William (1794-1851)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, October 2006 [1], accessed 24 November 2007.
- ^ Walker, Charles (1969). Thomas Brassey, Railway Builder. London: Frederick Muller, 38. ISBN 0584103050.
- ^ Helps, Arthur [1872] (2006). The Life and Works of Mr Brassey. Stroud: Nonsuch, 45. ISBN 1845880110.