Sir Thomas Bouch is forever damned for his associations with the Tay Railway Bridge disaster of December 1879. John wishes to describe something of Sir Thomas's early and inspired career as a pioneering railway engineer. He designed many successful railways and bridges; most were located in the north of England and southern Scotland. These include the Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway. Alas, his ambition got the better of him. Although he is forever known with the Tay Railway Bridge disaster, John wants to explain how he became the scapegoat for others' deficiencies and wrong doings.
Views: 468 | Enquiries: 2John Mather graduated from Bristol University in 1976 and is a retired Chartered Civil Engineer, having spent a 41 year career in the construction and maintenance of highways & bridges. John is passionate about swimming and has swum in many lakes and rivers in Europe and further abroad. As well as nearly being arrested by the Turkish navy when swimming in the River Bosporus and dodging Komodo dragons in Indonesia, his coldest swim was in Siberia's Lake Baikal! He has written two books about swimming. These are entitled: • “A Pictorial Guide to Greater Manchester’s Public Swimming Pools” (ISBN: 978-1-291-117890-5) Published by Rossendale Books 2012 • “Challenging Waters: The Diary of a Lake District Swimmer” (ISBN: 978-0-9955990-0-0). Published by Sublime Swimming Press on the 28th February 2018
As well as volunteering for the Lake District National Park Authority and occasionally helping out on archaeological excavations, his other interests include art and the history of both civil engineering and the First World War.
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