Samuel Smiles published his "Lives of the Engineers" in 1862, presenting
engineers as heroic characters, conquering nature and often overcoming
impossible problems on their way to success. He also invented much of
it, so while an interesting historical document, it must be taken with a
pinch of salt. Anthony Burton has turned his attention to a new book
collating the lives of the great engineers of the 18th and 19th
centuries, the extraordinary men who made the industrial revolution
possible. This definitive study investigates the common themes that run
between each man's story, and how they learned from one another, truly
standing on the shoulders of giants. This book presents ten incredible
engineers: Jack Metcalf, James Brindley, John Smeaton, William Jessop,
John Rennie, Thomas Telford, James Watt, Richard Trevithick, George and
Robert Stephenson, and Isambard Brunel.