'Sir William Cubitt' (1785-1861) was an eminent
English civil engineer and
millwright. Born in
Norfolk, England, he was employed in many of the great engineering undertakings of his time. He invented a type of
windmill sail and the prison
treadwheel, and was employed as Chief engineer, at Ransomes of
Ipswich, before moving to London. He worked on canals, docks, and railways, and the
Crystal Palace at Hyde Park in
1851.
He was president of the
Institution of Civil Engineers between 1850 and 1851.
Structures that still exist include:
★ Many
windmills in
East Anglia or
Lincolnshire
★ Iron bridges: Brent Eleigh and Clare, and the Stoke Bridge at Ipswich (Suffolk); Witham (Essex).
★ Port Offices,
Lowestoft
★ Haddiscoe Cut
★ Oxford Canal at
Rugby and at Newbold Tunnel
★
Shropshire Union Canal at Shelmore Embankment
★ Diglis Lock on the River Severn at Worcester
★
Folkestone Viaduct
★ Folkestone Warren and Martello, Abbot's Cliff, Shakespeare and Martello Tunnels
★
Welwyn Viaduct
★ Nene Bridge,
Peterborough
★ Museum of Childhood, Bethnal Green
References
★
Sir William Cubitt (1785-1861)
Cubitt also conetructed Penton Lodge, which is located in Penton Mewsey,