| 
	
		
			| 
NOTES AND EXTRACTS
 ON THE HISTORY OF THE
 
 LONDON & BIRMINGHAM RAILWAY
 
 
 CHAPTER 3.
 
 PROBLEMS WITH THE TRACK
 
 
 THE CAST-IRON PLATE RAIL
 
			The development of the railway locomotive languished for some years 
			following Trevithick’s withdrawal from the field.  This was not 
			wholly due to the absence of his inventive genius, nor to the 
			lack of a commercial driver for change, for the inflationary 
			pressures of the Napoleonic War had greatly increased the cost of 
			horse fodder and with it that of horse-powered traction.  The 
			principal reason, as Trevithick had discovered at Pen-y-Darren and 
			later in London, was the absence of rails capable of withstanding a 
			locomotive’s weight and hammer blow. [1]  More than a 
			another decade was to pass before rails became available that could 
			reliably withstand the stresses of locomotive traction.
 
 This chapter reviews the main changes that took place in rail design 
			and technology leading up to the world’s first passenger-carrying, 
			steam-worked railway, the Stockton and Darlington.
 
			
			
  
			Iron plate rails mounted on stone 
			blocks ― the Derby Canal Railway. 
			The development of the wagonway progressed with the coming of the 
			Industrial Revolution and the widespread use of iron.  First,  
			wooden rails were reinforced with iron plating to reduce wear and to 
			further reduce friction.  It was then a natural progression to the 
			all-iron L-shaped rail, [2] which did not 
			attacked by rot and could better withstand the weight of the wagons:
 
			“Notwithstanding the imperfection both of 
			the railway and the impelling force, as compared with the improved 
			apparatus of the present day, the advantage was so considerable, 
			that a single horse could draw three tons of coals from the pit to 
			the river.  There was, however, a drawback on the advantages, from 
			the expense of repairing the wear and tear of the decayed wood, 
			which was, indeed, under some circumstances, so great as to render 
			the use of rail-ways, made of this material, a very doubtful 
			benefit.  At length iron was introduced, and found to succeed 
			remarkably well.  But in the first instance the railways were not 
			made wholly of iron.  Flat bars of this metal were fastened on the 
			top of the existing wooden rails, and this was considered a great 
			improvement.  A greater still, however, which soon succeeded, was 
			making the rails wholly of iron, cast in short bars, united at their 
			extremities, and resting on square blocks of stone, instead of logs 
			of wood, arranged at short intervals along each side of the road.”
 
			The British 
			Magazine, Vol. I., p. 121, 1830. 
			However, the introduction of iron reinforcement on wood, followed by 
			the replacement of wood with iron plates, increased wear on the 
			wagons’ wooden wheels.  To combat this, iron tyres were 
			introduced followed by 
			iron wheels, both of which also reduced still further a railway wagon’s rolling resistance:
 
			“The next improvement in order of time 
			appears to have been the use of cast-iron as a substitute for the 
			wooden rails, and these were tried on a small scale at the Colebrookdale iron works in Shropshire about 1767, at the suggestion 
			of Mr. Reynolds, one of the partners in that concern.  About this 
			same time cast-iron wheels, turned in a lathe, and made with great 
			truth and accuracy, began to be used, and then it was that the great 
			advantage of these roads became apparent, for the advantage to be 
			gained by a rail-road depends in a great measure on the perfection 
			of the workmanship bestowed upon it, to make it truly smooth and 
			level, and on making the carriages that run upon it as free from 
			friction and inequalities of motion as possible.”
 
			Elements of 
			Civil Engineering, John Millington (1839). 
			However, it is doubtful that iron wagon wheels were first used at Colebrookdale.  Like much of our railway history, their first use was 
			probably in the North East of England. [3]
 
 Although there were variations in design, by the end of the 18th 
			Century a typical iron wagonway consisted of L-shaped plate rails, 
			which we would describe today as ‘angle irons’.  A wagon’s flat-rimmed 
			wheels ran along the rail’s flat surface (about 3½ inches wide), while 
			the uprights (about 4 inches high) kept the wheels aligned with the track.  This contrasts with a modern railway, where the opposite applies ― 
			flanges guide the wheel along a flangeless track.
 
			
  
			Plateway mounted on stone blocks ―
			the Derby Canal Railway. 
			
			Plate rails were of cast-iron, generally in lengths of three to six feet, drilled to receive spikes [4] 
			and supported on either transverse timber sleepers, or on stone 
			blocks.  It seems at this time that track-beds were unballasted, for 
			where timber sleepers were in use a civil engineering manual of the period speaks of the need to 
			support their ends:
 
			“. . . . a transverse timber sleeper may be 
			let into the ground and a large heavy stone, or mass of rubble-work 
			in mortar, may be sunk below each of its ends to give it a firmer 
			bearing and prevent its sinking deeper.”
 
			Elements of 
			Civil Engineering, John Millington (1839). 
			Where the lines were laid on timber, they were spiked directly into 
			the sleepers, whereas when laid on stone, holes had to be drilled 
			into the blocks, plugged with wood, and the lines spiked into the 
			plug.  An advantage of using stone blocks was that the track-bed 
			between the lines was left clear for the horses’ hooves, but to 
			achieve this with timber the sleepers had to be let into the ground 
			or covered with gravel where they then became more prone to rot.  
			However, stone blocks had their disadvantages; they were more prone than 
			wood to vibration, which shook the rails loose, while the wooden 
			plugs gradually saturated and swelled, splitting the stone.  Such was the construction of the Pen-y-Darren Tramroad [5] 
			on which Trevithick’s locomotive ran in 1804.
 
 Besides colliery owners building wagonways, canal companies also 
			made considerable use of them during the canal era (little 
			realising they would evolve to supersede the canals), principally as 
			feeders in situations where they provided a more economic 
			alternative to a branch canal, or where the terrain was unsuitable 
			for a waterway.  It was in the construction of such feeders that the 
			civil engineer Benjamin Outram’s name is now associated.
 
			 
  
			The Derby Canal Railway. 
			
			One example of Outram’s work was the ‘Derby Canal Railway’ (aka the 
			‘Little Eaton Gangway’), a typical wagonway of the period.  Now 
			abandoned, the Derby 
			Canal was opened throughout in 1796 to form a link 
			between the Trent & Mersey and the Erewash canals in Derbyshire.  As 
			a more economic alternative to a branch canal, Outram built a 
			wagonway to link the Denby collieries with the canal at Little Eaton 
			wharf.  Priestly described this plateway thus:
 
			“From the northern end of the main line 
			[of the canal] at Eaton, a railway 
			proceeds by Horsley and Kilboum, to Smithy House, which is nearly 
			four miles and three quarters in length.  From Smithy House there is 
			a branch one mile and three quarters in length, to the collieries at Henmoor, situated one mile and a half east of the town of Belper; 
			another one mile and a half in length, by the potteries, to the 
			extensive coal works near Denby Hall; with a collateral branch out 
			of the last mentioned branch, three quarters of a mile in length, to 
			other collieries north of Salterswood.”
 
			Historical 
			Account of the Navigable Rivers, Canals etc., Joseph Priestley 
			(1831). 
			The Derby Canal Railway used cast-iron 
			L-shaped plate rails, approximately three feet long, which 
			were spiked into stone sleepers.  Its horse-drawn wagons had 
			detachable bodies, each of a capacity of about 1¾ tons, which were 
			loaded into barges by crane at Little Eaton Wharf, an early form of 
			containerisation.  The wagonway’s principal cargo was coal, but it also carried stone, 
			pottery and other goods.  It remained in use in its original 
			horse-drawn form until closure in 1908.
 
			――――♦――――
 |    
	
		
			| 
			 THE EDGE RAIL.
 
			William Jessop was one of the great civil engineers of his era, his name 
			being linked to a wide range of civil engineering projects that 
			include canals, docks and wagonways.  He is also credited with the first use of the cast-iron 
			edge rail, the
			
			predecessor of the modern railway line. [6]
 
 Around 1794 ― the date is 
			uncertain ― Jessop engineered a wagonway to carry coal from Nanpantan, 
			on the Charnwood Forest Canal, to Loughborough.  This was to have 
			been laid with plate rails of the Outram pattern, but, so the story goes, the trustees 
			of a turnpike road objected to the 
			obstruction posed by the rails’ raised flanges at a point where the 
			track crossed the carriageway.  However, a further 
			problem with plate rails was that the debris thrown up 
			by the horses’ hooves lay on the rail’s flat surface and 
			obstructed the free running of the wagon wheels.  Jessop’s use of 
			the edge rail solved both problems; where the rails crossed a road, 
			their upper edges could be recessed so as to lie level with the road 
			surface, thereby posing no obstruction to 
			traffic, and elsewhere their raised running surfaces remained substantially free 
			of stones and dirt.
 
			
  
			“Edge rails succeeded plate-rails, having 
			been first used in 1785; the inconvenience arising from the dust 
			laying on the latter probably led to their introduction originally, 
			although the many other advantages possessed by them might hot have 
			been contemplated at the time, as the form of edge-rails is 
			certainly very superior, combining the least expenditure of material 
			with the greatest possible strength and the friction upon them is 
			less than upon tram-rails.” 
			A Glossary of Civil Engineering, 
			S. C. Brees (1844). 
			
			The earliest iron edge rail consisted of a cast-iron bar, laid on 
			edge and generally 
			three feet long (due to cast-iron being brittle, it could only be 
			laid in short lengths).  The underside of the rail was 
			elliptical to provide greater strength between the supports, which 
			gave rise to the description ‘fish bellied’.  The rails were mounted 
			in a succession of iron chairs, each being spiked to either a timber 
			or a stone block sleeper.  Vehicles that ran upon edge rails 
			required flanged wheels, which kept them aligned 
			with the track.
 
 The iron edge rail was not adopted immediately and co-existed with 
			the plate-rail for some years:
 
			“It was of course a great saving of 
			material to cast a flange on the tire of the wheels only, instead of 
			along the whole length of the line; but plate-rails with the flange 
			upon them continued in use notwithstanding, in virtue of the force 
			of prejudice.  In 1797, Mr. Jessop’s edge-rails were laid down on the 
			Lawson Main Colliery Railway, near Newcastle; but in 1800, Mr. Wm. Outram laid plate-rails, with a flange, on the Little Eaton Railway, 
			in Derbyshire.  In 1801 the Wandsworth and Croydon Railway was laid 
			with these flange rails, and in 1803 the Croydon and Merstham 
			Railway.  It was not till about 1812 or 1815 that edge rails got the 
			mastery.”
 
			The Railway Register, Hyde 
			Clark (1847). 
			In 1794, Jessop entered into partnership with Benjamin Outram and 
			others in an ironworks, ‘Benjamin Outram and Company’, [7] 
			that Outram had set up some years previously at Butterley in 
			Derbyshire, and the business began manufacturing both types of rail.
 
			――――♦――――
 |    
	
		
			| 
			
			 LOSH AND STEPHENSON’S PATENT
 
			In 1816, George Stephenson contributed to the development of 
			the iron edge rail by devising an improved method for joining and 
			fixing the rails in place.  At the time, railways were poorly laid, 
			the outcome being an uneven track on which locomotives and wagons 
			were subjected to excessive wear and tear from the considerable 
			jolts they experienced in passing over protruding rail joints, 
			sometimes being derailed.  Stephenson replaced the existing butt 
			joints between each rail with half-lap joints, which extended the 
			rails over each other for a short distance at their ends.  He also 
			redesigned the supporting chair, so that the joint between the rails 
			rested upon the apex of a curve in place of a flat surface.  To 
			reduce the number of rail joints, the chairs were moved from 3 feet 
			to 3 feet 9 inches or 4 feet apart.
 
			
  
			Fish-bellied rail, showing (top) 
			curvature in the supporting chair and (bottom) a half-lap joint. 
			
			The effect of these changes, while reducing the number of rail 
			joints, helped to maintain an even line.  Were a sleeper to tilt from 
			the horizontal, the rail would remain tangential to the curved base 
			of the chair in which it was seated, while the half-lap joint with 
			the adjacent rail kept it locked in place.
 
 Stephenson, together with William Losh, part owner of Losh, Wilson & 
			Bell, who at the time employed Stephenson for two days a week at 
			their Walker Ironworks, applied for a patent to cover this 
			invention.  Registered on 30th September 1816, the patent ― an 
			extract of which is at Appendix I. ― included 
			the steam suspension 
			and the application of malleable iron to rail vehicle wheels 
			referred to in Chapter 2.
 
			――――♦――――
 |    
	
		
			| 
			
			 THE MALLEABLE IRON RAIL
 
			An important step in the development of the iron rail took place at 
			the Tindale Fell Railway (aka Lord Carlisle’s Railway), an early 
			mineral line that served the extensive collieries and lime works at 
			Tindale Fell in Cumbria.  The line had been laid partly with 
			cast-iron and partly with malleable iron [8] 
			rails.  Over a period of years its operators noticed that while 
			the malleable iron rails remained in good condition, those of 
			cast-iron became worn and liable to fracture, an outcome that ran contrary to rceived 
			wisdom on the subject.  Because malleable iron was vulnerable to rust and was 
			also more expensive than cast-iron to manufacture, it had been 
			considered unsuitable for use in railway lines.  However, when 
			put to the test it was discovered that 
			the impact and friction of traffic rolling along a malleable iron 
			line work-hardened the surface, [9] which caused 
			it to resist rust, while malleable iron’s greater manufacturing 
			cost was more than offset by the much smaller gauge of bar necessary 
			to provide the equivalent strength of cast-iron.
 
 The experience at Tindale Fell came to the attention of the civil 
			engineer Robert Stevenson (1772–1850), who referred to it in a report: [10]
 
			“Before the period alluded to, the rails in 
			use had been almost invariably made of cast-iron or timber; but my 
			father, in his notes, says, ’I have no hesitation in giving a 
			decided preference to malleable iron, formed into bars from twelve 
			to twenty feet in length, with flat sides and parallel edges, or in 
			the simple state in which they come from the rolling mills of the 
			manufacturer.’  He also recommends that they should be fixed into 
			guides or chairs of iron, supported on props placed at distances in 
			no case exceeding three feet, and that they should be connected with 
			a clamp-joint, so as to preserve the whole strength of the material.  It is not a little singular that this description, given about forty 
			years ago [1818], may, to use 
			engineering phraseology, be not inaptly called a ‘specification of 
			the permanent way’ of our best railways at the present day.”
 
			Biographical Sketch of the Late 
			Robert Stevenson: Civil Engineer, Alan Stevenson (pub. 1861). 
			So wrote Stevenson Jnr. of his father, known principally for his 
			construction of the Bell Rock and other northern lighthouses, 
			although he was also involved in a range of civil engineering 
			work.  George Stephenson obtained a copy of Stevenson’s report, 
			which he passed to Michael Longridge, part owner of the Bedlington 
			Ironworks, [11] who in turn passed it to John 
			Birkinshaw, the works’ principal agent; and to Birkinshaw must go 
			most of the credit for establishing the Bedlington company’s 
			reputation:
 
			“The Bedlington Iron and Engine Works will 
			be remembered in industrial history more for the contribution made 
			to the development of the early railways than for any other single 
			reason.  It is no coincidence that the company’s peak of production 
			and fame was paralleled by the excitement of railroad and locomotive 
			development in this country and abroad.”
 
			The North Eastern Railway, 
			William Weaver Tomlinson (1915). 
			Birkinshaw contacted Lord Carlisle’s agent for information on the 
			use of malleable iron rails, and was told that:
 
			“Our rails are one and a half inches 
			square, and stand upon stones about ten inches square, and are 
			placed at one yard distance from centre hole to centre hole.  Our 
			railway carries four tons weight, and has never cost us any thing 
			yet, as to expense of the malleable iron, except creasing 
			[track maintenance].  The iron I 
			cannot see the least alteration with, although it has now been laid 
			eight years.  The cast-iron is a daily expense; it is breaking every 
			day.”
 
			In 1820, Birkinshaw registered a patent ― and extract of which is at
			Appendix II. ― for rolling rails of malleable iron:
 
			“These rails are generally rolled into 
			lengths of fifteen feet, subdivided into bearing lengths of three 
			feet each; eighteen feet lengths were recommended by the patentee, 
			but experience has shewn that the former are the most practicable.  The joinings of the ends of these rails, were at first square at the 
			ends, similar to the old cast-iron rails; but they are now formed 
			with a half lap . . . . and thus they now possess all the properties 
			of the improved cast-iron rails.”
 
			A Practical Treatise on Rail-roads, 
			Nicholas Wood (1836). 
			This was a vital breakthrough in railway engineering, for this new 
			type of rail could withstand the stresses caused by locomotive 
			movement.
 
			“KlLLINGWORTH COLLIERY,
 June 28, 1821.
 
			Robert Stevenson, Esq.
 Sir, ― With this you will receive 3 copies of a specification of a 
			patent malleable-iron rail invented by John Birkinshaw of Bedlington, 
			near Morpeth.  The hints were got from your Report on Railways, which 
			you were so kind as to send me by favour of Mr Cookson some time 
			ago.  Your reference to Tindale-fell Railway led the inventor to make 
			some experiments on malleable-iron bars, the result of which 
			convinced him of the superiority of the malleable over the cast-iron 
			― so much so, that he took out a patent.  Those rails are so much 
			liked in this neighbourhood, that I think in a short time they will 
			do away the cast-iron railways.  They make a fine line for our 
			engines, as there are so few joints compared with the other.  I have 
			lately started a new locomotive engine, with some improvements on 
			the others which you saw: it has far surpassed my expectations.  I am 
			confident a railway on which my engines can work is far superior to 
			a canal.  On a long and favourable railway I would stent my engines 
			to travel 60 miles per day with from 40 to 60 tons of goods.  They 
			would work nearly fourfold cheaper than horses where coals are not 
			very costly.
 
 I merely make these observations, as I know you have been at more 
			trouble than any man I know of in searching into the utility of 
			railways; and I return you my sincere thanks for your favour by Mr 
			Cookson.  If you should be in this neighbourhood, I hope you would 
			not pass Killingworth Colliery, as I should be extremely glad if you 
			could spend a day or two with me, ― I am, sir, yours most 
			respectfully,
 
			
			(Signed) G. STEPHENSON” 
			
			Biographical Sketch of the Late Robert Stevenson: 
			Civil Engineer, Alan Stevenson (pub. 
			1861).
 
			――――♦――――
 |    
	
		
			| 
			
			 RAILS FOR THE STOCKTON AND DARLINGTON
 
			Prior to Stephenson being appointed Engineer to the Stockton and 
			Darlington Railway Company, the directors reached two important 
			decisions; that the line was to be a railway laid with edge rails, as 
			opposed to a tramway laid with plate rails, and that Stephenson was to 
			undertake a further survey of the line.  Both decisions 
			were possibly assisted by a letter (dated 22nd June 1821) to one of the 
			Committee members from that great promoter of railways, William 
			James:
 
			“This railway pioneer [James], 
			who, in the capacity of engineer of the Stratford and Moreton 
			Railway, had visited most of the railroads in the kingdom, described 
			the edge-rail as ‘infinitely preferable’ to the plate-rail, and 
			eulogised, in no measured terms, the North-country engineers, 
			ranking Stephenson next to Watt in point of mechanical ability.”
 
			The North Eastern Railway, 
			William Weaver Tomlinson (1915). 
			Following completion of the survey toward the end of 1821, 
			Stephenson was appointed engineer to the Company.  Despite his 
			connection with William Losh and the Walker Ironworks, he declined 
			to recommend the use of Losh’s patent cast-iron rails, opting 
			instead for Birkinshaw’s patent malleable iron fish-bellied rails 
			of 28 lbs. per yard.  In Stephenson’s opinion:
 
			“The great object in the construction of a 
			railroad is that the materials shall be such as to allow the 
			greatest quantity of work to be done at the least possible 
			expenditure; and that the materials also be of the most durable 
			nature.  In my opinion Birkenshaw’s patent wrought-iron rail 
			possesses these advantages in a higher degree than any other.  It is 
			evident that such rails can at present be made cheaper than those 
			that are cast, as the former require to be only half the weight of 
			the latter, to afford the same security to the carriages passing 
			over them, while the price of the one material is by no means double 
			that of the other.  Wrought-iron rails, of the same expense, admit of 
			a greater variety in the performance of the work, and employment of 
			the power upon them, as the speed of the carriages may be increased 
			to a very high velocity without any risk of breaking the rails; 
			their toughness rendering them less liable to fracture from an 
			impulsive force, or a sudden jerk.  To have the same advantages in 
			this respect, the cast-iron rails would require to be of enormous 
			weight, increasing of course the original cost.”
 
			A Practical Treatise on the 
			Construction and Formation of Railways, James Day (1848). 
			But malleable iron had yet to win the day, for after 
			consulting a number of eminent engineers the Committee concluded 
			unanimously that two-thirds of the railway should be laid with 
			malleable iron and the remainder with cast-iron, the chairs in both 
			cases to be of cast-iron. [12]  By the 8th July 
			1823, the Belington Ironworks had delivered 900 tons of malleable 
			iron rails, [13] while the Neath Abbey Company 
			supplied 243 tons of cast-iron rails, chairs, and crossing plates. [14]
 
 The sleepers posed a similar problem to the rails ― uncertainty.  At 
			the outset there was a considerable discussion as to 
			whether stone blocks or wooden sleepers were more suitable for the 
			permanent way.  Eventually the Committee decided to try both, the 
			stone being sourced from local quarries at Brusselton and timber 
			shipped to the Tees from Portsmouth, where it had been recovered 
			from scrapped wooden-wall warships.  In time it was realised that 
			stone sleepers were too unyielding for the weight of the new 
			locomotives, causing damage to the iron rails, and both they and the 
			wooden blocks were replaced by more compliant transverse wooden 
			sleepers.  The redundant stone blocks served out their days as 
			edgings to the platforms of stations, and in the seawall and slipway 
			at Saltburn-by-the-Sea (a partly successful speculative development 
			carried out by Edward Pease’s youngest son, Henry) where they can 
			still be seen, the fastening holes for the iron chairs being plainly 
			visible.
 
			CHAPTER
			4
 
 ――――♦――――
 |    
	
		
			| 
			
			 APPENDIX I.
 
 LOSH AND STEPHENSON’S PATENT
 
 from:
 Patents for Inventions.
 Abridgements of Specifications Relating to Railways,
 (1868).
 
 A.D. 1816, September 30. ― No. 4067.
 
			LOSH, William, and STEPHENSON, 
			George. ― “Improvements in the construction of railways and 
			tramways.”*
 
 “The invention relates to edge round-top’d fish-backed, plate 
			tramway, and barrow-way plate rails.  In the construction of our edge 
			railways our objects are, to fix both the ends of rails, or separate 
			pieces of which the ways are formed, unmoveable in or upon the 
			chairs or props by which they are supported, and to place them in 
			such a manner that the end of any rail shall not project above or 
			fall below the corresponding end of that with which it is in 
			contact, or with which it is joined; also to form the joinings of 
			the rails with the pedestals or props which support them in such a 
			manner that if these props should vary from their perpendicular 
			position in the line of the way the joinings of the rails with each 
			other would remain as before such variation, and so that the rails 
			shall bear upon the props as firmly as before.  The formation of the 
			rails or plates, of which a plate railway consists, being different 
			from the rails of which the edge railways are composed, we are 
			obliged to adopt a different manner of joining them, both with each 
			other and with the props and sleepers on which they rest; but in the 
			joining these rails or plates upon their chairs and sleepers we fix 
			them down unmoveable, and in such a manner that the end of one rail 
			or plate does not project above or fall below the end of the 
			adjoining plate, so as to present an obstacle or cause a shock to 
			the wheels of the carriages which pass over them; and we also form 
			the joinings of these rails or plates in such a manner as to prevent 
			the possibility of the nails which are employed in fixing them in 
			their chairs from starting out of their places from the vibration of 
			the plates, or from other causes.”
 
 The patentees also describe improvements in the construction of 
			railway wheels and locomotive engines.
 
			___________ 
			* “A grant unto William Losh, of the town and county of 
			Newcastle-upon-Tyne, iron founder, and George Stephenson, of 
			Killingworth, in the county of Northumberland, engineer, for their 
			invented new method or new methods of facilitating the conveyance of 
			carriages, and all manner of goods and materials along railways and 
			tram-ways, by certain inventions and improvements in the 
			construction of the machine, carriages, carriage wheels, railways 
			and tram-ways employed for that purpose ― 30th September, 1816, 
			Patent Record Office, No 4067.”
 
			
  
			Engineers and Mechanics Encyclopedia 1839. 
			Because the base of the chair is not flat, but forms an arch, should 
			the sleeper tilt, as shown in the diagram, the rail remains 
			tangential to the arch. It is further prevented from protruding by 
			being fixed to its neighbour by a half-lap joint.
 
			――――♦――――
 |  
 
	
		
			| 
			
			APPENDIX II.
 JOHN BIRKINSHAW’S PATENT
 
 from
 The Engineer’s and Mechanic’s Encyclopedia
 Luke Hebert (1836).
   
			Specification of the Patent granted to JOHN BIRKINSHAW, 
			of Bedlington Iron-Works in the County of Durham; for an Improvement 
			in the Construction of malleable Iron Rails, to be used in Rail 
			Roads, whereby the Cost is reduced, and the Expense of Repairs of 
			broken Rails saved. Dated October 23, 1820.
 “My invention consists in the adaptation of wrought or malleable 
			iron bars or rails of a peculiar form, instead of cast-iron rails, 
			as heretofore.  From the brittle nature of cast-iron, it has been 
			found, by experience, necessary to make the bars of a railroad 
			sufficiently strong to bear at least six times the weight intended 
			to be carried along the road, by which the original cost of a 
			railroad was considerably augmented; or if light rails were used, 
			the necessity of frequently repairing entailed a heavy expense upon 
			the proprietors.
 
 To obviate these objections, I have invented a bar to be made of 
			wrought, or malleable iron, the original cost of which will be less 
			than the ordinary cast-iron rails or bars, and, at the same time, 
			will be found to require little (if any) reparation in the course of 
			many years.  The rails or bars which I have invented are formed as 
			prisms, though their sides need not of necessity be flat. Figs. 1 
			and 2 show sections of the bar thus formed; the upper surface upon 
			which the wheel of the carriage is to run is slightly convex, in 
			order to reduce the friction; and the under part rests in the 
			supporting-blocks, chairs, rests, standards, or pedestals, which are 
			mounted upon the sleepers.  The wedge-form is proposed, because the 
			strengths of the rail is always in proportion to the square of its 
			breadth and depth.  Hence this form possesses all the strength of a 
			cube equal to its square, with only half the quantity of metal, and, 
			consequently, half the cost.  Sufficient strength, however, may be 
			still retained, and the weight of metal further reduced, by forming 
			the bars with concave sides, as shown in section, by Figs. 3 and 4.  The mode of making iron bars of a great variety of forms, we have 
			already generally explained in our account of the iron manufacture.”
 
			――――♦――――
 |  
 
	
		
		
			| 
FOOTNOTES |  
			| 
			
			1. | ‘Hammer blow’ refers to 
			the vertical forces transferred to the track by a locomotive’s 
			driving wheels.  Although most is due to the unbalanced reciprocating 
			motion, which in slow-moving early locomotives would not have been 
			significant, the piston thrusts also contribute to it.  The result is 
			that rails are subjected to an intense and regular pounding, which 
			can cause damage. |  
			| 
			
			2. | There is some dispute 
			over the invention of cast-iron rails.  They are generally credited 
			to John Curr, being first used underground in mines at Sheffield c. 
			1776, only later being used overground.  Another claim is that 
			cast-iron rails were used at Coalbrookdale c.1768. |  
			| 
			
			3. | 
			“The 
			cast-iron waggon wheel was really a north-country invention.  As 
			early as may, 1731, Elias Thornhill of Sunderland, whitesmith, 
			obtained a grant of a patent for ’his new invention of making the 
			rim or edge of coal waggon wheels with iron or steel and with iron 
			ribs or tabbs and iron bolts, rivets, and screws for the fastening 
			the same.’ (Archaeologia Aeliana, vol. xxiv., p. 226)” 
			The North Eastern Railway, 
			William Weaver Tomlinson (1915). |  
			| 
			
			4. | 
			Commenting on the 
			Dowlais-Merthyr railway, William Taitt of Dowlais wrote on 17th 
			March 1791: 
“We are now making Rails for 
			our own Waggon way which weigh 44 li or 45 li [pounds]
			per yard. The Rails are 6 feet long, 3 pin 
			holes in them, mitred at the ends, 3 Inches broad Bottom, 2½ In. top 
			& near 2 In. thick . . . .”
 
The rails were spiked to 
			transverse wooden sleepers.
 |  
			| 
			
			5. | 
			The Pen-y-Darren 
			tramroad was a single track plateway with a gauge of 4 feet 4 inches over 
			the flanges of the L-shaped cast-iron plate rails, or 4 feet 2 inches 
			between the inside of the flanges.  The plates were 3 feet long, 
			weighed 56 pounds each, and were spiked to rough stone blocks about 18 
			inches square. |  
			| 
			
			6. | 
			Most writers on this 
			subject credit Jessop with the first use of the iron edge rail, but 
			flanged wheels on wooden rails were in use in the North East of 
			England well before: 
“The flanged cast-iron wheel had been used in the North of England 
			for half a century before Jessop introduced the iron edge rail, and 
			was not only mentioned by Bishop Pococke in 1760, but described and 
			illustrated in 1765 by Monsieur Jars, who actually gives the depth 
			of the flange, viz., from an inch to an inch and a half (Voyages 
			Métallurgiques, vol i., p.202). . . . The flanged waggon wheels had 
			merely to be transferred from the wooden to the iron rails when the 
			latter were laid down.”
 
			The North Eastern Railway, 
			William Weaver Tomlinson (1915). |  
			| 
			
			7. | Following Outram’s 
			death in 1805, ‘Benjamin Outram and Company’ was rename the 
			‘Butterley Company’, and continued trading (as an engineering 
			company) until 2009. |  
			| 
			
			8. | Malleable iron is a 
			form of cast-iron that is easier to work with than pure iron.  It is 
			made by melting scrap steel and pig iron and then carefully 
			controlling the cooling of the mixture over many hours.  This results 
			in an iron that is very tough but not brittle. |  
			| 
			
			9. | In metallurgy: work 
			hardening is the increase in hardness of a metal induced, 
			deliberately or accidentally, by hammering, rolling, drawing, or 
			other physical processes. |  
			| 
			
			10. | 
			“One 
			point, however, deserves particular notice here, as likely to be 
			attended with the most important advantage to the railway system, 
			which is the application of malleable iron instead of cast-iron 
			rails.  Three miles and a half of this description of railway have 
			been in use for about eight years on Lord Carlisle’s works, at 
			Tindal Fell, in Cumberland, where there are also two miles of 
			cast-iron rail; but the malleable iron road is found to answer better in 
			every respect.  Experiments with malleable iron rails have also been 
			made at Mr. Taylor’s Works, at Ayr, and Sir John Hope’s at Pinkie; 
			and, upon the whole, this method, as in the case of the Tindal Fell 
			Railway, is not only considerably cheaper in the first cost than the 
			cast-iron railway, but is also much less liable to accident.  In the 
			use of malleable iron bars, the joints of the railway are 
			conveniently obtained about twelve feet apart, and three pedestals 
			are generally between each pair of joints.” 
			Report of a Proposed Railway from 
			the Coal-field of Mid-Lothian to the City of Edinburgh p.26 
			(1818). |  
			| 
			
			11. | Soon to enter 
			partnership with the Stephensons in the Newcastle locomotive 
			manufacturing firm of Robert Stephenson & Company. |  
			| 
			
			12. | 
			George Stephenson to 
			William James, postmarked 20th December, 1821:   "With respect to the Stockton and 
			Darlington Railway Company advertising for cast-iron rails, it was 
			merely to please a few of the subscribers who have been brought over 
			by some of the cast-iron founders, but they have only advertised for 
			one-third to be cast-iron."
 
			The Two James’s and the Two Stephensons ( 1861) p. 48. |  
			| 
			
			13. | 
			
			“The specifications for the malleable iron rails prescribed that 
			they should be fifty-six pounds per double yard; that the breadth of 
			the top of the rail should be two and one-fourth inches, and the 
			depth at the end two inches; that the depth at the middle should be 
			three and one-fourth inches; that the depth at the top flange should 
			be three-quarters of an inch; that the thickness of the web at the 
			top should be three-quarters of an inch; that the thickness of the 
			web at the bottom should be half an inch; that the edge should be 
			rounded and the surface flat; that the rails should be perfectly 
			straight, and fit to the chairs accurately; and that a sample rail 
			and chair, or patterns thereof, should be furnished to the company.” 
			A History of the Stockton and 
			Darlington Railway, J. S. Jeans (1875). |  
			| 
			14. | 
			
			“The weight and dimensions prescribed for the cast-iron rails and 
			accessory chairs were as follow:― ‘The length of each rail to be 4 
			feet, cast from good pig-iron; the weight per double yard to be 115 
			lbs.; the weight of the chairs to be 10 lbs. each, or 15 lbs. per 
			double yard; the breadth at the top of the rail to be 2¼ inches; the 
			depth at the end to be 4 inches; the depth at the middle to be 6 
			inches; the depth of the top flange to be 1 inch; the thickness of 
			the web at the top to be five-eighths of an inch.’” 
			A History of the Stockton 
			and Darlington Railway, J. S. Jeans (1875). |  |