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Contents
Enter Maudslay's
service , Rudimentary screw
generator , The guide screw , Interview with Faraday
, Rate of
wages , Economical living , My cooking stove , Make model of marine
steam-engine , My collar-nut
cutting machine , Maudslay's elements of
high-class workmanship , Flat filing , Standard planes , Maudslay's "Lord
Chancellor" , Maudslay's Visitors , General Bentham, Barton, Donkin and Chantrey , The Cundell brothers ,
Walks
round London , Norman architecture ,
ON the morning of
Monday, the 30th of May 1829, I commenced my regular attendance
at Mr. Maudslay's workshop. My first job was to assist him in
making some modifications in the details of a machine which he
had contrived some years before for generating original screws. I
use the word "generating" as being most appropriate to
express the objects and results of one of Mr. Maudslay's most
original inventions.
It consisted in the
employment of a knife-edged hardened steel instrument, so
arranged as to be set at any required angle, and its edge caused
to penetrate the surface of a cylindrical bar of soft steel or
brass. This bar being revolved under the incisive action of the
angularly placed knife-edged instrument, it thus received a
continuous spiral groove cut into its surface. It was then in the
condition of a rudimentary screw; the pitch, or interval between
the threads, being determined by the greater or less angle of
obliquity at which the knife-edged instrument was set with
respect to the axis of the cylindrical bars revolving under its
incisive action.
The spiral groove, thus
generated, was deepened to the required extent by a suitable and
pointed hard steel tool firmly held in the jaws of an adjustable
slide made for the purpose, as part and parcel of the bed of the
machine. In the case of square-threaded screws being required, a
square-pointed tool was employed in place of the V or
angle-threaded tool. And in order to generate or produce right
hand or left hand screws, all that was necessary was to set the
knife-edged instrument to a right or left hand inclination in
respect to the axis of the cylindrical bar at the outset of the
operation.
This beautiful and
truly original contrivance became, in the hands of its inventor,
the parent of a vast progeny of perfect screws, whose
descendants, whether legitimate or not, are to be found in every
workshop throughout the world, wherever first-class machinery is
constructed. The production of perfect screws was one of
Maudslay's highest ambitions and his principal technical
achievement. It was a type of his invaluable faculty of solving
the most difficult problems by the most direct and simple
methods.
It was by the same
method that he produced the Guide screw. His screw-cutting lathe
was moved by combination wheels, and by its means he could, by
the one Guide screw, obtain screws of every variety of pitch and
diameter. As an illustration of its complete accuracy I may
mention that by its means a screw of five feet in length and two
inches in diameter was cut with fifty threads to the inch; the
Nut to fit on to it being twelve inches long, and containing six
hundred threads! This screw was principally used for dividing
scales for astronomical and other metrical purposes of the
highest class. By its means divisions were produced with such
minuteness that they could only be made visual by a microscope.
This screw was sent
for exhibition to the Society of Arts. It is still preserved with
the utmost care at the Lambeth Works amongst the many admirable
specimens of Henry Maudslay's inventive genius and delicate
handiwork. Every skilled mechanic must thoroughly enjoy the sight
of it, especially when he knows that it was not produced by an
exceptional tool, but by the machine that was daily employed in
the ordinary work of the factory.
I must not, however,
omit to say that I took an early opportunity of presenting
Brougham's letter of introduction to Faraday at the Royal
Institution. I was received most cordially by that noble-minded
man, whose face beamed with goodness and kindness. After some
pleasant conversation he said he would call upon me at
Maudslay's, whom he knew very well. Not long after Faraday
called, and found me working beside Maudslay in his beautiful
little workshop. A vice had been fitted up for me at the bench
where he himself daily worked. Faraday expressed himself as
delighted to find me in so enviable a position. He congratulated
me on my special good fortune in having the inestimable advantage
of being associated as assistant workman with one of the greatest
mechanical engineers of the day.
Mr. Maudslay offered
to conduct Faraday through his workshops, and I was permitted to
accompany them. I was much impressed with the intelligent
conversation of Faraday, as well as with the quickness he
exhibited in appreciating not only the general excellence of the
design and execution of the works in progress, but his capacity
for entering into the technical details of the composite tools
and machinery which he saw during his progress through the place.
This most pleasant and memorable meeting with the great
philosopher initiated a friendship which I had the good fortune
to continue until the close of his life.
It was, of course, an
immense advantage for me to be so intimately associated with Mr.
Maudslay in carrying on his experimental work. I was not,
however, his apprentice, but his assistant workman. It was
necessary, therefore, in his opinion, that I should receive some
remuneration for my services. Accordingly, at the conclusion of
my first week in his service, he desired me to go to his chief
cashier and arrange with him for receiving whatever amount of
weekly wages I might consider satisfactory. I went to the
counting-house and had an interview with Mr. Young* the cashier, a most
worthy man. Knowing as I did the great advantages of my
situation, and having a very modest notion of my own worthiness
to occupy it, I said, in answer to Mr. Young's question as to the
amount of wages I desired, that "if he did not think ten
shillings a week too much I could do well enough with that."
"Very well" said he,"let it be so" And he
handed me over half a sovereign!
I had determined,
after I obtained a situation, not to cost my father another
shilling. I knew how many calls he had upon him, at a time when
he had his own numerous household to maintain. I therefore
resolved, now that I had begun life on my own resources, to
maintain myself, and to help him rather than be helped any
longer. Thus the first half-sovereign I received from Mr. Young
was a great event in my life. It was the first wages, as such,
that I had ever received. I well remember the high satisfaction I
felt as I carried it home to my lodgings; and all the more so as
I was quite certain that I could, by strict economy and good
management, contrive to make this weekly sum of ten shillings
meet all my current expenses.
I had already saved
the sum of £20, which I placed in the bank as a deposit account.
It was the residue of the sale of some of my model steam-engines
at Edinburgh. My readers will remember that I brought with me a
model steam-engine to show to Mr. Maudslay as a specimen of my
handiwork. It had gained for me the situation that I desired, and
I was now willing to dispose of it. I found a purchaser in Mr.
Watkins, optician at Charing Cross, who supplied such apparatus
to lecturers at Mechanics' Institutions. He gave me £35 for the
model, and I added the sum to my deposit account. This little
fund was quite sufficient to meet any expenses beyond those of a
current weekly nature.
My cooking
stove[note: I have this handy apparatus by me still; and
to prove its possession of its full original efficiency I
recently set it in action after its rest of fifty years, and
found that it yielded results quite equal to my grateful
remembrance of its past services.]
But I was resolved that my wages alone
should maintain me in food and lodging. I therefore directed my
attention to economical living. I found that a moderate dinner at
an eating-house would cost move than I could afford to spend. In
order to keep within my weekly income I bought the raw materials
and cooked them in my own way and to my own taste. I set to and
made a drawing of a very simple, compact, and handy cooking
apparatus. I took the drawing to a tinsmith near at hand, and in
two days I had it in full operation. The apparatus cost ten
shillings, including the lamp. As it contributed in no small
degree to enable me to carry out my resolution, and as it may
serve as a lesson to others who have an earnest desire to live
economically, I think it may be useful to give a drawing and a
description of my cooking stove. The cooking or meat pan rested
on the upper rim of the external cylindrical case, and was easily
removable in order to be placed handy for service. The requisite
heat was supplied by an oil lamp with three small single wicks,
though I found that one wick was enough. I put the meat in the
pot, with the other comestibles, at nine o'clock in the morning.
It simmered away all day, until half-past six in the evening,
when I came home with a healthy appetite to enjoy my dinner. I
well remember the first day that I set the apparatus to work. I
ran to my lodging, at about four P.M., to see how it was going
on. When I lifted the cover it was simmering beautifully, and
such a savoury gusto came forth that I was almost tempted to fall
to and discuss the contents. But the time had not yet come, and I
ran back to my work.
The meat I generally cooked in it was leg
of beef, with sliced potato, bits of onion chopped down, and a
modicum of white pepper and salt, With just enough of water to
cover "the elements." When stewed slowly the meat
became very tender; and the whole yielded a capital dish, such as
a very Soyer might envy. It was partaken of with a zest that, no
doubt, was a very important element in its savouriness. The whole
cost of this capital dinner was about 4 1/2d. I sometimes varied
the meat with rice boiled with a few raisins and a pennyworth of
milk. My breakfast and tea, with bread, cost me about fourpence
each. My lodgings cost 3s. 6d. a week. A little multiplication
will satisfy any one how it was that I contrived to live
economically and comfortably on my ten shillings a week . In the
following year my wages were raised to fifteen shillings a week,
and then I began to take butter to my bread.
To return to my
employment under Mr. Maudslay. One of the first jobs that I
undertook was in assisting him to make a beautiful small model of
a pair of 200 horsepower marine steam-engines. The engines were
then in course of construction in the factory. They were
considered a bold advance on the marine engines then in use, not
only in regard to their great power, but in carrying out many
specialities in their details and general structure. Mr. Maudslay
had embodied so much of his thought in the design that he desired
to have an exact model of them placed in his library, so as to
keep a visible record of his ideas constantly before him. In
fact, these engines might be regarded as the culmination of his
constructive abilities.
In preparing the
model it was necessary that everything should be made in exact
conformity with the original. There were about three hundred
minute bolts and nuts to be reduced to the proportional size. I
esteemed it a great compliment to be entrusted with their
execution. They were all to be made of cast-steel, and the nuts
had to be cut to exact hexagonal form. Many of them had collars.
To produce them by the use of the file in the ordinary mode would
not only have been difficult and tedious, but in some cases
practically impossible.
Collar-nut
cutting machine.
To get rid of the difficulty I suggested to
Mr. Maudslay a contrivance of my own by means of which the most
rigid exactness in size as well as form could be given to these
hexagonal nuts. He readily granted his permission. I constructed
a special apparatus, consisting of a hard steel circular cutter
to act as a circular file. When brought into operation in the
production of these minute six-sided collared nuts, held firm in
the spindle of a small dividing plate and attached to the
slide-rest, each side was brought in succession under the action
of the circular file or cutter with the most exact precision in
regard to the division of the six sides. The result was
absolutely perfect as respects the exactness of the six equal
sides of the hexagonal nut, as well as their precise position in
regard to the collar that was of one solid piece with it. There
was no great amount of ingenuity required in contriving this
special tool, or in adapting it to the slide-rest of the lathe,
to whose spindle end the file or cutter /\ was fixed. But the
result was so satisfactory, both as regards the accuracy and
rapidity of execution in comparison with the usual process of
hand filing, that Mr. Maudslay was greatly pleased with the
arrangement as well as with my zeal in contriving and executing
this clever little tool. An enlarged edition of this collar-nut
cutting machine was soon after introduced into the factory.
Arrangement
of the machine
It was one of the specialities that I
adopted in my own workshop when I commenced business for myself,
and it was eagerly adopted by mechanical engineers, whom we
abundantly supplied with this special machine. It was an
inestimable advantage to me to be so intimately associated with
this Great Mechanic. He was so invariably kind, pleasant, and
congenial. He communicated an infinite number of what he
humorously called "Wrinkles" which afterwards proved of
great use to me. My working hours usually terminated at six in
the evening. But as many of the departments of the factory were
often in full operation during busy times until eight o'clock, I
went through them to observe the work while in progress. On these
occasions I often met "the guvnor, as the workmen called Mr.
Maudslay. He was going his round of inspection, and when there
was any special work in hand he would call me up to him to and
explain point in connection with it that was worthy of particular
notice. I found this valuable privilege most instructive, as I
obtained from the cheif mechanic himself a full insight into the
methods , means, and processes by which the skilful workman
advanced the various classes of work. I was also permitted to
take notes and make rapid sketches of any object that specially
interested me. The entire establishment thus became to me a
school of practical engineering of the most instructive kind.
Mr. Maudslay took
pleasure in showing me the right system and method of treating
all manner of materials employed in mechanical structures. He
showed how they might be made to obey your will, by changing them
into the desired forms with the least expenditure of time and
labour. This in fact is the true philosophy of construction. When
clear ideas have been acquired upon the subject, after careful
observation and practice, the comparative ease and certainty with
which complete mastery over the most obdurate materials is
obtained, opens up the most direct road to the attainment of
commercial as well as of professional success.
To be permitted to
stand by and observe the systematic way in which Mr. Maudslay
would first mark or line out his work, and the masterly manner in
which he would deal with his materials, and cause them to assume
the desired forms, was a treat beyond all expression. Every
stroke of the hammer, chisel, or file, told as an effective step
towards the intended result. It was a never-to-be-forgotten
practical lesson in workmanship, in the most exalted sense of the
term. In conformity with his often repeated maxim, "that
there is a right way and a wrong way of doing everything,"
he took the shortest and most direct cuts to accomplish his
objects. He illustrated this by telling me, in his own humorous
style, " When you want to go from London to Greenwich, don't
go round by Inverness." Another of his droll sayings was
that he "considered no man a thorough mechanic unless he
could cut a plank with a gimlet, and bore a hole with a saw
!"
The grand result of
thoughtful practice is what we call experience: it is the power
or faculty of seeing clearly before you begin, what to avoid and
what to select -- or rather what to do and what not to do.
High-class workmanship, or technical knowledge , was in his hands
quite a science. Every piece of work was made subject to the
soundest philosophical principles, as applied to the use and
treatment of materials. It was this that gave such a charm of
enjoyment to his dealing with tools and materials. He loved this
sort of work for its own sake, far more than for its pecuniary
results. At the same time he was not without regard for the
substantial evidence of his supremacy in all that regarded
first-class tools, admirable management, and thorough
organisation of his factory.
The innate love of
truth and accuracy which distinguished Mr. Maudslay, led him to
value highly that class of technical dexterity in engineering
workmen which enabled them to produce those details of mechanical
structures in which perfect flat or true plane surfaces were
required. This was an essential condition for the effective and
durable performance of their functions. Sometimes this was
effected by the aid of the turning-lathe and slide-rest. But in
most cases the object was attained by the dexterous use of the
file, so that "flat filing" then was, as it still is,
one of the highest qualities of the skilled workman. No one that
I ever met with could go beyond Henry Maudslay himself in his
dexterous use of the file. By a few masterly strokes he could
produce plane surfaces so true that when their accuracy was
tested by a standard plane surface of absolute truth, they were
never found defective; neither convex, nor concave, nor
"cross-winding," -- that is, twisted.
The importance of
having such Standard Planes caused him to have many of them
placed on the benches beside his workmen, by means of which they
might at once conveniently test their work. Three of each were
made at a time, so that by the mutual rubbing of each on each the
projecting surfaces were effaced. When the surfaces approached
very near to the true plane, the still projecting minute points
were carefully reduced by hard steel scrapers, until at last the
standard plane surface was secured. When placed over each other
they would float upon the thin stratum of air between them until
dislodged by time and pressure. When they adhered closely to each
other, they could only be separated by sliding each off each.
This art of producing absolutely plane surfaces is, I believe, a
very old mechanical "dodge." But, as employed by
Maudslay's men, it greatly contributed to the improvement of the
work turned out. It was used for the surfaces of slide valves, or
wherever absolute true plane surfaces were essential to the
attainment of the best results, not only in the machinery turned
out, but in educating the taste of his men towards first-class
workmanship.
Maudslay's love of
accuracy also led him to distrust the verdicts given by the
employment of the ordinary callipers and compasses in determining
the absolute or relative dimensions of the refined mechanism
which he delighted to construct with his own hands. So much
depended upon the manner in which the ordinary measuring
instruments were handled and applied that they sometimes failed
to give the required verdict as to accuracy. In order, therefore,
to get rid of all difficulties in this respect, he designed and
constructed a very compact and handy instrument which he always
had on his bench beside his vice. He could thus, in a most
accurate and rapid manner, obtain the most reliable evidence as
to the relative dimensions, in length, width, or diameter, of any
work which he had in hand. In consequence of the absolute truth
of the verdicts of the instrument, he considered it as a Court of
Final Appeal, and humorously called it "The Lord
Chancellor."
Maudslay's
"Lord Chancellor"
This trustworthy "Companion of the
Bench" consisted of a very substantial and inflexible bed or
base of hard brass. At one end of it was a perfectly hardened
steel surface plate, having an absolutely true flat or plane
face, against which one end or side of the object to be measured
was placed; whilst a similar absolutely true plane surface of
hardened steel was advanced by means of a suitable fine thread
screw, until the object to be measured was just delicately in
contact with it. The object was, as it were, between the jaws of
a vice, but without any squeeze -- being just free, which could
be easily ascertained by feeling. These two absolutely plane
surfaces, between which the object lay, had their distances apart
easily read off from the scale engraved on the bed of the
instrument, in inches and tenth parts of an inch, while the
disk-head or handle of the screw was divided on its edge rim into
hundredth or thousandth parts, as these bore an exact metrical
relation to the pitch of the screw that moved the parallel steel
faces of the measuring vice (as I may term it) nearer or farther
apart.
Not only absolute measure could be obtained
by this means, but also the amount of minute differences could be
ascertained with a degree of exactness that went quite beyond all
the requirements of engineering mechanism; such, for instance, as
the thousandth part of an inch! It might also have been divided
so far as a millionth part of an inch, but these infinitesimal
fractions have really nothing to do with the effective machinery[note:
I may mention another saying of Mr. Maudslay's. Besides his
observation that "in going from London to Greenwich we must
not go round by Inverness," he said, "We must not
become too complicated with our machinery. Remember the
get-at-ability of parts. If we go on as some mechanics are doing,
we shall soon be boiling our eggs with a chronometer!"]
that comes forth from our workshops, and
merely show the mastery we possess over materials and mechanical
forms. The original of this measuring machine of Maudslay's was
exhibited at the Loan Collection at South Kensington in 1878. It
is now treasured up, with other relics of his handiwork, in a
cabinet at the Lambeth works. While writing upon this subject it
may be worthy of remark, that the employment of a screw as the
means of adjusting the points or reference marks of a measuring
instrument, for the ascertainment of minute distances between
objects, was first effected by William Gascoigne, about the year
1648. There can be no doubt that he was the inventor of the
Micrometer -- an instrument that, when applied (as he first did
so) to the eye-piece of the Telescope, has been the means of
advancing the science of astronomy to its present high position
(See Grant's History of Astronomy, p. 453)
I had abundant occupation for my leisure
time after my regular attendance at the factory was over. I had
not only the opportunity of studying mechanics, but of studying
men. It is a great thing to know the character of those who are
over you as well as those who are under you. It is also well to
know the character of those who are associated with you in your
daily work. I became intimate with the foremen and with many of
the skilled workmen. From them I learnt a great deal. Let me
first speak of the men of science who occasionally frequented
Maudslay's private workshop. They often came to consult him on
subjects with which he was specially acquainted.
Among Mr. Maudslay's
most frequent visitors were General Sir Samuel Bentham, Mr.
Barton, director of the Royal Mint, Mr. Bryan Donkin, Mr.
Faraday, and Mr. Chantrey, the sculptor. As Mr. Maudslay wished
me to be at hand to give him any necessary assistance, I had the
opportunity of listening to the conversation between him and
these distinguished visitors. Sir Samuel Bentham called very
often. He had been associated with Maudslay during the
contrivance and construction of the block machinery. He was
brother of the celebrated Jeremy Bentham, and he applied the same
clear common-sense to mechanical subjects which the other had
done to legal, social, and political questions. It was in the
highest degree interesting and instructive to hear these two
great pioneers in the history and application of mechanics
discussing the events connected with the block-making machinery.
In fact, Maudslay's connection with the subject had led to the
development of most of our modern engineering tools. They may
since have been somewhat altered in arrangement, but not in
principle. Scarcely a week passed without a visit from the
General. He sat in the beautiful workshop, where he always seemed
so happy. It was a great treat to hear him and Maudslay
"fight their battles o'er again," in recounting the
difficulties, both official and mechanical, over which they had
so gloriously triumphed.
At the time when I
listened to their conversation, the great work in hand was the
organisation of a systematic series of experiments on the hulls
of steamships, with the view of determining the laws of
resistance on their being propelled through the sea by a power
other than those of winds and sails. The subject was as complex
as it was interesting and important. But it had to be put to the
test of actual experiment. This was done in the first place by
large models of hulls, so as to ascertain at what point the
curves of least resistance could be applied. Their practical
correctness was tested by careful experiment in passing them
through water at various velocities, to record which conditions
special instruments were contrived and executed. These, as well
as the preparation of large models of hulls, embodying the
various improved "lines," occupied a considerable
portion of the time that I had the good fortune to spend in Mr.
Maudslay's private workshop.
Mr. Barton of the
Royal Mint was quite a "crony" of Maudslay's. He called
upon him often with respect to the improvements for stamping the
current coin of the realm. Bryan Donkin was also associated with
Maudslay and Barton on the subject of the national standard of
the yard measure. But perhaps Mr. Chantrey was the most
attractive visitor at the private workshop. He had many a long
interview with Maudslay with respect to the planning and
arranging of a small foundry at his studio, by means of which he
might cast his bronze statues under his own superintendence. Mr.
Maudslay entered con amore into the subject, and placed his skill
and experience entirely at Chantrey's service. He constructed the
requisite furnaces, cranes, and other apparatus, at Chantrey's
studio; and it may be enough to state that, when brought into
operation, they yielded the most satisfactory results.
Among my most
intelligent private friends in London were George Cundell and his
two brothers. They resided near my lodgings, and I often visited
them on Saturday evenings. They were most kind, gentle, and
genial. The eldest brother was in Sir William Forbes's bank.
George was agent for Mr. Patrick Maxwell Stuart in connection
with his West India estates, and the third brother was his
assistant. The elder brother was an admirable performer on the
violoncello, and he treated us during these Saturday evenings
with noble music from Beethoven and Mozart. My special friend
George was known amongst us as "the worthy master." He
was thoroughly versed in general science, and was moreover a keen
politician. He had the most happy faculty of treating complex
subjects, both in science and politics, in a thoroughly
common-sense manner. His two brothers had a fine feeling for art,
and, indeed, possessed no small skill as practical artists. With
companions such as these, gifted with a variety of tastes, I
spent many of my Saturday evenings most pleasantly and
profitably. They were generally concluded with a glass of beer of
"the worthy master's" own brewing.
When the season of
the year and the state of the weather were suitable I often
joined this happy fraternity in long and delightful Sunday walks
to various interesting places round London. Our walks included
Waltham Abbey, Waltham Cross, Eltham Palace, Hampton Court,
Epping Forest, and many other interesting places of resort. When
the weather was unfavourable my principal resort was Westminster
Abbey, where, besides the beautifully-conducted service and the
noble anthems, I could admire the glory of the architecture, and
the venerable tombs, under which lay the best and bravest. I used
generally to sit at a point from which I could see the grand tomb
of Aylmer de Vallance with its magnificent surroundings of quaint
and glorious architecture. It was solemn, and serious also, to
think of the many generations who had filled the abbey, and of
the numbers of the dead who lay beneath our feet.
I was so great an
admirer of Norman and Gothic architecture that there was scarcely
a specimen of it in London which I did not frequently visit. One
of the most interesting examples I found in the Norman portion of
St. Saviours Church, near London Bridge , through some of it has
since been destroyed by the so-called "restoration" in
1831. The new work has been executed in the worst taste and
feeling. I also greatly admired the Norman chapel of the Tower,
and some Norman portions of the Church of St. Bartholomew the
Less, near Smithfield.
No style of
architecture that I have ever seen has so impressed me with its
intrinsic gravity, and I may say solemnity, as that of the
Norman. There is a serious earnestness in its grave simplicity
that has a peculiar influence upon the mind; and I have little
doubt that this was felt, and understood by those true architects
who designed and built the noble cathedrals at Durham and
elsewhere. But there, as elsewhere, some of our modern so-called
"Architects" have made sad havoc with the earliest and
most impressive portions of those grand and truly interesting
remains, by their "Restorations", as they term it --
but which I call Defamations.
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