Great Britons

Written by Eric Olsen
Published December 02, 2002

In conjunction with the series of the same name, the BBC ran a competition for Britons to vote on the Great Britons. The top 10 are as follows:

    1 Churchill 456,498 (28.1%)

    2 Brunel 398,526 (24.6%)

    3 Diana 225,584 (13.9%)

    4 Darwin 112,496 (6.9%)

    5 Shakespeare 109,919 (6.8%)

    6 Newton 84,628 (5.2%)

    7 Elizabeth I 71,928 (4.4%)

    8 Lennon 68,445 (4.2%)

    9 Nelson 49,171 (3%)

    10 Cromwell 45,053 (2.8%)
August historical personages all, although I doubt Diana will be held above Shakespeare (!!) in another hundred years. But of the ten, I have to admit, I had never heard of #2, Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806 - 1859). Talk about feeling stupid. Here's some bio on the guy who "built modern Britain":
    The son of a French engineer, Brunel was born in Portsmouth and educated at Hove and the Collège Henri Quatre, Paris. He returned to England in 1823.

    His first notable achievement was to take part in planning (with his father) the Thames Tunnel from Rotherhithe to Wapping; the tunnel was finally completed in 1843.

    He then planned the Clifton Suspension Bridge, over the River Avon, which was completed posthumously in 1864, using chains from his own Hungerford Suspension Bridge.

    The possibility of using steam as a means of powering ships across the ocean fascinated Brunel. He built three extraordinary ships mid-century, revolutionising maritime travel. One of his ships, the SS Great Britain, the first screw-propeller driven iron ship to cross the Atlantic, survives today and is on display in Bristol.

    The work for which he is probably best remembered is his construction of a network of tunnels, bridges and viaducts for the Great Western Railway. In March 1833, he was appointed their chief engineer and his work began with the line that linked London to Bristol. Impressive achievements during its construction included the viaducts at Hanwell and Chippenham, the Maidenhead Bridge, the Box Tunnel and the Bristol Temple Meads Station.

    ....Brunel is noted for introducing the broad gauge in place of the standard gauge railway track. While working on the railway line from Swindon to Gloucester and South Wales, he also devised the renowned combined truss and tubular suspension bridge that crosses the Wye at Chepstow. This design was further improved in his famous bridge over the Tamar at Saltash near Plymouth. Brunel died shortly after the completion of the Saltash Bridge.

    Did you know?

    Brunel's father was a French royalist, who had fled the Revolution.

    The Duke of Wellington was against the Great Western Railway. He is reported to have said '... it will only encourage the lower classes to move about ...'

    On completion, Box Tunnel, in Wiltshire, was the longest railway tunnel in the world.

    Brunel also designed railways in India (Bengal) and Italy (Genoa and Florence).

    He smoked over 40 cigars a day, kept in a purpose-built bag, which he carried with him at all times.

Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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Great Britons
Published: December 02, 2002
Type:
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: News, Video: Television
Writer: Eric Olsen
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Comments

#1 — July 11, 2005 @ 22:41PM — Omni Temporal

At least there is some reassurance in knowing that the Brits are as silly as Americans. Well, not quite as silly.

#2 — July 22, 2005 @ 03:04AM — dave

I read somewhere that Brunel introduced the broad gauge to cover up a contractual mistake which led to the Box Railway tunnel being accidentally too wide, and the broad gauge was introduced as a cover up to explain the vast cost over run this caused. Any truth in this?

Dave

#3 — November 9, 2005 @ 17:14PM — Igorek [URL]

Have a great trip! Looking forward to some deep thoughts and awesome pictures. See you when you get back

#4 — November 9, 2005 @ 17:58PM — Igorek [URL]

Have a great trip! Looking forward to some deep thoughts and awesome pictures. See you when you get back

#5 — November 10, 2005 @ 14:39PM — Max Kayne [URL]

I am delighted that you have chosen to respond at last to one of the people posting comments on your blog. While the subject of the sex/slave trade is indeed horrendous, I am sure I am not alone in wishing that you would engage and debate with those of us posing hard and difficult questions about the impending EU Constitutioncrisis that is likely to result from a rejection by French and Dutch voters. Surely this is a paramount subject for you - Commissioner for Institutional Relations and Communication - to be addressing. It wont go away, you know.tadalafil
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