Person    | Male  Born 9/8/1757  Died 2/9/1834

Thomas Telford

Categories: Architecture, Engineering

Countries: Scotland

Stonemason, architect and civil engineer. Born Eskdale, Dumfriesshire. Aged 12 left school to work for a local stonemason. Aged 25 rode on horseback to London. Built roads, bridges and canals. Telford  founded the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1818, and was its first president.

Never married and spent his live travelling from one project to another. An early nick-name was "Laughing Tam"; his admirer Robert Southey called him "Colossus of Roads". Telford New Town is named after him. Died at home at 24 Abingdon Street. The first engineer to be buried in Westminster Abbey.

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Thomas Telford

Commemorated ati

Skempton Building plaques

2018: Eamonn Doyle has written to correct our "east to west", saying that the...

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Thomas Telford - Abingdon Street - lost

Telford's plaque was recovered by the LCC in 1959, and donated to the Institu...

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Thomas Telford - Institution of Civil Engineers 1

This is the plaque originally erected in Abingdon Street. Rescued from that w...

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