William Moorsom

Captain William Scarth Moorsom (1804–1863) was an English soldier and engineer. He was born in Whitby to a military family, being the son of an admiral, and trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, becoming a captain in the 52nd regiment. After assisting Robert Stephenson he created railway lines in England, Belgium, Germany and Ceylon.

Overview
Moorsom was the youngest of the four sons of Admiral Sir Robert Moorsom, who had served at the Trafalgar, and his wife Eleanor.

He entered the Royal Military College in 1819, and became especially adept in fortification and military sur­veying. In 1823 he joined the 79th Highlanders Regiment, then stationed in Ireland. During his stay there, he made a survey of Dublin and its neighbourhood. This remained in use until superseded by the Ord­nance Survey publication. In 1825 he served in the Mediterranean at the rank of lieutenant of the 7th. Fusileers. In 1826 he transferred to the 69th Regiment, and then to the 52nd Light Infantry in Nova Scotia.

During this time he served as deputy quartermaster-general. He produced a survey of the harbour and environs of Halifax, along with reports on transport feasibility to all parts of the province, and published a monograph Letters From Nova Scotia; comprising Sketches of a Young Country in 1830.

Although he was highly regarded he was unable to purchase a suitable promotion so returned to England and bought out his commission in 1832. He had met his wife, Isabella Ann Morris, daughter of Lewis Wilkins, judge and head of the supreme court in Nova Scotia. They lived with his father at Cosgrove Priory, near Stony Stratford, until his death in April 1835.

With his experience of military surveying Moorsom assisted in the construction of the London and Birmingham Railway construction of which had begun in 1833 and of which his eldest brother, Constantine Richard Moorsom was Secretary to the Board.

Moorsom's survey of the valley of the Ouse, which allowed for the line to be straightened, and a large amount of embankment dispensed with, attracted the at­tention Robert Stephenson He then spent two years studying new railway lines all over the country and in 1836 was approached to undertake a survey of the country between Birmingham and Gloucester for the purposes of building a railway

Lickey Incline
The Birmingham and Gloucester Railway had found Brunel's proposals out of its financial reach. His brief in 1836 was to build the line as cheaply as possible, which he did by following open country, avoiding populated areas where land prices would be higher. Arriving at the Lickey Hills there was no option but to climb them, using cable assistance if necessary.

Moorsom's preference was for locomotives, from experience gained observing mineral railways in the north. The general opinion at that time was that adhesion working was not possible on such an incline and the directors of the company, set out to buy stationary engines for cable working. They found the cost prohibitive so, with the backing of the Deputy Chairman, Mr. Samuel Baker, Moorsom was allowed to continue with what at the time was a considerable gamble. The resulting Lickey Incline has entered railway folklore.

Since no English manufacturer would, or could, supply him, he ordered 4-2-0 locomotives from Norris of Philadelphia in the United States. The loco they supplied had four foot drivers, cylinder bore of 101 inches and 18 inch stroke, weighing less than 10 tons.

Moorsom was also awarded the Telford Medal for his method of using iron caissons filled with concrete and masonry to form the foundations of a three-arch viaduct across the river Avon, near Tewkesbury.

In passing, one of his assistants was Herbert Spencer, the philosopher, regarded as the founder of social science. F. R. Conder was critical of Moorsom's management style and engineering abilities in his Personal Recollections of English Engineers (1868) Spencer was less recriminatory in his Autobiography (1904) describing Moorsom as a kind man, although he felt that he had treated some subordinates meanly. Chrimes suggests that his problems may have been "due to the financial pressures of bringing up a large family, combined with working for companies which had limited financial resources."

The period of 1844–45 proved to be especially busy with new lines from Birmingham to Wolverhampton, Shrewsbury, Newton, and Chester,; the Yarmouth Junction, from Diss and Beccles, the Irish Great Western, from Naas, by Tullamore, to Galway, the Metropo­litan Counties Junction, from Gravesend, by Reigate, Dorking, Weybridge, Staines, Rickmansworth, St. Albans, Chelmsford, and Billericay to Tilbury, the London, Hammersmith, Staines, and Windsor, 25 miles, and several smaller lines. The Southampton and Dorchester Railway in 1847 was especially notable as "Castleman' Corkscrew" due to the inststence of its promoters that it should serve as many of the local communities as possible. At this time, Moorsom, surveyed the line from Exeter and Plymouth to Falmouth, the West Cornwall Railway, from Truro to Penzance

In 1845 he was in Ireland working on the Waterford and Kilkenny Railway Of note was a timber viaduct over the River Nore,85 feet in height and of 200 feet span, at the time the largest of its type in the British Isles.

In 1850 he won the Prussian government's engineering prize for his design for a bridge across the Rhine at Cologne on the line from Prussia's Rhine Province to Antwerp in Belgium for the Königlich Preußische und Großherzoglich Hessische Staatseisenbahn (K.P.u.G.H.St.E.). However the design was not used.

For the next four years there was a general retraction of the industry and in 1852 he became involved with the Britannia and Baltimore Mining Company to prospect for and mine gold in the United Kingdom. Although an amount of gold was produced it was not enough for the company to be viable.

During this period he had been appointed engineer to the Cromford and High Peak Railway which was in deep financial difficulty. In 1857 the Stockport, Disley and Whaley Bridge Railway was opened, with a proposal to link with the Cromford line. Plans were laid to capitalise on this by substantially improving the line. However the necessary funds were not forthcoming and there was oppostition from other railway companies. The CH&HPR and Moorsom parted company in about 1856.

Over the years he had gained the reputation of taking on too many schemes: a weakness in which he was not alone, but some of his surveys were found to be wanting. He was frequently replaced by other engineers, and he found it difficult to obtain work. In 1856 he was asked to survey the railway from Kandy to Colombo Ceylon (Sri Lanka) Under pressure to complete the work before the rainy season, he began early in January and pre­sented his report in May, and part of the work proved to be faulty.

In 1860, his wife Isabella died and, in 1862 he was Engineer the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway

He had been elected an Associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers, on 24 March 1835, and was transferred to the class of Members on the 20th of February, 1849. Among a number of papers that he read was, in 1852, Description of the viaduct erected over the river Nore, near Thomastown . He became a Member of the Society of Arts on the 31st of January, 1843.

He occupied his retirement by writing a history of his regiment and died of cancer, after a long and painful illness, at his home, 17A Great George Street, Westminster, on 3 June 1863, aged 61, and was buried at Kensal Green cemetery.