George Christian Darbyshire
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George Christian Darbyshire | |
|---|---|
George Christian Darbyshire | |
| Born | 1820 |
| Died | 5 June 1898 (aged 77) |
| Engineering career | |
| Discipline | civil engineer |
| Projects | Bendigo railway line, Victoria |
George Christian Darbyshire (1820 – 5 June 1898[1]) was an English and Australian civil engineer. He was the second son of George Darbyshire, also a surveyor and railway engineer.
Darbyshire was born at sea in 1820 and spent his early life in Derby, England. His father, George was a civil engineer who worked for George Stephenson. His mother was Elizabeth Darbyshire, née Smith. Later Darbyshire worked under Robert Stephenson and was involved on the various lines in the north engineered by Robert Stephenson. He married his wife Maria Wragg in 1846 when he was aged 21. Maria was the daughter of Samuel Wragg, an engineer who also worked for George Stephenson, and the widow of a man called Stafford who was killed in an accident.[2]
Training
Darbyshire in evidence to the Select Committee on the Chewton Railway Station given on 12 June 1863 related that his whole railway experience in Britain had been on the Midland Railway. Robert Stephenson was engineer for the Midland Railway on which construction began in February 1837. The Midland Railway, under Hudson became an extensive system through construction and acquisitions. Darbyshire's brother, John Darbyshire who also came out to Victoria, became Mining surveyor and later Inspector of Mines with the Victorian government Mines department.[2][3]
However, Darbyshire may also have trained as a surveyor in England, being initially employed by his father in the firm of George Darbyshire and Sons, then with his brother in the partnership John and George C Darbyshire and were responsible for a number of surveys for Tithe maps in around 1839–41.
Migration to Australia
Darbyshire travelled to Australia with his wife Maria on the Richard arriving in Melbourne on 7 July 1853 and became Engineer of Construction, and District Surveyor under the Victorian Government at Williamstown in 1854. He was also appointed deputy surveyor general of Victoria on 9 April 1857, to the Board of Science on 4 June 1858, and Territorial Magistrate for Wyndham on 7 April 1865.[4]
Darbyshire's migration to Victoria coincides with the end of what is now termed the 'railway mania'. The drop off in competing proposals and line construction saw many men who had entered the new profession of civil engineer become unemployed. The obituaries of a number of these early members of the profession published by the ICE refer to the member being forced to retreat to the family property to be supported through the downturn, or for those from less well established families to find employment overseas.[2]
Victorian Railways
He took up a post as Engineer for the Melbourne, Mount Alexander and Murray River Railway Company in 1855. He was then appointed Engineer-in-Chief of the Victorian Railways, and was in that post from April 1856 to 17 May 1860, after which he was replaced by Thomas Higinbotham.[5]
The Victorian Government Railway Department was established in 1856 as part of the Board of Land and Works. Among Darbyshire's first responsibilities was supervising the design and construction of the line to Sandhurst (Bendigo) and Echuca.[6]
Darbyshire saw himself as an engineer, and was recruited to the Survey Department by the Surveyor General Andrew Clarke, as an engineer.[7][8] In response to a request to describe an engineer when appearing before the Select Committee upon the Railways on 4 May 1860, he stated: A man who has actually been employed for some years, having actual experience in the working and construction is a civil engineer, as compared with the man who has no experience in works of construction.
Darbyshire was well experienced in railway work when he came to Victoria, and was highly skilled in surveying and designing a rail line. A small but significant example is that the lines were set out with the section in the stations above the general grade and at a flatter grade than the line. That produced a situation in which the trains approached the platform on an up grade that aided braking, and departed on a down grade that aided starting. Higinbotham was not aware of that detail and changed some station locations after he took over, to the detriment of efficient running. The proposed station at Chewton had to be abandoned because trains to Castlemaine could not stop on the grade at the point where Higinbotham had sited the station, and trains to Melbourne were unable to start up the grade if they stopped there.