
Born in Glasgow in 1772, Robert Stevenson faced a precarious childhood after the loss of his father and uncle to fever. Despite these hardships, he pursued a solid education at the Andersonian Institution in Glasgow and the University of Edinburgh, laying the groundwork for a remarkable engineering career. Early on he joined the Northern Lighthouse Board, quickly proving his aptitude for both practical design and scientific inquiry.
Stevenson’s legacy is built on an astonishing array of projects—lighthouses that guided ships along treacherous coasts, innovative bridges, harbours, roads, and early railway experiments. His meticulous reports, diary entries, and papers for learned societies reveal a mind constantly probing the limits of contemporary technology. This memoir stitches together those original documents, offering listeners a genuine glimpse into the engineer’s own voice and the era’s evolving methods.
For anyone fascinated by the birth of modern civil engineering, the narrative provides not only a portrait of a pioneering Scotsman but also a window onto the professional challenges and triumphs of the early nineteenth century.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (466K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chris Curnow, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2017-09-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1815–1886
Part of the famous Stevenson engineering family, this Scottish civil engineer designed more than 30 lighthouses around Scotland and helped carry on one of the best-known lighthouse-building traditions in Britain. He also wrote about engineering, sharing practical knowledge drawn from a lifetime of coastal work.
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