Christopher Blackett

For his son, the Member of Parliament,, see Christopher Blackett (politician).
Portrait of Christopher Blackett

Christopher Blackett (1751 – 25 January 1829) owned the Northumberland colliery at Wylam that built Puffing Billy, the first commercial adhesion steam locomotive. He was also the founding owner of The Globe newspaper in 1803.[1][2][3]

Life

Blackett was born a Blackett of Wylam and the eldest son by the second marriage of John Blackett, a High Sheriff of Northumberland, whose family descended from Christopher Blackett, an elder brother of Sir William Blackett, and Alice Fenwick, sole heir of her father. In 1659 the coal-rich manor of Wylam passed by inheritance from the Fenwicks to Christopher Blackett (ancestor of article subject) and around 1748 the Wylam waggonway was constructed by John Blackett. This enabled coal to be transported five miles from Wylam colliery to the staithes at Lemington, then on the River Tyne.[4][5]

The Christopher Blackett of this article succeeded to the lordship of the Manor of Wylam and its collieries in 1800.[2] Prior this he had been Postmaster of Newcastle and agent for the Blackett-Beaumont Lead Mines in the North Pennines.[6]

In 1804 Christopher Blackett ordered a locomotive from Richard Trevithick. Christopher Blackett owned the Globe newspaper in London which he established in 1803. Norman Hill suggests this is how he encountered Trevithick.[2] Blackett's commissioned engine from Trevithick must have been a sizeable work in 1804. It was made by John Whinfield at Pipewell in Gateshead.[7] Sadly it proved too heavy for the wooden rails of the waggonway: Whinfield and Blackett fell out.[7]

Blackett then ordered that the waggonway be relaid with cast-iron plate rails. That undertaken, in 1808 Blackett asked Trevithick for another locomotive and was curtly told Trevithick had "discontinued the business".[8] Next, Blackett instructed his viewer (manager), William Hedley, assisted by his foreman smith, Timothy Hackworth to build an alternative locomotive. After several experiments Puffing Billy and Wylam Dilly were constructed in 1813-14 and were hauling coal waggons from Wylam to Lemington.[9][10] Christopher Blackett's son and heir, Christopher Blackett, and his son John Frederick Burgoyne Blackett both became Members of Parliament. His youngest son, Rev John Alexander Blackett (1803-1865), in 1855 inherited the Whitfield, Northumberland estates of his wife's uncle, William Ord, and changed his name to Blackett-Ord.[11][12]

Significance

Using the published sources like Philip Brook (further reading) the conclusion about Christopher Blackett's importance to the development of the steam locomotive in the United Kingdom is this: he was not an engineer but he was the entrepreneur prepared to invest in the very foundations of steam locomotive technology not once but twice. Hence Norman Hill wrote "the importance of Christopher Blackett's place in the introduction of the steam locomotive engine has been sadly overlooked".[2] Brooks wrote of Christopher "He had been instrumental in encouraging the development of locomotives and without his tenacity, the important experiments carried out might never have taken place".[13] Likely it is that they would have happened but the point is they actually successfully happened at Wylam with Blackett's patronage.

References

  1. Timothy Hackworth and the Locomotive by Robert Young page 53 says of Blackett "Better known in London as the proprietor of the Globe newspaper, established in 1803". Young was published in 1923 and 1975. It is likely that Young sources subsequent quoted references to this linkage.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Hill 2007, p. 6.
  3. Blacketts and Literature at http://www.theblacketts.com/articles/47-blacketts-and-literature retrieved 7th November 2013.
  4. Kirtley, Longbottom & Blackett 2013, pp. 85–86.
  5. Purdue 2004, pp. 128–131.
  6. Brooks 1975, p. 9.
  7. 1 2 Hill 2007, p. 7.
  8. Hill 2007, p. 8.
  9. Kirtley, Longbottom & Blackett 2013, pp. 104
  10. Purdue 2004, pp. 131–132
  11. Kirtley, Longbottom & Blackett 2013, pp. 104–105.
  12. Purdue 2004, p. 134.
  13. Brooks 1975, p. 29.

Sources

Further reading

External links

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