'Sir Daniel Gooch, 1st Baronet' (
August 24 1816 –
October 15 1889) was first
chief mechanical engineer of the
Great Western Railway from
1837 to
1864 and its
Chairman from
1865 to 1889.
Born in
Bedlington,
Northumberland, the son of an ironfounder, he trained in engineering with a variety of companies, including a period with
Robert Stephenson and Company, but was aged barely 21 when recruited by
Isambard Kingdom Brunel for the Great Western Railway. His earliest days with the company were a struggle to keep the miscellaneous collection of 7 ft 0¼ in (2140 mm)
broad gauge steam locomotives ordered by Brunel working. Taking the best of these, the
GWR Star Class (on which he and Brunel had improved the
blastpipe arrangement) as a model, he designed the
GWR Firefly Class of
2-2-2 express passenger locomotives introduced in
1840. In comparative trials by the Gauge Commissioners, ''Ixion'' of this class proved capable of speeds greater than its
standard gauge challenger. In
1843 Gooch introduced a new form of locomotive
valve gear.
In
1840, Gooch was responsible for identifying the site of
Swindon Works and in
1846 for designing the first complete locomotive to be constructed there, ''Great Western'', prototype of the
GWR Iron Duke Class of
4-2-2s which were able to achieve 60
miles per hour (90 km/h) and which, much renewed, saw out the broad gauge.
Recalled to the Great Western Railway Company as Chairman in 1865, he led it out of near-bankruptcy and took a particular interest in construction of the
Severn Tunnel; however, final abandonment of the broad gauge did not take place until after his death.
He was also responsible for laying the first successful
Transatlantic telegraph cable, using the
SS Great Eastern (1885/86), as chief engineer of the Telegraph Construction Company, of which he became Chairman.
He married Margaret Tanner in
1838. Following her death in
1868 he married Emily Burder in
1870; she died in 1901. He was
Conservative MP for
Cricklade from
1865 to
1885 and in
1866 was created a
Baronet in recognition of his cable work. From 1859 he lived at
Clewer Park in Windsor. His brothers
John Viret Gooch,
Thomas Longridge Gooch and William Frederick Gooch were also railway engineers.
References
★
Memoirs & Diary, Gooch, Daniel, , , David & Charles, 1972, ISBN 0-7153-5609-7
★
Locomotive Engineers of the GWR, Griffiths, Derek, , , Patrick Stephens Ltd, 1987, ISBN 0-85059-819-2
★ (
September 24 2004), ''
Sir Daniel Gooch''. Retrieved
February 9 2005.