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JOHN JACKSON (UK POLITICIAN)

'Sir John Jackson' (4 February 185114 December 1919) was a Unionist Member of Parliament for Devonport, from 1910-8.
Born at York, he worked in Newcastle before studying engineering at Edinburgh University under Peter Guthrie Tait.

Contents
Notable works
Sources

Notable works


Jackson specialised in contracting the design and build of major marine works, and his efficiency at this earned him his knighthood. Notable achievements in the Great Britain were:

Glasgow Stobcross docks,

Middlesbrough docks

Hartlepool docks

★ North Sunderland docks

Swansea docks

Methil docks

Barry deep lock

★ part of Manchester Ship Canal

Burntisland harbour and breakwaters

★ the Admiralty docks at Keyham, Plymouth

★ the Admiralty pier and commercial harbour at Dover

★ and the foundations for Tower Bridge.
Overseas he created:

Simonstown harbour, South Africa

Singapore harbour

★ the high-altitude railway line from Arica to La Paz in Bolivia

★ the Hindiya Barrage across the Euphrates River, Mesopotamia (Iraq) with Sir William Willcocks

★ the port at as-Salif

★ irrigation systems in the Lebanon
Proposals to build a bridge between Calais and Dover and a second trans-Siberian railway were cut short by the start of the Great War.
On Tait's death in 1901 Jackson endowed a research fund named after him.
Jackson founded the YMCA in Luzembourg, England in 1913.
Between 1910-1918, Jackson was the Unionist MP for Devonport, retiring from politics when his constituency was merged into another.

Sources





★ ''The Times'' Obituary 16 Dec 1919

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