'Sir John Wolfe-Barry' (
December 7,
1836 –
January 22,
1918) was an
English civil engineer of the late
19th and early
20th century. His most famous project was the construction of
Tower Bridge over the River
Thames in
London.
Early career
Wolfe-Barry, the youngest son of
architect Sir
Charles Barry, added 'Wolfe' to his inherited name in 1898. He was educated at
Glenalmond and
King’s College London, and was a pupil of civil engineer Sir
John Hawkshaw, as was
Henri Marc Brunel, son of the great
Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Barry and Hawkshaw worked on railway bridge crossings across the Thames, among other projects (Brunel pursued his own business from
1871, but in
1878 went into partnership with Barry). Barry began his own practice in
1867, and carried out more work for the railways.
Tower Bridge
However, it was Tower Bridge that really made Wolfe-Barry's name. In 1878,
architect Horace Jones first proposed a low-level
bascule bridge. An Act of Parliament allowing the Corporation of the
City of London to build it was passed in 1885. Jones was appointed architect, and knighted, but died the same year. Wolfe-Barry, already well-established with experience of bridges across the Thames, then took control.
Other projects
His other projects included:
★
Cannon Street Railway Bridge (aka the Alexandra Bridge) (1866)
★
Blackfriars Railway Bridge (aka St Paul's Bridge), London (1886)
★ docks at
Barry near
Cardiff, south
Wales
★
District Line of the
London Underground (with Sir John Hawkshaw)
★ pumping stations on the
Regent's Canal, north London
★
Kew Bridge, west London (1903)
★ expansion of
Greenland Dock, Surrey Docks (now
Surrey Quays), south-east London (1904)
Industry standardisation
A recognised industry leader (he was elected President of the
Institution of Civil Engineers in 1896, knighted in 1897, and served on several Royal Commissons), Wolfe-Barry played a prominent role in the development of industry standardisation, urging the ICE's Council to form a committee to focus on standards for iron and steel sections.
Two members each from the ICE, the
Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the
Institution of Naval Architects and the Iron and Steel Institute first met on
26 April 1901. With the
Institution of Electrical Engineers who joining the following year, these bodies were the founder institutions of what is today the
British Standards Institution or BSI.
Late career
He was chairman of
Cable and Wireless from 1900 to 1917.
In 1902 Wolfe-Barry joined the consulting firm Robert White & Partners, and it was renamed Wolfe-Barry, Robert White & Partners (later, 1946, Sir Bruce White, Wolfe Barry and Partners – now part of London-based consultancy Beckett Rankine Partnership).
Wolfe-Barry died in January 1918 and was buried in
Brookwood Cemetery near
Woking in
Surrey.
External links
★
John Wolfe-Barry's Gravesite