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3RP DUKE OF See also: British inland navigation, younger son of the ist duke, was See also: born on the 21st of May 1736
.
Scroop, 1st duke of Bridgewater (1681-1745), was the son of the 3rd See also: earl of Bridgewater, and was created a duke in 1720; he was the See also: great-See also: grandson of See also: John
See also: Egerton, ist earl of Bridgewater (d
.
1649; cr
.
1617), whose name is associated with the production of See also: Milton's Comus; and the latter was the son of See also: Sir See also: Thomas Egerton (154o-1617),
See also: Queen See also: Elizabeth's
See also: lord keeper and See also: James I.'s lord chancellor, who was created baron of
See also: Ellesmere in 1603, and in 1616 Viscount Brackley (q.v.)
.
See also: Francis Egerton succeeded to the dukedom at the age of twelve on the See also: death of his See also: brother, the 2nd duke
.
As a See also: child he was sickly and of such unpromising intellectual capacity that at one See also: time the idea of cutting the entail was seriously entertained
.
Shortly. after attaining his majority he became engaged to the beautiful duchess of See also: Hamilton, but her refusal to give up the acquaintance of her
See also: sister, Lady See also: Coventry, led to the breaking off of the match
.
Thereupon the duke broke up his See also: London establishment, and retiring to his estate at Worsley, devoted himself to the making of canals
.
The navigable canal from Worsley to Manchester which he projected for the transport of the See also: coal obtained on his estates was (with the exception of the Sankey canal) the first great undertaking of the kind executed in Great Britain in See also: modern times
.
The construction of this remarkable See also: work, with its famous aqueduct across the Irwell, was carried out by James See also: Brindley, the celebrated engineer
.
The completion of this canal led the duke to undertake a still more ambitious work
.
In 1762 he obtained See also: parliamentary See also: powers to provide an improved waterway between Liverpool and Manchester by means of a canal
.
The difficulties encountered in the execution of the latter work were still more formidable than those of the Worsley canal, involving, as they did, the carrying of the canal over SaleSee also: Moor See also: Moss
.
But the See also: genius of Brindley, his engineer, proved See also: superior to all obstacles, and though at one See also: period of the undertaking the See also: financial re-See also: sources of the duke were almost exhausted, the work was carried to a triumphant conclusion
.
The untiring perseverance displayed by the duke in surmounting the various difficulties that retarded the accomplishment of his projects, together with the pecuniary restrictions he imposed on himself in See also: order to supply the necessary capital (at one time he reduced his See also: personal expenses to £400 a See also: year), affords an instructive example of that energy and self-denial on which the success of great undertakings so much depends
.
Both these canals were completed when the duke was only See also: thirty-six years of age, and the See also: remainder of his See also: life was spent in extending them and in improving his estates ; and during the latter years of his life he derived a princely income from the success of his enterprise
.
Though a steady supporter of Pitt's administration, he never took any prominent See also: part in politics
.
He died unmarried on the 8th of See also: March 1803, when the ducal title became
See also: extinct, but the earldom of Bridgewater passed to a See also: cousin, John See also: William Egerton, who became 7th earl
.
By his will he devised his canals and estates on
See also: trust, under which his See also: nephew, the See also: marquess of Stafford (afterwards first duke of See also: Sutherland), became the first beneficiary, and next his son Francis Leveson See also: Gower (afterwards first earl of Ellesmere) and his issue
.
In order that the trust should last as long as possible, an extra-ordinary use was made of the legal See also: rule that See also: property may besettled for the duration of lives in being and twenty-one years after, by choosing a great number of persons connected with the duke and their living issue and adding to them the peers ,who had taken their seats in the See also: House of Lords on or before the duke's decease
.
Though the last of the peers died in 1857, one of the commoners survived till the 19th of See also: October 1883, and consequently the trust did not expire till the 19th of October 1903, when the whole property passed under the undivided control of the earl of Ellesmere
.
The canals, however, had in 1872 been transferred to the Bridgewater Navigation See also: Company, by whom they were sold in 1887 to the Manchester See also: Ship Canal Company
.
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