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See also: English engineer and sanitarian, was See also: born at See also: Bristol on the 28th of See also: February 181o
.
His See also: father was a See also: mason and builder at Chorley, See also: Lancashire, and he himself began his See also: engineering See also: education by working in a stonemason's yard
.
In 1831 he obtained employment under Jesse See also: Hartley in the engineer's office at the Liverpool docks, and for four years from 1836 he was engaged under Robert Stephenson as assistant See also: resident engineer for the Blisworth section of what is now the See also: London & See also: North-Western See also: main See also: line from London to the North
.
Returning to Liverpool, he spent some years as assistant-surveyor to the corporation, and then in 1844 accepted an engineering See also: post on the Bridgewater Canal
.
Three years later he returned to Liverpool, to super-intend the design and construction of the famous brick-arched ceiling in the St See also: George's See also: Hall, in succession to, his friend H
.
L
.
Elmes
.
During this
See also: period See also: Rawlinson's reputation as a sanitarian had been growing, and when the Public See also: Health See also: Act was passed in 1848 he was appointed one of the first inspectors under it
.
He inspected many of the chief towns of See also: England, and his reports on the sanitary conditions he found brought him in many cases into See also: great unpopularity with the -municipal rulers
.
Early in 1855 popular feeling was so aroused by the waste of See also: life that was going on among the See also: British troops in the See also: Crimea through disease, and by the mismanagement of the See also: campaign, that the See also: Aberdeen See also: ministry was forced to resign
.
See also: Lord Palmerston, who then became See also: prime See also: minister, sent a sanitary commission, consisting of Rawlinson and two medical members (Dr See also: John
See also: Sutherland and Dr H
.
Gavin), with full See also: powers from the War Office, to do whatever it thought would See also: lead to better hygienic conditions in See also: camp and hospital
.
The commission reached Constantinople inSee also: March, and, by insisting on what now seem the most obvious precautions, succeeded within a few
See also: weeks in reducing the See also: death-See also: rate in the Levantine hospitals from 42 to 2i%
.
Passing on to the Crimea, it effected a similar improvement there, and by the end of the See also: year the health of the whole British army in the See also: field was even better than it enjoyed at home
.
Rawlinson's next great public service, for which he was made C.B. in 1865, was in connexion with the
See also: distress caused in Lancashire by the collapse of the See also: cotton-manufacturing industry consequent on the See also: American See also: Civil War
.
In 1863 it was suggested that, in See also: order to provide employment for the starving operatives, the See also: government should start See also: works of " utility, profit and See also: ornament," and Rawlinson being sent to make an official investigation into the question, reported, after visiting nearly Too towns, that 1Z million sterling might be advantageously expended in providing See also: water-supply and drainage, forming streets, &c., in those places
.
The result was that the See also: Treasury was authorized to advance £2,200,000 the amount was afterwards increased) at 31% for carrying out such works, which proved of enormous public benefit
.
In 1866 he acted as chairman of the Royal Commission on the Pollution of See also: Rivers, and a few years later - was appointed chief engineering inspector to the See also: Local Government See also: Board; on retiring from this position in 1888 he was promoted to be K.C.B
.
In 1894 he served as president of the Institution of Civil See also: Engineers
.
He died in London on the 31st of May 1898
.
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