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See also: English See also: civil engineer, was See also: born at Austhorpe See also: Lodge, near See also: Leeds, on the 8th of See also: June 1724
.
He received a See also: good See also: education at the grammar school of Leeds
.
At an early age he showed a liking for the use of See also: mechanical tools, and in his fourteenth or fifteenth See also: year contrived to make a turning-See also: lathe
.
On leaving school in his sixteenth year he was employed in the office of his See also: father, an attorney, but, after attending for some months in 1742 the courts at See also: Westminster See also: Hall, he requested to be allowed to follow some mechanical profession
.
He became apprentice to a philosophical instrument maker, and in 1750 set up in business on his own account
.
Besides improving various mathematical
See also: instruments used in navigation and astronomy, he carried on experiments in regard to other mechanical appliances, amongst the most important being a series on which he founded a paper—for which he received the See also: Copley medal of the Royal Society in 1759—entitled An Experimental Inquiry concerning the Native See also: Powers of See also: Water and See also: Wind to turn Mills and other See also: Machines depending on a Circular Motion
.
In 1754 he made a tour of the Low Countries to study the See also: great canal
See also: works of See also: foreign See also: engineers
.
Already by his papers read before the Royal Society and his intercourse with scientific men his abilities as an engineer had become well known, and in 1756 application was made to him to reconstruct the Eddystone lighthouse, which had been burnt down in See also: December of the previous year
.
After the completion of the new tower in 1759, See also: Smeaton's advice was frequently sought in regard to important See also: engineering projects, including the construction of canals (especially the Forth and See also: Clyde canal), the drainage of See also: fens, the designing of harbours and the repair and erection of See also: bridges, though many of the schemes he See also: drew up were not carried out on account of the general lack of capital
.
He was also employed in designing numerous waterwheels, windmills, pumps, and other mechanical appliances
.
A considerable portion of his See also: time was devoted to astronomical studies and observations, on which he read various papers before the Royal Society
.
A year before his See also: death he announced that he wished " to dedicate the chief See also: part of his remaining time to the description of the several works performed under his direction," but he completed nothing more than the Narrative of the See also: Building of the Eddystone See also: Light-See also: house, which had already appeared
.
He died at Austhorpe on the 28th of See also: October 1792, and was buried in the old parish See also: church of Whitkirk
.
See
See also: John
See also: Holmes, A See also: Short Narrative of the See also: Genius, See also: Life and Works of the See also: late Mr John Smeaton (1793); and S
.
See also: Smiles, Lives of the Engineers
.
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