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Episode details

Radio 4,01 Feb 2017,15 mins

Available for 16 days

Thomas Telford's extraordinary career reached its zenith with the construction of the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct. Begun in 1795 - it opened in 1805. Still in use today, it carries the Llangollen Canal, towering 100 feet high and 1,000 feet long over the valley of the River Dee. It was built with simple technology, no safety ropes and no experience of building anything so high. Unusually, care was paid to protecting the workforce: only one man died during construction (and that death was thought to be due to carelessness). It is seen as Telford's masterpiece and he chose it above all of his creations as the background to his official portrait in the Institution of Civil Engineers. Julian Glover has written the first full modern biography of Thomas Telford: a shepherd's son, who revolutionised British engineering and set the stage for the Industrial Revolution. Read by Robin Laing. Abridged by David Jackson Young Producer: Kirsteen Cameron. First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in January 2017.

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