Description

Book Synopsis


William Jervois was a military engineer who rose to prominence as a result of Lord Palmerston’s extensive programme of fortification against a feared French invasion in the middle years of the nineteenth century. Ramparts of Empire is a detailed and engaging study of his life and works. As the first comprehensive study of this influential Victorian, the bookis an important contribution to military and engineering history as well as to the history of Imperial Britain.

The text is richly illustrated with photographs and plans of Jervois’ forts, while supporting appendices provide a mine of supplementary information. This includes a gazetteer of Jervois’ works and documentary evidence of his involvement in plans for a Channel Tunnel and a proposal for attacking the seaboard of the United States.

In 1860, Palmerston’s parliament sanctioned the construction of the largest system of fortifications that the British Isles had ever seen, or would ever see again, to defend against a feared French invasion. For William Jervois, then a young major in the Royal Engineers, his appointment as ‘design leader’ of this programme was a major step in a career in fortress construction that would see his work in Britain, the Channel Islands, Ireland, Canada, Bermuda, India, and later, Australia and New Zealand.

Timothy Crick makes extensive use of extracts from Jervois’ diaries and illustrations of his fortresses to give the reader a rounded picture of this Royal Engineer’s wide-ranging career. He also captures a real sense of the fears of invasion that prevailed in this period. Throughout the book both the political background and the technical considerations involved in constructing forts and armaments are carefully explored to flesh out the motivations in what is sometimes referred to as the ‘Golden Age’ of British fort building.








Trade Review


‘The book is admirably illustrated and well designed’
‘The book is as excellent read as well as being authoritative’
John Harris, Fortress Study Group Casemate, 94 May 2012





‘Exceptionally well illustrated, reproducing numerous plans, diagrams and images, dominated by forts and other buildings, many from national collections.’
‘Essential reading for students of the Victorian Army and the Victorian Fortress.’ (Professor Andrew Lambert, British Journal for Military History Volume 1 (1), October 2014)




Table of Contents


CONTENTS



GLOSSARY

CHRONOLOGY INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER ONE: EARLY DAYS IN AFRICA

CHAPTER TWO: APPOINTMENT IN ALDERNEY

CHAPTER THREE: THE THREAT FROM FRANCE

CHAPTER FOUR: THE 1859 ROYAL COMMISSION

CHAPTER FIVE: DEFENDING THE NAVAL BASES

CHAPTER SIX: MISSION TO CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES

CHAPTER SEVEN: THE IRONCLAD FORTS

CHAPTER EIGHT: IMPERIAL PROGRESS

CHAPFER NINE: AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND AND THE THREAT FROM RUSSIA

CHAPTER TEN: COAST DEFENCE, HONOURS AND RETIREMENT

CHAPTER ELEVEN: JERVOIS IN CONTEXT

CHAPTER NOTES

APPENDIX A: Gazetteer: List of fortified works associated with Jervois

APPENDIX B: The Relative Industrial Strength of the Major Powers in the 19th Century

APPENDIX C: The 'Battle of Dorking' and its Successors

APPENDIX D: The Arming of the Coaling Stations, 1884

APPENDIX E: 'A Plan for Attacking the Seaboard of the United States'

APPENDIX F: Jervois and the Channel Tunnel (1883)

APPENDIX G: The Relative Value of the British Pound

SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

INDEX OF PEOPLE & PLACES


Ramparts of Empire: The Fortifications of Sir

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      Publisher: University of Exeter Press
      Publication Date: 27/02/2012
      ISBN13: 9781905816040, 978-1905816040
      ISBN10: 1905816049

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      William Jervois was a military engineer who rose to prominence as a result of Lord Palmerston’s extensive programme of fortification against a feared French invasion in the middle years of the nineteenth century. Ramparts of Empire is a detailed and engaging study of his life and works. As the first comprehensive study of this influential Victorian, the bookis an important contribution to military and engineering history as well as to the history of Imperial Britain.

      The text is richly illustrated with photographs and plans of Jervois’ forts, while supporting appendices provide a mine of supplementary information. This includes a gazetteer of Jervois’ works and documentary evidence of his involvement in plans for a Channel Tunnel and a proposal for attacking the seaboard of the United States.

      In 1860, Palmerston’s parliament sanctioned the construction of the largest system of fortifications that the British Isles had ever seen, or would ever see again, to defend against a feared French invasion. For William Jervois, then a young major in the Royal Engineers, his appointment as ‘design leader’ of this programme was a major step in a career in fortress construction that would see his work in Britain, the Channel Islands, Ireland, Canada, Bermuda, India, and later, Australia and New Zealand.

      Timothy Crick makes extensive use of extracts from Jervois’ diaries and illustrations of his fortresses to give the reader a rounded picture of this Royal Engineer’s wide-ranging career. He also captures a real sense of the fears of invasion that prevailed in this period. Throughout the book both the political background and the technical considerations involved in constructing forts and armaments are carefully explored to flesh out the motivations in what is sometimes referred to as the ‘Golden Age’ of British fort building.








      Trade Review


      ‘The book is admirably illustrated and well designed’
      ‘The book is as excellent read as well as being authoritative’
      John Harris, Fortress Study Group Casemate, 94 May 2012





      ‘Exceptionally well illustrated, reproducing numerous plans, diagrams and images, dominated by forts and other buildings, many from national collections.’
      ‘Essential reading for students of the Victorian Army and the Victorian Fortress.’ (Professor Andrew Lambert, British Journal for Military History Volume 1 (1), October 2014)




      Table of Contents


      CONTENTS



      GLOSSARY

      CHRONOLOGY INTRODUCTION

      CHAPTER ONE: EARLY DAYS IN AFRICA

      CHAPTER TWO: APPOINTMENT IN ALDERNEY

      CHAPTER THREE: THE THREAT FROM FRANCE

      CHAPTER FOUR: THE 1859 ROYAL COMMISSION

      CHAPTER FIVE: DEFENDING THE NAVAL BASES

      CHAPTER SIX: MISSION TO CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES

      CHAPTER SEVEN: THE IRONCLAD FORTS

      CHAPTER EIGHT: IMPERIAL PROGRESS

      CHAPFER NINE: AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND AND THE THREAT FROM RUSSIA

      CHAPTER TEN: COAST DEFENCE, HONOURS AND RETIREMENT

      CHAPTER ELEVEN: JERVOIS IN CONTEXT

      CHAPTER NOTES

      APPENDIX A: Gazetteer: List of fortified works associated with Jervois

      APPENDIX B: The Relative Industrial Strength of the Major Powers in the 19th Century

      APPENDIX C: The 'Battle of Dorking' and its Successors

      APPENDIX D: The Arming of the Coaling Stations, 1884

      APPENDIX E: 'A Plan for Attacking the Seaboard of the United States'

      APPENDIX F: Jervois and the Channel Tunnel (1883)

      APPENDIX G: The Relative Value of the British Pound

      SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

      INDEX OF PEOPLE & PLACES


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