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Articles
Radio Times articles, from 2003-2005

Escape-proof???
Sounds Familiar
The Hounding of the Royals 
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells?
The Mystery of the Stones
Going Loco
Troy
Pedal Power
Dentures
Obesity
Genius Sperm
Ultimation
Sandals, Slaughter and Sex
Greased Lightning
Flying Saucers
Aztecs
Venus
The Stuarts
The Ascent of Man
Test-tube Tantrums
RT Mastermind
Medical Marvels
Engineering Triumphs
Eccentricity
Surreal Estate
Offshore Wind Farms
Nothing to Loos
Groovy
A Bridge Too Far
Flogging a Dead Horse
Worst Jobs
Asteroid Alert
Eureka Years
Crash
Inspired
The Man Who Missed Dinosaurs
The Sagger-maker's Bottom-knocker
The Master
Naming Nature
Albert Einstein
Environmental Scariness
Geronimo!
Ancient Plastic Surgery
The Ancients
Gold in Them Thar Banks and Braes
Animal Magnetism
Egyptians
Technophilia
HIGNFY
Panem et Circenses
Tambora
That Spotty Old Sun
Telling Stories
Beethoven's Hair
A Blind Eye
Comets
Medrocks

Other articles

Thomas Crapper  
Thunder, Flush and Thomas Crapper, 1997
The birth of the bike 
Eureekaaargh!, 1999
Romans were streets ahead 
Daily Telegraph, November 2000
The Pioneers who Invented Progress 
Daily Telegraph, August 2001
A tough mistake
Chemistry Review, September 2001
At home and school in 1952 
The Times, June 2002
Newton and the rotten apple 
Daily Telegraph, 11 September 2002
World Toilet Day
Daily Telegraph, 19 November 2004

 

 

      

The Master

This week the History Channel begins a series about master craftsmen. There must have been such masters in every century and in every culture: the men – and occasionally women – who were exquisitely skilled with their hands, and were simply the best.

Yes, there were women. In the eighteenth century Eleanor Coade, daughter of a wool-merchant from Exeter, set up her own business on the south bank in London making artificial stone, and ran it for 50 years. No one has ever made better artificial stone.

Leonardo da Vinci was a fantastic dreamer and technical artist, but alas did not actually build anything. A couple of generations earlier, however, his fellow-Italian Filippo Brunelleschi had not only invented the technique of perspective drawing but built the extraordinary dome of the cathedral in Florence, one of the wonders of the age. His influence was as great as that of Christopher Wren in seventeenth century England.

This series ranges from samurai sword-makers and mediaeval castle builders to shipwrights and gun-smiths, and I look forward to seeing it. However, my own craft hero of all time would be Henry Maudslay, the father of precision engineering. He started working at the age of 12 filling cartridges with gunpowder at Woolwich Arsenal, but in his teens moved into the blacksmith’s forge. There he learned to love the iron, to work with the metal, rather than fighting against it, and soon became renowned for his skill in bending the iron to his will. He spent ten years making Joseph Bramah’s new unpickable locks, and then set up on his own, putting in his shop window a precision screw that he had cut on his own lathe.

The French engineer Marc Brunel wanted to build machine tools in order to make pulley-blocks for the navy, and was persuaded to hire Maudslay for the job by the perfection of that screw. Thus Maudslay built the world’s first ever mechanized production-line; 200 years later some of his machines are still there in the block-making house in Portsmouth docks.

With his lathe Maudslay made a micrometer that he called the Lord Chancellor, because it could measure to a ten-thousandth of an inch, and so settle any argument in the workshop. One of his workmen said it was a pleasure to see him handle a tool of any kind, but he was quite splendid with an 18-inch file.

 

Page last updated: Wednesday, 06 July 2005 17:58