Sir William Fairbairn
Born: 19 February 1789, Kelso, United Kingdom
Died: 18 August 1874, Moor Park House, Tongham, United Kingdom
Sir William Fairbairn, was a Scottish civil engineer, structural engineer and shipbuilder. He was first to use wrought iron for ships, bridges, mill shafts, and structural beams. After moving to London in 1811, he invented a steam excavator and a sausage-making machine, but without commercial success. By 1817, he had established an engineering works in Manchester making mill machinery, which later made over 400 locomotives. The shipbuilding works he opened at Millwall, London (1835-49) built hundreds of iron boats. He furnished the rectangular wrought-iron tubes used by Stephenson for the Britannia railway bridge (1850) over the Menai Strait, which included two almost 460-ft (140-m) spans. He assisted James Joule and Lord Kelvin in geological investigations from 1851

Sir William Fairbairn
Date of Birth: 19 Feb 1789
Birth Place: Kelso, United Kingdom
Proffession: Civil Engineer
Nationality: United States
Death: 18 August 1874, Moor Park House, Tongham, United Kingdom