A Treatise on Roads: Wherein the Principles on which Roads Should be Made are Explained and Illustrated by the Plans, Specifications and Contracts Made Use of by Thomas Telford |
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Page 4
... sufficient apology for their length : - " The police of roads does not begin to show itself as worthy of consideration until the pros- perous times of Greece . The senate of Athens watched over them . The Lacedæmonians , The- bans , and ...
... sufficient apology for their length : - " The police of roads does not begin to show itself as worthy of consideration until the pros- perous times of Greece . The senate of Athens watched over them . The Lacedæmonians , The- bans , and ...
Page 13
... sufficient funds , but the Director - general , the brother of the cele- brated Cardinal Dubois , recommenced the re- pairs of them , and continued them with great regularity . " Under the administration of M. de Tru- daine , in 1787 ...
... sufficient funds , but the Director - general , the brother of the cele- brated Cardinal Dubois , recommenced the re- pairs of them , and continued them with great regularity . " Under the administration of M. de Tru- daine , in 1787 ...
Page 15
... sufficient strength . There are very extensive tracts of the kingdom wholly without any regularly formed roads ; and , therefore , however valuable the efforts of the statesmen of France may have been in carrying the progress of road ...
... sufficient strength . There are very extensive tracts of the kingdom wholly without any regularly formed roads ; and , therefore , however valuable the efforts of the statesmen of France may have been in carrying the progress of road ...
Page 17
... sufficiently insecure , there exists scarce a waggon or cart track throughout Spain . All means of transport are therefore dear ; and in Salamanca , it has been known , after a succession of abundant harvests , that the wheat has ...
... sufficiently insecure , there exists scarce a waggon or cart track throughout Spain . All means of transport are therefore dear ; and in Salamanca , it has been known , after a succession of abundant harvests , that the wheat has ...
Page 19
... the ordinary course appointed by all former laws and statutes of this realm is not sufficient for the effectual re- * Anderson's Commerce , vol . xix . p . 130 . pairing of the same , neither are the inhabitants , c 2 INTRODUCTION . 19.
... the ordinary course appointed by all former laws and statutes of this realm is not sufficient for the effectual re- * Anderson's Commerce , vol . xix . p . 130 . pairing of the same , neither are the inhabitants , c 2 INTRODUCTION . 19.
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Common terms and phrases
Allesley Archway road bottom breadth bridge broken stones built carriage centre coating Commissioners contractor covered cross drains cubic yards depôts depth ditch draught earth Edition eighteen inches embankments engineer expense of drawing Fcap feet wide fences footpath formed Foster's Booth foundation four feet four inches gravel ground half Hartshill Holyhead Road Horizontal horses improvement inches deep inches thick inches wide inclined plane J. C. LOUDON John Kershaw labour laid land length line of road masonry ment metal pavement miles mound necessary nine inches North Wales parish passing paved pavement Pence placed Plate VII posts proper quicksets rails railway Rates of Inclination repair road materials road-making roadway side channels side drains six inches slopes specification spirit level Stowe Hill streets surface surveyor Telford Thomas Baylis three inches trustees turnpike roads valley velocity Vols waggon weight wheels whole
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Page 8 - All these cities were connected with each other, and with the capital, by the public highways, which, issuing from the Forum of Rome, traversed Italy, pervaded the provinces, and were terminated only by the frontiers of the empire. If we carefully trace the distance from the wall of Antoninus to Rome, and from thence to Jerusalem, it will be found that the great chain of communication, from the north-west to the south-east point of the empire, was drawn out to the length of four thousand and eighty...
Page 20 - ... let me most seriously caution all travellers who may accidentally propose to travel this terrible country to avoid it as they would the devil ; for a thousand to one but they break their necks or their limbs by overthrows or breakings down.