Title
Bidder Family Book
Reference
MS/0208
Production date
1845 - 1950
Scope and Content
Bound volume containing photocopies of correspondence and notes chiefly on Bidder (and related) family history and ancestry, homes etc. with a (rough) index. Other surnames with several entries include Conolly, Devenish, Harby, Warren.
Extent
1 volume
Physical description
Modern binding, photocopied pages
Language
English
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Bidder, George ParkerBiographyBiography
(1806-1878), civil engineer
George Parker Bidder was born at Moretonhampstead, Devon on the 13th June 1806. He had little formal education, yet it was noticed he had an extraordinary ability to handle numbers without writing them down, as well as a remarkable memory. In October 1816 benefactors of St John's College, Cambridge sent him to Wilson's Grammar School, Camberwell, Surrey, but he did not stay more than six months.
Sir Henry Jardine, king's remembrancer for Scotland, noticed Bidder while he was being exhibited in Edinburgh in 1819 and arranged for a year's private coaching before sending him to Edinburgh University in 1820 to study mathematics and natural philosophy. In 1822 he was awarded the magistrates' prize for higher mathematics, but he left in May 1824 without taking a degree. In 1846 his growing prosperity allowed him to commemorate his benefactor by founding the Jardine bursary at the university.
Bidder had his first employment at Ordinance Survey, first in South Wales and then in London but within a year he joined Henry Robinson Palmer, founder of the Institution of Civil Engineers. He was resident engineer at the reconstruction of Brunswick wharf, Blackwall, with its pioneering use of cast-iron sheet piling, completed in 1834. In 1826 he first appeared before a parliamentary committee helping Palmer to oppose the second Liverpool and Manchester Railway Bill. His memory and powers of mental calculation made him a formidable witness. When Brunswick wharf was finished, Bidder was reintroduced to Robert Stephenson whom he had met in Edinburgh. Stephenson hired Bidder to work on several aspects of the London and Birmingham Railway.
He worked on docks with which he was involved throughout his career—the original Victoria docks, London, being probably his greatest technical achievement. In 1845–6 he joined William Fothergill-Cooke in establishing the Electric Telegraph Company, with which he remained closely associated until it was nationalized in 1870. He was also involved in the development of submarine telegraph facilities; as early as 1850 he foresaw the global possibilities of telecommunication.
He was an active member of the Institution of Civil Engineers for nearly fifty years and president in 1860–61. He married Georgina Warren Harby in 1835, they had eight children. Bidder died unexpectedly of heart problems on the 20th September 1878.
- Bidder, George ParkerBiographyBiography
(1836-1896) Barrister and Businessman
George Parker Bidder, born on the 18th August 1836 in London, was the eldest son of George Parker Bidder (1806-1878) an engineer and calculating prodigy. He was educated first at King’s College School and at the University of Edinburgh, where he gained distinction in the mathematical classes under the late Professor Kelland. Passing to Trinity College, Cambridge, he obtained a scholarship there, and in 1858 graduated as seventh wrangler.
Two years afterwards he was called to the Bar at Lincoln’s Inn and joined the Home Circuit, his success as a Junior being marked and rapid. One of his greatest triumphs was in 'The Metropolitan Board of Works v. The Millwall Dock Company' (1876), a case which turned on the laws of deposit and silting in rivers; better known is his masterly and effective opposition for the Mersey Docks and Harbour Board against the Manchester Ship Canal, based mainly on the theory of the formation and erosion of banks in an estuary. In the inquiry into the collapse of the Tay Bridge he successfully defended the reputation of its engineer, the case involving the closest study of every technical detail.
Bidder took a prominent part (as Chairman of the Cannock Chase Colliery Co) in the great coal strike of 1893, and was a member of the body of coal-owners which, under Lord Rosebery’s presidency, met the representatives of the collier. He was an Associate of the Surveyors’ Institution and a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Bidder died at Queen Anne’s Mansions, Westminster, on the 1st of February 1896, quite unexpectedly, from the effects of a street accident in Manchester three weeks previously.
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions
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