Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 1154342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,720 pages of information and 247,131 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Charles William Pasley: Difference between revisions

From Graces Guide
New page: 1780-1861 ---- '''1862 Obituary <ref> Institution of Civil Engineers Minutes of the Proceedings </ref> == See Also == <what-links-here/> == Sources of Information == <references/> ...
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
1780-1861
Charles William Pasley (1780-1861)
 
1820 Charles William Pasley, Lt-Col of the Royal Engineers, Chatham, became a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers.<ref>1820 Institution of Civil Engineers</ref>


----
----
'''1862 Obituary <ref> [[Institution of Civil Engineers]] Minutes of the Proceedings </ref>
'''1862 Obituary <ref> [[Institution of Civil Engineers]] Minutes of the Proceedings </ref>
GENERAL SIR CHARLES WILLIAM PASLEY, K.C.B., F.R.S., &C., was born on the 8th September, 1780, at Eskdale-Muir, Dumfries, where he received the rudiments of a good useful
education ; and in the year 1796 he was appointed to the Royal
Military Academy at Woolwich where he pursued his studies
with energy, and obtained a commission in the Royal Artillery on
the 1st of December, 1797.
He was transferred to the Royal
Engineers on the 1st of April, 1798, and on the 2nd of August,
1799, he received a commission as first lieutenant in that corps.
For the next ten years he was actively engaged in Minorca,
Malta, Naples, and Sicily, and other places, and was intrusted
with several confidential missions, and employed in many important
services ; among others, conveying communications between
General Villette and Lord Nelson, in 1804.
Having attained the rank of second captain on the 1st of March,
1805 ; he was still more actively employed, and served, in 1806,
under the Prince of Hesse-Philippsthal in the defence of the
fortress of Gaeta, when it was besieged by the French. In the
same year he was with Sir John Stuart at the battle of Maida,
in Calabria.
He was at the siege of Copenhagen, under Lord Cathcart, in
1807, and was transferred to the division of Major-General Leith,
at Oviedo, in September, 1808 ; where he was employed on dangerous
rkconnaissance duties for some time, until he was appointed
extra aide-de-camp to Sir David Baird, in conseqnence of his
knowledge of the Spanish language, in addition to his professional
attainments. He was soon after attached, in the same capacity,
to the staff of Sir John Moore, of whom he was a devoted admirer ;
but he blamed the general principles of his retreat, and he advocated
his turning upon his pursuers before his arrival at Corunna,
whence, in case of being worsted, there was no retreat save
by sea.
His next service was in the expedition to Walcheren; and in
1809 he took part in the siege of Flushing, where he was seriously
wounded whilst leading his men to the attack of a battery.
During the forced temporary ‘‘ inglorious ease ” consequent
upon his wound, he occupied himself in acquiring a knowledge of
the German language, and in reading up his former studies.
In November, 1810, he produced the “Essay on the Military
Policy and Institutions of the British Empire,” which by the plain
common sense view which it t,ook of public matters, at a period of
unnecessary despondency, and its manly and cheerful tone, deservedly
attracted the attention and elicited the encomiums of the
best men of the day.
At this period the Duke of Wellington made strong representations
to the home authorities respecting all branches of the army ;
but more especially as to the defective condition of the C’ ng ‘in eer
Department in the field. This had long been perceived by
Captain Pasley, and whilst in command at Plymouth, he had
commenced a system of education of the royal military artificers,
which had proved most advantageous to the service. In spite of
Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to:
IP: 217.33.59.182
On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58
MEMOIRS. 547
the usual routine opposition, the system of education advocated
by him, and laid down in a treatise written at the time for the
use of that department of the service, was adopted at Chatham ;
and he was appointed Director of Field Instruction with the
rank of Brevet-Major, which was followed by the steps of
Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel in 1813, and Lieutenant-Colonel in
1814.
In this latter year he commenced the publication of his useful
work on “Military Instructions,” which was completed in 1817 ;
and in 1818 he published a volume of (( Standing Orders,” containing
a perfect code of military rules for the duties of all ranks
in the army.
At this period his pen was scarcely ever idle, and he produced
a number of very valuable treatises for the use of the army, somc of
which have been reproduced abroad.
In 1831 he brought out a volume entitled ‘( Observations on the
Expediency and Practicability of Simplifying and Improving t,he
Measures, Weights, and Money used in this Country without materially
altering the present standard,” wherein he advocated the
decimal division ; but, he strongly opposed the introduction of the
unit or the denominations adopted in France.
The peculiar nature of his; military duties almost naturally
directed Colonel Pasley’s attention to civil constructions, and in
1838, he published his very useful and well-known work “Observations
on Limes, Calcareous Cements, Mortars, Stuccos, and
(loncrete, and on Puzzolanas natural and artificial,” which has
run through many editions, and has been translated into most of
the modern languages. It has also powerfully contributed to the
foundation of large commercial establishments for the production
of Portland and other cements.
The experience he had attained of exploding gunpowder under
water led to his being consulted by the Conservators of the ‘rllames,
respecting the removal of two wrecks which materially affected the
navigation. Colonel Pasley undertook, and successfully accomplished
the work, for which he received the thanks of the Municipal
Authorities, and the Freedom of the City of London in a gold box.
This Success led to his undertaking the removal of the wreck of
the U Royal George,” at Spithead, and the (‘ Edgar,” at St. Helens.
During portions of six successive summers, between 1839 and
1844, he devoted himself to these labours, which were ultilnately
completely successfu1, not only in clearing the anchorage-ground,
but in recovering such a quantity of valuable material, that the
operations cost nothing to the nation ; for all these services, however,
Colonel Pasley neither asked nor received any reward from
the Admiralty.
The following characteristic note was written to the compiler of
2 N 2
Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to:
IP: 217.33.59.182
On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58
548 MEMOIRS.
this Memoir, when seeking, for a foreign correspondent,, information
on firing charges of gunpowder under water.
‘ 6 MY DEAR SIR, 9th February, 1855.
4‘ My operations against wrecks will be found in what is now
called The United Service Magazine,’ but was formerly styled
the United Service Journal.’ The numbers for September, 1838,
and the ‘ Editor’s Portfglio,’ for October, 1838, page 271, contain
the account of my operations for blowing up and removing the
wrecks of the brig ‘ William,’ and schooner ‘ Glamorgan,’ the
former sunk in the Thames near Tilbury Fort, the latter nearly
opposite to East Tilbury Church, towards the eastern extremity of
Gravesend Reach. In June, 1839, of the same journal, page 183,
are further observations on my subaqueous explosions In the
Thames. In November, 1839, is a Paper by Captain Basil Hall,
R.N., on the capstan of the ‘ Royal George ’ recovered by me in
September of that year. In January, 1840, page 72 ; and in
February of the same year, page 149 ; and in March of the same
year, page 164; my first operations in the removal of the wreck
of the Royal George ’ are described, which were continued every
summer till the end of 1843 ; but no more of my oper, t’ Ionsw ere
published in the ‘ United Service Journal,’ because the Editor
made difficulties about the length of them, and I would not curtail
them, as I always noticed the Royal Engineers’ officers and
privates, of the sappers and miners, as well aithe civil divers, and
the riggers, or dockyard-men who were more useful, as well as the
excellent officers of Engineers Captain Symonds and Hutchinson,
which was a great incentive to zeal and activity on the part of all
the workmen thus distinguished. In 1844, I removed the wreck
of the ‘ Edgar,’ blown up and sunk by accidentally catching fire,
off the Mother Bank, at Spithead, in the early part of the last
century when not a man was saved of those QU board. Lieutenant
(now Captain) Barlow, R.E., with the same excellent military
workmen, dockyard-men, naval pensioners, and riggers were employed
in 1841 ; but no civil divers were employed a.s in the commencement
of our operations at Spithead. Your correspondent
must not attempt simultaneous explosions, or to make use of one
conducting wire, trusting to the water for completing the circuit.
These expedients were tried repeatedly, in 1843, by Captain
Hutchinson, who was very zealous about them; but we lost a
great deal of powder by the first, as we never succeeded in firing
more than two charges simultaaeously out of a greater number,
and the cases containing a second charge were generally burst,
and the powder spoiled, by the explosion of the first that happened
to prove successful. The second of those expedients gave more
trouble, and required a battery of double the power to produce the
Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to:
IP: 217.33.59.182
On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58
MEMOIRS. 549
same effect. \Ve, therefore, in all cases, used a separate voltaic
battery, and two conducting wires to every charge in our operations
against the ‘ Edgar ’ in 1844.
“ I remain, my dear Br,
‘‘ Tours very faithfully,
‘‘ C. W. PASLEY.”
“P.S. My operations from 1840 to 1844, inclusive, were published
in a Portsmouth weekly paper, of which I think Harrison
was the editor, but I have no copy of them.”
In the year 1841 he was removed from Chatham, and was appointed
Ins ector-General of Railways, the somewhat invidious
duties of W K ich he performed with great uprightness and conscientiousness,
if not always for the benefit of the public service.
He had some “bloodless encounters” with his civil brethren, in
which controversial opinions were stoutly maintained on both sides ;
but amidst all that occurred, Colonel Pasley was universally respected
and esteemed, and he certainly did his utmost to perform
his duties as well in his civil as in his military capacity. He
resigned the post in the year 1846, when he was made a K.C.B.
for his services, and henceforth devoted himself to re-editing his
various works, and to the introduction of useful apparatus for the
Military Engineering service, as well as in advocating the Decimal
Coinage system.
His higher steps in the army were Brevet-Colonel in 1830 ;
Colonel of Engineers in 1831 ; Major-General in the army in
1841 ; Lieutenant-General in 1851, and General in 1860. The
degree of D,.C.L. was conferred npon him at Oxford in 1844.
He had been a fellow of the R.oyal Society since 1816, and he
belonged also to the Astronomical, the Geographical, the Zoological,
the Statistical, and other Societies; and of the Institutiou of
Civil Engineers, he became an Honorary Member so early as the
year 1820, 011 the proposition of Mr. Telford, seconded by
Messrs. Palmer, Field, Maudslay, and Jones-four out of the five
founders of the Institution. He was a constant attendant at the
meetings, and frequently took part in the discussions, exhibiting a
pertinacious determination not to be out-manmuvred, OT to be
beaten in a fair stand-up fight, if by any tactics or strong argument
he could prevent defeat. Among the Civil Engineers he
was almost universally popular; and he devoted himself to his
civil duties with as much energy as he had previously done to the
practice of his own profession.
He was equally popular at the East India Company’s Military
&llege of Addiscombe, where he held the position of Public
Examiner for sixteen years, up to the year 1855 ; and the high
Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to:
IP: 217.33.59.182
On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58
550 MEMOIRS.
standard which was reached and maintained by that establishment
may, in some degree, be attributed to the energy infused into the
officers, and others connected with it, by the good example of
Colonel Pasley.
His co~~stitution begatno give way for only a short titne before
his decease, and he may be said to have been well up to within a
week beforc his death, which occurred at his residence, in Norfolk
Crescent, Hyde Park, on the 19th of April, 1861, deeply regretted
by his relatives ; and his memory will long be cherished by his
nurnerous friends, as a most useful and worthy member of society,
and a very distinguished and meritorious officer.
----


== See Also ==
== See Also ==
Line 12: Line 230:
{{DEFAULTSORT: Pasley, C}}
{{DEFAULTSORT: Pasley, C}}
[[Category: Biography]]
[[Category: Biography]]
[[Category: Births 1780-1789]]
[[Category: Deaths 1860-1869]]

Revision as of 15:47, 13 July 2013

Charles William Pasley (1780-1861)

1820 Charles William Pasley, Lt-Col of the Royal Engineers, Chatham, became a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers.[1]


1862 Obituary [2]

GENERAL SIR CHARLES WILLIAM PASLEY, K.C.B., F.R.S., &C., was born on the 8th September, 1780, at Eskdale-Muir, Dumfries, where he received the rudiments of a good useful education ; and in the year 1796 he was appointed to the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich where he pursued his studies with energy, and obtained a commission in the Royal Artillery on the 1st of December, 1797.

He was transferred to the Royal Engineers on the 1st of April, 1798, and on the 2nd of August, 1799, he received a commission as first lieutenant in that corps. For the next ten years he was actively engaged in Minorca, Malta, Naples, and Sicily, and other places, and was intrusted with several confidential missions, and employed in many important services ; among others, conveying communications between General Villette and Lord Nelson, in 1804. Having attained the rank of second captain on the 1st of March, 1805 ; he was still more actively employed, and served, in 1806, under the Prince of Hesse-Philippsthal in the defence of the fortress of Gaeta, when it was besieged by the French. In the same year he was with Sir John Stuart at the battle of Maida, in Calabria. He was at the siege of Copenhagen, under Lord Cathcart, in 1807, and was transferred to the division of Major-General Leith, at Oviedo, in September, 1808 ; where he was employed on dangerous rkconnaissance duties for some time, until he was appointed extra aide-de-camp to Sir David Baird, in conseqnence of his knowledge of the Spanish language, in addition to his professional attainments. He was soon after attached, in the same capacity, to the staff of Sir John Moore, of whom he was a devoted admirer ; but he blamed the general principles of his retreat, and he advocated his turning upon his pursuers before his arrival at Corunna, whence, in case of being worsted, there was no retreat save by sea. His next service was in the expedition to Walcheren; and in 1809 he took part in the siege of Flushing, where he was seriously wounded whilst leading his men to the attack of a battery. During the forced temporary ‘‘ inglorious ease ” consequent upon his wound, he occupied himself in acquiring a knowledge of the German language, and in reading up his former studies. In November, 1810, he produced the “Essay on the Military Policy and Institutions of the British Empire,” which by the plain common sense view which it t,ook of public matters, at a period of unnecessary despondency, and its manly and cheerful tone, deservedly attracted the attention and elicited the encomiums of the best men of the day. At this period the Duke of Wellington made strong representations to the home authorities respecting all branches of the army ; but more especially as to the defective condition of the C’ ng ‘in eer Department in the field. This had long been perceived by Captain Pasley, and whilst in command at Plymouth, he had commenced a system of education of the royal military artificers, which had proved most advantageous to the service. In spite of Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to: IP: 217.33.59.182 On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58 MEMOIRS. 547 the usual routine opposition, the system of education advocated by him, and laid down in a treatise written at the time for the use of that department of the service, was adopted at Chatham ; and he was appointed Director of Field Instruction with the rank of Brevet-Major, which was followed by the steps of Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel in 1813, and Lieutenant-Colonel in 1814. In this latter year he commenced the publication of his useful work on “Military Instructions,” which was completed in 1817 ; and in 1818 he published a volume of (( Standing Orders,” containing a perfect code of military rules for the duties of all ranks in the army. At this period his pen was scarcely ever idle, and he produced a number of very valuable treatises for the use of the army, somc of which have been reproduced abroad. In 1831 he brought out a volume entitled ‘( Observations on the Expediency and Practicability of Simplifying and Improving t,he Measures, Weights, and Money used in this Country without materially altering the present standard,” wherein he advocated the decimal division ; but, he strongly opposed the introduction of the unit or the denominations adopted in France. The peculiar nature of his; military duties almost naturally directed Colonel Pasley’s attention to civil constructions, and in 1838, he published his very useful and well-known work “Observations on Limes, Calcareous Cements, Mortars, Stuccos, and (loncrete, and on Puzzolanas natural and artificial,” which has run through many editions, and has been translated into most of the modern languages. It has also powerfully contributed to the foundation of large commercial establishments for the production of Portland and other cements. The experience he had attained of exploding gunpowder under water led to his being consulted by the Conservators of the ‘rllames, respecting the removal of two wrecks which materially affected the navigation. Colonel Pasley undertook, and successfully accomplished the work, for which he received the thanks of the Municipal Authorities, and the Freedom of the City of London in a gold box. This Success led to his undertaking the removal of the wreck of the U Royal George,” at Spithead, and the (‘ Edgar,” at St. Helens. During portions of six successive summers, between 1839 and 1844, he devoted himself to these labours, which were ultilnately completely successfu1, not only in clearing the anchorage-ground, but in recovering such a quantity of valuable material, that the operations cost nothing to the nation ; for all these services, however, Colonel Pasley neither asked nor received any reward from the Admiralty. The following characteristic note was written to the compiler of 2 N 2 Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to: IP: 217.33.59.182 On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58 548 MEMOIRS. this Memoir, when seeking, for a foreign correspondent,, information on firing charges of gunpowder under water. ‘ 6 MY DEAR SIR, 9th February, 1855. 4‘ My operations against wrecks will be found in what is now called The United Service Magazine,’ but was formerly styled the United Service Journal.’ The numbers for September, 1838, and the ‘ Editor’s Portfglio,’ for October, 1838, page 271, contain the account of my operations for blowing up and removing the wrecks of the brig ‘ William,’ and schooner ‘ Glamorgan,’ the former sunk in the Thames near Tilbury Fort, the latter nearly opposite to East Tilbury Church, towards the eastern extremity of Gravesend Reach. In June, 1839, of the same journal, page 183, are further observations on my subaqueous explosions In the Thames. In November, 1839, is a Paper by Captain Basil Hall, R.N., on the capstan of the ‘ Royal George ’ recovered by me in September of that year. In January, 1840, page 72 ; and in February of the same year, page 149 ; and in March of the same year, page 164; my first operations in the removal of the wreck of the Royal George ’ are described, which were continued every summer till the end of 1843 ; but no more of my oper, t’ Ionsw ere published in the ‘ United Service Journal,’ because the Editor made difficulties about the length of them, and I would not curtail them, as I always noticed the Royal Engineers’ officers and privates, of the sappers and miners, as well aithe civil divers, and the riggers, or dockyard-men who were more useful, as well as the excellent officers of Engineers Captain Symonds and Hutchinson, which was a great incentive to zeal and activity on the part of all the workmen thus distinguished. In 1844, I removed the wreck of the ‘ Edgar,’ blown up and sunk by accidentally catching fire, off the Mother Bank, at Spithead, in the early part of the last century when not a man was saved of those QU board. Lieutenant (now Captain) Barlow, R.E., with the same excellent military workmen, dockyard-men, naval pensioners, and riggers were employed in 1841 ; but no civil divers were employed a.s in the commencement of our operations at Spithead. Your correspondent must not attempt simultaneous explosions, or to make use of one conducting wire, trusting to the water for completing the circuit. These expedients were tried repeatedly, in 1843, by Captain Hutchinson, who was very zealous about them; but we lost a great deal of powder by the first, as we never succeeded in firing more than two charges simultaaeously out of a greater number, and the cases containing a second charge were generally burst, and the powder spoiled, by the explosion of the first that happened to prove successful. The second of those expedients gave more trouble, and required a battery of double the power to produce the Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to: IP: 217.33.59.182 On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58 MEMOIRS. 549 same effect. \Ve, therefore, in all cases, used a separate voltaic battery, and two conducting wires to every charge in our operations against the ‘ Edgar ’ in 1844. “ I remain, my dear Br, ‘‘ Tours very faithfully, ‘‘ C. W. PASLEY.” “P.S. My operations from 1840 to 1844, inclusive, were published in a Portsmouth weekly paper, of which I think Harrison was the editor, but I have no copy of them.” In the year 1841 he was removed from Chatham, and was appointed Ins ector-General of Railways, the somewhat invidious duties of W K ich he performed with great uprightness and conscientiousness, if not always for the benefit of the public service. He had some “bloodless encounters” with his civil brethren, in which controversial opinions were stoutly maintained on both sides ; but amidst all that occurred, Colonel Pasley was universally respected and esteemed, and he certainly did his utmost to perform his duties as well in his civil as in his military capacity. He resigned the post in the year 1846, when he was made a K.C.B. for his services, and henceforth devoted himself to re-editing his various works, and to the introduction of useful apparatus for the Military Engineering service, as well as in advocating the Decimal Coinage system. His higher steps in the army were Brevet-Colonel in 1830 ; Colonel of Engineers in 1831 ; Major-General in the army in 1841 ; Lieutenant-General in 1851, and General in 1860. The degree of D,.C.L. was conferred npon him at Oxford in 1844. He had been a fellow of the R.oyal Society since 1816, and he belonged also to the Astronomical, the Geographical, the Zoological, the Statistical, and other Societies; and of the Institutiou of Civil Engineers, he became an Honorary Member so early as the year 1820, 011 the proposition of Mr. Telford, seconded by Messrs. Palmer, Field, Maudslay, and Jones-four out of the five founders of the Institution. He was a constant attendant at the meetings, and frequently took part in the discussions, exhibiting a pertinacious determination not to be out-manmuvred, OT to be beaten in a fair stand-up fight, if by any tactics or strong argument he could prevent defeat. Among the Civil Engineers he was almost universally popular; and he devoted himself to his civil duties with as much energy as he had previously done to the practice of his own profession. He was equally popular at the East India Company’s Military &llege of Addiscombe, where he held the position of Public Examiner for sixteen years, up to the year 1855 ; and the high Delivered by ICEVirtualLibrary.com to: IP: 217.33.59.182 On: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 15:36:58 550 MEMOIRS. standard which was reached and maintained by that establishment may, in some degree, be attributed to the energy infused into the officers, and others connected with it, by the good example of Colonel Pasley. His co~~stitution begatno give way for only a short titne before his decease, and he may be said to have been well up to within a week beforc his death, which occurred at his residence, in Norfolk Crescent, Hyde Park, on the 19th of April, 1861, deeply regretted by his relatives ; and his memory will long be cherished by his nurnerous friends, as a most useful and worthy member of society, and a very distinguished and meritorious officer.


See Also

Loading...

Sources of Information

  1. 1820 Institution of Civil Engineers
  2. Institution of Civil Engineers Minutes of the Proceedings