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Civil Engineer blog

John Rennie - calm, serene and solid, an engineer of 'severe truthfulness'

Date
29 June 2021

Marking the 200th anniversary of John Rennie's death, ICE Past President Gordon Masterton pays tribute to the engineer, the durability of his engineering creations, touching on his character and the contemporary esteem in which he was held.

John Rennie - calm, serene and solid, an engineer of 'severe truthfulness'
Waterloo Bridge: ‘the noblest bridge in the world’. Image credit: Rennie collection, ICE Archive

John Rennie's (1761-1821) work on canals, aqueducts, bridges and dockyards mark him as one of the greatest engineers of his age, on a par with his contemporary Thomas Telford.

Rennie was born near East Linton, 20 miles east of Edinburgh. He played truant from school to watch Andrew Meikle, the local millwright and inventor of the threshing machine, and began to work there when he was 12, while continuing his education.

Rennie studied at the University of Edinburgh, closest to his home but fortuitously, the leading academic centre for natural philosophy, practical chemistry and geology – the best available formative education for an engineering career before any courses in 'engineering' existed in the United Kingdom.

One of his professors was John Robison, a close friend of James Watt, who gave Rennie a glowing reference. Watt appointed Rennie as the London agent for Boulton & Watt, initially to supervise the fabrication and erection of a steam engine for the Albion Mill, a task he executed with flair.

When he was 29, Rennie set up his own engineering consultancy business. Although his reputation had been established in mechanical engineering with Boulton & Watt, the bigger opportunities lay in civil engineering infrastructure.

John Rennie by Sir Henry Raeburn. Image credit: Institution of Civil Engineers
John Rennie by Sir Henry Raeburn. Image credit: Institution of Civil Engineers

Rennie's first works were the Lancaster Canal, the Kennet & Avon Canal, the Royal Military Canal, and improving the drainage of the Norfolk fens. He also designed bridges in stone and cast iron with daringly wide arches - like Kelso Bridge, Waterloo Bridge, Southwark Bridge and London Bridge, projects which were overseen by his son John after his death.

Breakwater at Plymouth Sound. Image credit: First Rennie Collection, ICE Archive
Breakwater at Plymouth Sound. Image credit: First Rennie Collection, ICE Archive

Rennie's docks and harbours included Grimsby, Leith and the London and East India Docks. His largest projects were for the Royal Navy as it built the infrastructure preparing for a century of world domination, including Sheerness Dockyard and the great breakwater at Plymouth. Rennie also gave advice on novel maritime structures such as steam-powered dredgers, diving bells and the Bell Rock Lighthouse.

What was he like as a person?

Rennie married Martha Mackintosh in 1790. They had nine children, but Martha died in 1806 soon after the last child was born. Five children survived until Rennie’s death in 1821. The two eldest, George and John, became well-known engineers in their own right, learning their profession by working closely with their father. John Rennie 'the elder' was an imposing figure – 6ft 4in tall, and 15 stone, but suffered badly from rheumatism.

By contemporary accounts, Rennie lived to work, and had few other interests. His biographer, Samuel Smiles said: “Work was with him not only a pleasure – it was almost a passion.” However, he was a book collector; he would commission any friends visiting Paris to purchase rare texts for his collection. The only holiday we know he took was with James Watt to France in 1816, the year after the Battle of Waterloo, but much of that time was spent inspecting the dock and harbour works commissioned by Napoleon.

Kennet and Avon Canal: sketch from Rennie's notebook of the tunnel under Sidney Gardens, c.1794.
Image credit: Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers, ICE Archive
Kennet and Avon Canal: sketch from Rennie's notebook of the tunnel under Sidney Gardens, c.1794. Image credit: Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers, ICE Archive

Rennie operated with high integrity and had ethical principles that influenced many others. His character was described by a contemporary: "What I liked about Rennie was his severe truthfulness."

Samuel Smiles said: “Mr Rennie established a reputation for truthfulness, honesty and uprightness, not less honourable and exalted than his genius as an engineer was illustrious… He was a man of powerful and equally balanced mind – not so clever, as profound; not brilliant, but calm, serene, and solid, like one of his own structures.”

Rennie's death in 1821 was felt at the national level: he received a public funeral and was laid to rest in St. Paul’s Cathedral.

Waterloo Bridge was considered his masterpiece, described by a contemporary as "perhaps the finest large masonry bridge ever built in this or any other country". The Italian sculptor Canova called it "the noblest bridge in the world" and said that "it is worth going to England solely to see Rennie’s bridge".

Rennie was a member of the Society of Civil Engineers, which later became the Smeatonians, from 1785 until his death. His image was one of seven carved portraits on the outside of the original ICE headquarters.

Rennie and Thomas Telford were rivals in their careers, and apparently did not have a warm relationship, but today Rennie’s name is one of 16 inscribed around the ICE’s Thomas Telford Lecture Theatre. Whatever their differences in life, they at least share that recognition in death.

Rennie’s greatest monuments are his projects, many surviving still, as tributes to the genius of his foresight in designing for durability, and the longevity of his structures has surely benefitted their carbon footprint dramatically.

Get involved

'Engineering Foresight from Hindsight', the ICE’s collaborative forum of PHEW, archives, journals, CARE Panel and education and outreach, is planning a number of commemorative activities in the bicentenary of Rennie’s death, including a comprehensive mapping of all his projects.

If you have an idea for a local project or how to promote interest in Rennie’s life and achievements, please contact us.

John Rennie (1761-1821) 200th anniversary

  • Gordon Masterton OBE DL, ICE Past President 2005-2006 and chair at ICE Panel for Historical Engineering Works