Education
Not much is known about Sir Joseph Bazalgette’s early education other than he was privately educated.
His engineering career began in 1836, as a pupil of Irish civil engineer Sir John Macneill, working on land drainage works in Northern Ireland.
Career
Early in his career, Sir Joseph Bazalgette set up a private consultancy in 1842 with an office in Great George Street, Westminster.
As a consulting engineer, he worked on the Tame Valley Canal in Birmingham, at Portsmouth Dockyard, and was heavily involved in surveys for railways.
However, stress and overwork contributed to a serious breakdown in Bazalgette’s health, and between 1847 and 1848, he left London to recuperate in the country.
When he recovered, Sir Joseph returned to London. On 16 August 1849, he was appointed assistant surveyor to the second Metropolitan Commission of Sewers, on a salary of £250 a year.
In 1852, he was appointed engineer at the Metropolitan Commission, until it was replaced by the Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW).
Sir Joseph was elected engineer to the Board on 25 January 1856 on a salary of £1,000 a year. He stayed in the role until the MBW was replaced by the London County Council in 1889.
Draining London
The first work of the MBW was to finish the design and implement the plans for the main drainage of London.
The whole system consisted of 1,300 miles of sewers and 82 miles of west-east intercepting sewers.
It also included Abbey Mills pumping station at Stratford, Western pumping station at Pimlico, Deptford Pumping Station, Crossness Pumping Station, and the Southern Outfall Sewer.
As part of the drainage system, Sir Joseph embanked the River Thames in central London, which he said reclaimed about 52 acres of land.
The embankments tidied the mud banks on the river’s edge, improved road traffic flow, and created additional building land.
These comprised the Victoria Embankment (opened 1879), which runs between Westminster and Blackfriars Bridges, the Albert Embankment (opened 1868) on the south bank between Westminster and Vauxhall Bridges, and the Chelsea Embankment (completed 1874).