1820s He found work as a surveyor with
James Walker, the engineer for the
London Commercial Docks. He also wrote articles for the
Encyclopædia Metropolitana. He opened an engineering office of his own in Hatton Garden, employing three assistants. In 1825 Vignoles was invited by the
Rennies to survey the proposed
London and Brighton Railway and the initial surveys for the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway - the latter after Parliament's rejection of
George Stephenson's initial scheme. Vignoles moved with his family to Liverpool for the next fifteen years. The combination of his surveying experience and his initial training in the law enabled him to present the case for new lines clearly in Parliament. Following the acceptance of the revised bill for the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, his skills continued to bring him work. The board of the L&M were unable to agree terms with the Rennies and
George Stephenson took over. Vignoles resigned in February 1827 after a disagreement with Stephenson over the measurements for
Wapping Tunnel, who in any case distrusted civil engineers. In 1826,
Marc Brunel offered him a post as resident engineer for the
Thames Tunnel, but withdrew it in favour of his son
Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Vignoles continued as engineer for two connecting railways: the Wigan Branch Railway (1832) and the
St Helens and Runcorn Gap Railway (1833). The latter was one of the first instances where two conflicting lines used a bridge rather than a level crossing. Vignoles subsequently went to the Isle of Man on behalf for the government to survey property. He was next invited by Brunel to assist in straightening out the
Oxford Canal. At this time all work had ceased on the Thames Tunnel due to repeated flooding and lack of finances. Vignoles's criticisms led to a falling out, and in 1830 his alternative suggestions were rejected. In 1829 he assisted
John Braithwaite and
John Ericsson with the locomotive
Novelty at the
Rainhill Trials. He continued to work with Ericsson, and in 1830 they patented a method of ascending steep inclines on railways ( 5995).
1830s The experience led to larger projects, including new railways in Ireland, which then was wholly part of the United Kingdom. This included Ireland's first, the
Dublin and Kingstown (the latter town and ferry port is now called Dun Laoghaire) (1832–34), initially built to the standard English gauge of ." The later extension, the Kingstown and Dalkey railway, was built as an
atmospheric railway. Between 1836 and 1838, Vignoles was engineer to the royal commission on railways in Ireland. in Coventry He had possibly been associated with Stephenson in initial work for a proposed
Sheffield and Manchester Railway, but by the time the prospectus was issued in 1830, they had parted company. In the event, the scheme foundered because of the severity of the proposed route via
Whaley Bridge and over
Rushop Edge into the
Hope Valley. He designed "
Vignoles Bridge" in Coventry (which originally spanned the
Oxford Canal) in 1835. He was retained in 1835 to survey the scheme which followed it, the
Sheffield, Ashton-Under-Lyne and Manchester Railway (later:
Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway), including the original
Woodhead Tunnel. For this he experimented with a steam boring machine. However, there were difficulties with his relationship with the directors and contract, and his remuneration, so he resigned in 1839 before work was started. Meanwhile, he surveyed the
Midland Counties Railway linking
Nottingham,
Derby and
Leicester with
Rugby, opened in 1839
1840s The early years of the decade were difficult. He became professor of civil engineering at
University College, London. He advocated and built
atmospheric railways, and gave advice to the planned lines of the
Royal Württemberg State Railways (now part of the German railways) (1843). His fortunes improved with the
Railway Mania of 1844–46. He was the engineer for the
Dalkey Atmospheric Railway which opened in 1843. In 1846 he was employed to construct the
Nicholas Chain Bridge in
Kyiv over the
Dnieper River (then:
Russian Empire, today:
Ukraine). The work extended from 1847 to 1853. The bridge had four main spans, overall half a mile long, at that time the largest of its kind in Europe. From 1847 until 1853 when the bridge was completed, he lived in Ukraine, returning frequently to England. His first wife Mary had died in 1834. In 1849 he married Margaret Hodge at
St Martin-in-the-Fields.
1850s He was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society in 1855. After his stay in Ukraine, Vignoles became involved in some English projects, such as the
London, Chatham and Dover Railway (1855–64). Most of his work was abroad, with such lines as the
Frankfurt, Wiesbaden, and Cologne Railway and the
Western Railway in Austria. Other work included that for the
Wiesbadener Eisenbahngesellschaft in the Duchy of
Nassau 1853–1856, building the
Nassauische Rheintalbahn from
Wiesbaden to
Oberlahnstein. Between 1857 and 1864, he was engineer for the
Tudela &
Bilbao Railway in Spain. Finally, in 1860 the
Bahia and San Francisco Railway in Brazil. ==Later life==