Brunlees was the Construction Engineer for the
Ulverston and Lancaster Railway. This was a short but difficult and important railway to link the
Furness Railway network to the
Lancaster and Carlisle Railway line and thence to all points further south in the British network. The route was planned by
McClean and Stileman at 19 miles in length of which ten miles comprised embankments and viaducts across tidal water. Much of this was sand running to a depth of 30 to 70 feet. This made it very challenging to build. In business terms the
Manchester-based railway contractors
John Brogden and Sons were the prime movers of this railway. The Ulverstone and Lancaster Railway Act received the
Royal Assent on 24 July 1851 but work was not in full progress until September 1853 because workers and accommodation for them were not readily available. McClean and Stileman had resigned as engineers in the previous February so another engineer had to supervise construction. Brunlees was chosen because of his success with the River Foyle project. The line was opened on 26 August 1857. Brunlees wrote a paper on this project for the
Institution of Civil Engineers in which he described the design profile of the embankments and a novel design of drawbridge for the viaducts to withstand the winds and waves. ==Railway across the Solway Firth==