In 1852 Brassey took out the largest contract of his career, which was to build the
Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. This line passed from
Quebec, along the valley of the
Saint Lawrence River, and then to the north of
Lake Ontario to
Toronto. The line totalled in length. The consulting engineer for the project was Robert Stephenson and the company's engineer for the whole undertaking was Alexander Ross. Brassey worked in partnership with Peto, Betts and Sir William Jackson. The line crossed the river at
Montreal by the
Victoria Bridge. This was a
tubular bridge designed by Robert Stephenson and was the longest bridge in the world at the time, measuring some . The bridge opened in 1859 and the formal opening ceremony was carried out the following year by the
Prince of Wales. The construction of the line caused considerable problems. The main problem was the raising of the necessary finance and at one stage Brassey travelled to Canada to appeal personally for assistance. Other difficulties arose from the severity of the Canadian winter, the waterways being frozen for around six months each year, and resistance from Canadian businessmen. The line was an engineering success but a financial failure, with the contractors losing £1 million.
The Canada Works The contract for the Grand Trunk Railway included all the materials required for building the bridge and the railway, including the
rolling stock. To manufacture the metallic components, Brassey built a new factory in Birkenhead which he called
The Canada Works. A suitable site was found by George Harrison, Brassey's brother-in-law, and the factory was built with a quay alongside to take ocean-going ships. The works was managed by George Harrison with a Mr. Alexander and William Heap as assistants. The
machine shop was in length and included a
blacksmiths' shop with 40
furnaces,
anvils and
steam hammers, a
coppersmiths' shop, and fabrication,
woodwork and
pattern shops. There was also a well-stocked library and a reading room for all the workforce. The fitting shop was designed to manufacture 40
locomotives a year and a total of 300 were produced in the next eight years. The first locomotive, given its trial in May 1854, was named
Lady Elgin, after the wife of the
Governor General of Canada of the time, the
Earl of Elgin. For the bridge hundreds of thousands of components were required and all were manufactured in Birkenhead or in other English factories to Brassey's specifications. These were all stamped and coded, loaded into ships to be taken to Quebec and then by rail to the site of the bridge for assembly. The central tube of the bridge contained over 10,000 pieces of iron, perforated by holes for half a million
rivets, and when it was assembled every piece and hole was true. == The Grand Crimean Central Railway ==