Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,257 pages of information and 244,498 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Samuel Canning

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Samuel Canning (1823–1908), civil and electrical engineer

1823 July 21st. Born at Ogbourne St Andrew, Wiltshire

Educated at Salisbury

1848-9 gained his first engineering experience with Locke and Errington on the Great Western Railway extensions, and as resident engineer on the Liverpool, Ormskirk and Preston Railway.

1852 Moved to Glass, Elliot and Co, cable manufacturers,

1855–6 Laid the Canadian cable connecting Cape Breton Island with Newfoundland.

1857 Assisted Charles Tilston Bright with the first trans-Atlantic cable.

Laid cables in the Mediterranean and elsewhere.

1859 Married Elizabeth Ann Gale of Grately, Hampshire; they had three sons and three daughters.

1865 Appointed chief engineer of the new Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Co. In charge of the manufacture and laying of the Atlantic cables of 1865 and 1866

1866 After breakage of the first and replacement with a second cable, Canning recovered the broken cable using grappling machinery he devised. For this he was knighted in 1866.

1869 he laid the French Atlantic cable between Brest and Duxbury, Massachusetts.

Was a consulting engineer in telegraphy. Supervised the laying of the Marseilles–Algiers and other cables for the India Rubber, Gutta Percha and Telegraph Works Co. Adviser to other telegraph companies.

Advised Callender's on machinery for wire work for manufacturing insulated cable.

1883 Appointed to Callender's board in March but resigned in December after a dispute over his remuneration.

1908 died at Whatley, Twyford, Hampshire, on 24 September; buried in Kensal Green Cemetery, London.


Dictionary of National Biography, 1912 supplement

CANNING, Sir SAMUEL (1823–1908), a pioneer of submarine telegraphy, born at Ogbourne St. Andrew, Wiltshire, on 21 July 1823, was son of Robert Canning of that place by his wife Frances Hyde.

Educated at Salisbury, he gained his first engineering experience (1844–9) as assistant to Messrs. Locke and Errington on the Great Western railway extensions, and as resident engineer on the Liverpool, Ormskirk and Preston railway.

From railway work he turned in 1852 to submarine telegraphy, and entering the service of Messrs. Glass and Elliot, laid in 1855–6 his first cable that connecting Cape Breton Island with Newfoundland.

In 1857 he assisted (Sir) Charles Bright in the construction and laying of the first Atlantic cable, and he was on board H.M.S. Agamemnon during the submergence of the cable in 1857 and 1858. Subsequently until 1865 he laid, while in the service of Messrs Glass, Elliot & Company, cables in the deep waters of the Mediterranean and other seas.

When the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Company was formed in 1865, Canning was appointed its chief engineer, and in that capacity had charge of the manufacture and laying of the Atlantic cables of 1865 and 1866, for which the company were the contractors. This work involved the preparation and fitting-out of the Great Eastern. On 2 Aug. 1865 the cable broke in 2000 fathoms of water.

After a second cable had been successfully laid by the Great Eastern (13–27 July 1866) Canning set to work to recover the broken cable, using special grappling machinery, which he devised for the purpose. After several failures the cable was eventually recovered on 2 Sept. 1866. For these services he was knighted in 1866; the King of Portugal conferred upon him the Order of St. Jago d'Espada, and the Liverpool chamber of commerce presented him with a gold medal. In 1869 he laid the French Atlantic cable between Brest and Duxbury, Massachusetts.

After his retirement from the service of the Telegraph Construction Company, he practised as a consulting engineer in matters connected with telegraphy, and, among other work, superintended the laying of the Marseilles-Algiers and other cables for the India Rubber, Gutta Percha and Telegraph Works Company, acting later as adviser to the West Indian and Panama and other telegraph companies.

He was a member both of the Institution of Civil Engineers (from 1 Feb. 1876) and of that of Electrical Engineers. He died at 1 Inverness Gardens, Kensington, on 24 Sept. 1908, and was buried in Kensal Green cemetery. He married in 1859 Elizabeth Anne (d. 1909), daughter of W. H. Gale of Grately, Hampshire, by whom he had three sons and three daughters.

His portrait in oils, by Miss B. Bright, is in the possession of his only surviving daughter, Mrs. Morris.


1909 Obituary [1]




See Also

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Sources of Information

  • Biography, ODNB