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Robert
Stevenson
Robert
Stevenson was born in Glasgow in 1772, the son of Alan Stevenson
(a merchant in that city) and Jean Lillie. Alan died of fever
in 1794 whilst in the Caribbean West Indies attending to the trading
business which he and his brother Hugh ran from Glasgow. This
unfortunate situation placed his mother in straitened financial
circumstances. Eventually the family moved to Edinburgh where
young Robert was enrolled at the High School. During this time,
Jean Stevenson, through her church-going activities, had met Thomas
Smith, whom she would eventually marry after the death of his
2nd wife. As a young man Robert acted as assistant to his stepfather
(who in time also became his father-in-law), in the supervision
of such lighthouses as then existed on the coasts of Scotland.
These were few in number and were crudely illuminated by coal
fires. Thomas Smith had already done much to improve them by the
introduction of lamps and reflectors. Robert worked hard to qualify
himself as an civil engineer, and even as early as 1793 he was
known to have been entrusted, at least in part, to the building
of the lighthouse on Little Cumbrae on the Frith of Clyde. It
is to Robert Stevenson, however, the credit is mainly due for
building up the family business of lighthouse construction and
civil engineering, although there was been criticism over the
years about exactly whose design was used to built the Bell Rock
lighthouse. See "Who Built the Bell Rock Lighthouse".
Stevenson marred Jean Smith (the daughter of his step-father by
an earlier marriage) and had a large family of whom three sons
followed their father into the lighthouse-building business. Robert
retired in 1843, and his eldest son Alan became Engineer to the
Northern Lighthouse Board. Robert died in 1850 (his wife had died
in 1846) and both lie in New Calton Cemetery in Edinburgh with
their family, many of whom died in infancy.
Lighthouses - Bell Rock (1811), Toward Point (1812), Southerness
(1812), Isle of May (1816), Corsewall (1817), Point of Ayre (1818),
Calf of Man (1818), Sumburgh Head (1821), Rhinns of Islay (1825),
Buchan Ness (1827), Cape Wrath (1828), Tarbat Ness (1830), Mull
of Galloway (1830), Dunnet Head (1831), Douglas Head (1832), Girdle
Ness (1833), Barra Head (1833), Lismore (1833).
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