Peter Bruff

View of the Chappel Viaduct on the Sudbury line, engineered by Peter Bruff in 1847-1849

Peter Schuyler Bruff (23 July 1812 – 24 February 1900) was an English civil engineer and land developer[1][2] remembered primarily for his part in establishing the East Anglian railway networks between the 1840s and 1860s. His contribution to the region's infrastructure and development extended far beyond the railways, however, and included the renovation of the Colchester water supply (1851-1880) and the Ipswich sewerage system (completed 1881), the development of the town of Harwich and the Essex resorts of Walton-on-the-Naze and Clacton on Sea (which he built up from an empty piece of farmland into a flourishing seaside town),[3][4] and (not least) the late Victorian revival of the Coalport porcelain factory in Shropshire, which he purchased in 1880.

  1. ^ M. Russen, 'Peter Bruff: Ipswich's Brunel... and the builder of Stoke Hill Tunnel', Newsletter of the Ipswich Society, Issue 177 (October 2009) Society's online edition.
  2. ^ 'Obituary. Peter Schuyler Bruff, 1812-1900', Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Volume 141 Part 3, 1900, (January 1900), pp. 339-341 (Institution of Civil Engineers, Virtual Library pdf, free access).
  3. ^ E.A. Labrum, Civil Engineering Heritage (T. Telford 1994), p. 282. ISBN 0-7277-1970-X
  4. ^ N. Jacobs, Clacton Past, with Holland on Sea and Jaywick (Phillimore & Co., Ltd., Chichester 2002). ISBN 1-86077-225-0

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