Robert White
Robert White (1842-1925)
Railway Achievements
- 1869, entered the service of the Great Southern of India Railway as assistant engineer, and remained, in India in the service of that Company, and of its successor - the South Indian Railway Company - until 1881, rising to the position of Chief Engineer and acting as Chief Engineer of the line. During his service in India he was in charge of the construction of a large portion of what is now the metre-gauge system of the South Indian Railway [1].
- 1881, retired from India, in private consultancy based in England.
- 1888, joined George Barclay Bruce in partnership. The partnership were the Consulting Engineers for the South Indian Railway [1].
- 1902 Sectional Locomotive Committee from its formation in 1902, and on the Locomotive Conference formed at the request of the Secretary of State for India to prepare designs for standard types of locomotives for Indian Railways, and on the Sub-Committee on Iron for Railway Rolling Stock [1].
- 1908, on the death of Sir George Barclay Bruce he continued the practice of the firm under his own name [1].
- c.1910, Pamban Viaduct, designed by Robert White, the SIR Company’s Consulting Engineer in London. The bridge was constructed in England under his supervision [2].