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Nicholas Wilcox Cundy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nicholas Wilcox Cundy (1778 – c. 1837) was an English architect and engineer. He was the son of Peter Cundy and Thomasine Wilcox and the brother of Thomas Cundy (senior). His parents' address was Restowick House, St Dennis, Cornwall.[1]

Career

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Nicholas Cundy was articled to a civil engineer in 1793. Later, he moved to London and became articled to an architect. His best-known architectural work is the conversion of the Pantheon, London into a theatre 1811–1812.

He returned to civil engineering about 1823 and became involved with canals and railways. He made an unsuccessful bid to build a ship canal from Portsmouth to London.[2] In the 1830s, he became involved with railway schemes, including the Grand Southern Railway (a proposed London-Brighton route),[3] the Grand Northern Railway (later the Northern and Eastern Railway), and the Central Kent Railway.

He stood as a Member of Parliament for Sandwich, Kent but was not elected.

Personal life

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He married Miss Stafford-Cooke. He died about 1837.

References

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  1. ^ A Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland
  2. ^ Imperial Ship Canal from London to Portsmouth. Mr. Cundy's Reply
  3. ^ Cundy, Nicholas Wilcox (1834). Inland Transit: The Practicability, Utility, and Benefit of Railroads; the Comparative Attraction and Speed of Steam Engines, on a Railroad, Navigation, and Turnpike Road; Report of a Select Committee of the House # Commons on Steam Carriages, with an Abstract of the Evidence Taken Before Parliament on the Birmingham Railroad Bill; with the Preamble; Also, the Plans, Sections, and Estimate of the Projected Grand Southern and Northern Railroads. G. Herbert. p. 10. nicholas cundy railway.

Bibliography

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