This is my first post for CNC_Rick, who is slowly working his way from the beginning of the Underground Lair. I'll get to my call for action for Rick (or any other readers) at the end, but first, I need to talk about an Englishman I just learned about.
Previously I mentioned famous English civil engineer Isamabard Kingdom Brunel, said to be one of the greatest English figures of the Industrial Revolution. Pictured here in front of a whacking great chain:
en.wikipedia.org
Tonight, looking into a book I want to recommend to CNC_Rick, I discover that the Englishman who wrote that book also wrote a book in 1957 about Brunel that repopularized him for modern readers. (The book also helped the author stop being broke.)
The author, L.T.C. Rolt, liked old cars, old canals and barges, old trains and railways, and did what he could to preserve them. He lived on a narrow barge for a good spell. (On this small barge he installed a Model T engine, and later, a bath, and that helped an adventurous lady move in and live with him for quite some time before she joined the circus.)
He helped found the Vintage Sports Car Club in 1934. He wrote many books about trains and barges/canals, and was instrumental in preserving England's small canal network.
en.wikipedia.org
And now for my prescription for CNC_Rick. Back in the early 90's, stuck at home on a break from school, I found this book at the public library and read the first couple of chapters, and it was outstanding. It's a history of machine tools, and giving a good foundation to the centuries of attempts to, say, bore cannon barrels before the Industrial Revolution being the foundation of boring machines needed to properly build large steam engines.
The book is titles
A Short History of Machine Tools. Its also titled Tools for the
Job: A Short History of Machine Tools. Published by a publisher in England, and in the USA by MIT Press.
Wikipedia:
"Rolt, L. T. C. (1965),
A Short History of Machine Tools, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: MIT Press,
OCLC 250074. Co-edition published as Rolt, L. T. C. (1965),
Tools for the Job: a Short History of Machine Tools, London: B. T. Batsford,
LCCN 65080822"
I recommend reading this book!
Do I recommend
buying this book? Maybe. Maybe not. It's hard to find and it's not cheap. A decade ago I bought a copy as a gift for a friend at $45. I checked the usual sources tonight (Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Abe Books, ebay) and lots of dry holes and a few insane prices.
But you can always ask your local library to get you one on the interlibrary loan (ILL) system.
en.wikipedia.org
I have no idea how Google books works nowadays. That may be a possibility.