Robert Ballard
BALLARD Robert MICE MASE JP (1839-1912)
Robert Ballard was born on March 28, 1839 at Ledbury, Herefordshire, England, son of Robert Ballard, builder, and his wife Catherine Maria, née Pedlingham. He first attended King Edward Grammar School, Ledbury; later he trained as a civil engineer under his uncle, Stephen Ballard, in Britain and Holland and under George Woodhouse in France. He became a member of the Institution of Engineers, England, and the American Society of Engineers.
Sent by Thomas Brassey (1805 1870) of Peto, Brassey & Betts, railways contractors, to New South Wales in 1859, Ballard constructed the railway from Maitland to Singleton. In 1863 65 he worked for the government as resident engineer, superintending the rail extension from Picton to Goulburn. In 1865 he rejoined Peto, Brassey & Betts, now contracting for Queensland's first railway from Ipswich to Toowoomba. Ballard was resident engineer for the Main Range section of the line.
After the 1866 financial crisis and trouble between government and contractors, Ballard left the company and was later appointed official mining surveyor for the Gympie goldfields. In 1872 he was appointed chief engineer on the Great Northern railway to build the line from Westwood, beyond Rockhampton, to Dawson Bridge. His system offered a quick cheap means of constructing the Queensland narrow gauge railway line of 3 ft 6 ins. Though a public servant, Ballard let subcontracts directly to tradesmen, thus eliminating the profits made by large contractors. He was appointed chief engineer of the Central and Northern railway in 1878. In recognition of his achievements in cheap railway construction Ballard was granted £5000 by the Queensland government. He was considered one of the boldest engineers in Australia and patented a number of his own inventions, including a new fish joint for rails. On the Charters Towers railway Ballard saved a detour of five miles (8 km) and £30,000 by making steep mountain tracks with some grades of one in twenty five and curves of four chains (80 m) radius; the time of construction was cut by two years.
When he left the Queensland government service in 1886 Ballard prepared a report on railways construction which was accepted by the South Australian government. Later he served as consulting engineer for the Mount Morgan Gold Mining Co. and several English gold mining companies at Menzies, Western Australia including the Lady Harriet gold mine from 1897 to 1901. Ballard was the manager of the Menzies Mining and Exploration Corporation Ltd (NCGF) from 1897 to 1901 during which time the mine produced 26 thousand fine oz of gold at a valuable grade of 23 dwt per ton. He was the company’s consulting engineer from 1898 to 1901. He was also manager of a less successful mine, Central Menzies GM Ltd, in 1899 1900.
Ballard had married Tamar Brown, at West Maitland, New South Wales, on December 22, 1862; they had seven children.
He left Australia in 1901 and returned to London. He died in London on November 22, 1912.
Ballard was determined and resolute with many interests outside his field. He was a member of the Johnsonian Club of Brisbane. In New York and London he published The Solution of the Pyramid Problem; or, Pyramid Discoveries. With a New Theory as to Their Ancient Use (1882), arguing that the pyramids were the 'theodolites of the Egyptians'. His Man's Blood Guilt (London, 1906) speculated on the history of the human soul. His collection of drawings and paintings of Australian butterflies and moths is in the Mitchell Library, Sydney. He was made a Justice of the Peace in Western Australia in May 1901.
Lake Ballard is believed to have been named after him.
References:
Australian Dictionary of Biography
Denis A Cumming and Richard G Hartley, Westralian Founders of 20th Century Mining, Graphic Source Pty Ltd, 2014
Jacqueline Bell, Robert Ballard: an early Queensland Railway Engineer, Queensland Heritage, Volume 1 Issue 10, pp 3 9