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CHAPTER X - BEGIN BUSINESS AT MANCHESTER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2010

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Summary

Mr. Maudsley arrived from Berlin two days after my return to London. He, too, had enjoyed his holiday. During his stay in Berlin he had made the friendship of the distinguished Humboldt. Shenkel, the architect, had been very kind to him, and presented him with a set of drawings and engravings of his great architectural works, which Mr. Maudsley exhibited to me with much delight. What he most admired in Shenkel was the great range of his talent in all matters of design, his minute attention to detail, and his fine artistic feeling.

Soon after Mr. Maudsley's return, a very interesting job was brought to him, in which he took even more than his usual interest. It was a machine that his friend Mr. Barton, of the Royal Mint, had obtained from France. It was, intended to cut or engrave the steel dies used for stamping coin. It was a remarkable and interesting specimen of inventive ingenuity. It copied any object in relief which had been cast in plaster of Paris or brass from the artist's original wax model. The minutest detail was transferred to soft steel dies with absolute accuracy. This remarkable machine could copy and cut steel dies either in intaglio or in cameo of any size, and, in short, enabled the mechanic who managed it to transfer the most minute and characteristic touches of the original model to the steel dies for any variety of size of coin.

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James Nasmyth, Engineer
An Autobiography
, pp. 172 - 198
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1883

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