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Thomas Curtis Clarke 1827-1901


Location
The County of Northumberland - Port Hope
On the east side of Lent Lane, halfway between Augusta Street and Walton Street


Photographer
Alan L Brown
Posted
May 20, 2004

Text from the Plaque
"The world of today differs from that of Napoleon Bonaparte more than his world differed from that of Julius Caeser, and this change has chiefly been made by engineering". These were the words of civil engineer Thomas Clarke, a New Englander who came to Port Hope in 1853 to work for the local railway. He married and raised a family here, and in the 1860s was a partner in a Port Hope firm that constructed the East and West Blocks of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. Clarke then moved to the United States where he pioneered the modern iron viaduct and built massive railway bridges that brought him international acclaim. Clarke is buried in St. John's Cemetery, Port Hope.

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