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Document 35 P 17

72
double pumps and two single ones they had not been able to sink the
Surface of the water within the Case above an inch below the Surface on the
Outside- In this Method however the Coffer dam Cases used at Perth
Bridge were driven so as to keep the water out of the foundation Pitts
when the surface of the River (when the Tide was in) was from six to seven
feet deep upon the Bed of the River and Consequently against the sides of
the Casing it would therefore have seemed that there had been some very
palpable defect in driving these Cases had not the operations of the second
Pier from the North side sufficiently shown how extremely open this Bed
of Gravel is to the passage of water and how impracticable every method
was likely to prove that depended upon the drainage of the water from
the Piers to be placed in the Main Channel of the River.
Several very rapid and much larger Floods than that which did
the Mischief happened in the course of the succeeding winter particularly
one upon the twelfth of December when the water was within nine inches
of the top of the impost when Mr Pickernell marked a fall of two feet three
inches but without any material damage to anything which naturally
induced all those concerned to proceed in the way they were then going on.
The season of One thousand Seven hundred and Seventy nine was
begun by new founding the western half of the Pier that the weather pre-
-vented from being completed the year before which was the fifth from the
North and was done without Caisson or draining the water by means of an
Air Chest or diving Machine that had been very successfully and Conveni-
-ently employed in undersetting the other three damaged Piers and the
Pier before unbegun (being the Sixth from the North was the next in Course
founded by Caisson but with this difference that the Case was first drove
all except the down stream Salient Pointing before the Caisson was floated
into its place through this opening.
It would cause too great a prolixity to describe the particular
17 operations

Note: Mr Smeaton's Memorial, p 17

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Transcribed by CTW and KS