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William Roberts J.P. M.Inst. C.E. (1848 – 30 November 1918) was Engineer-in-Chief to the Highland Railway based in Inverness, Scotland.
Life
He was born in Dunblane in 1849, the son of William Roberts (1821–1896) for some time station master at Elgin, and for many years Superintendent of the line of the Highland Railway, and Margaret McGregor (1821–1877).
He married Madeline (c. 1854 – 19 May 1947) daughter of Donald Fraser on 30 April 1879 in Broomhall, Strathspey. They had the following children
Donald Fraser Roberts (born 1881)
William Roberts (born 1883) (also a railway engineer).
Margaret MacGregor Roberts (died 1880)
James Hamish Roberts (1885 – 13 October 1918)
Simon Fraser Roberts (died 1891)
Isabella Fraser Roberts (born 1887)
Madeline Fraser Roberts (born 1889)
Ewan Duncan MacPherson Roberts (1892–1935)
John Fraser Roberts (born 1895)
Cecil Herbert Roberts (born 1898)
He died at his home, Rockburn, 18 Southside Road, Inverness on 30 November 1918 and was buried in Tomnahurich Cemetery, Inverness where his memorial was erected.
Career
He worked as a pupil and later assistant to Peter MacBey, Civil Engineer and Surveyor in Elgin from 1863 to 1871.
From 1871 to 1874 he worked under Murdoch Paterson, engineer in chief of the Highland railway and was the resident engineer for the Sutherland and Caithness Railway. In 1874 he was involved with the construction of the Eglinton Tunnel and Stobcross Dock, Glasgow. From 1876 to 1877 he worked for the Dunfirmline & Inverkeithing Railway. He also worked for the East India Railway on the Allahabad. From 1879 to 1891 he worked for the Badenoch and Strathspey districts of Inverness, where he designed and constructed stone, iron and timber bridges over the River Spey and the River Findhorn for the County Road Trustees. He also designed water and drainage works for Kingussie and Grantown-on-Spey.
He was appointed assistant to Murdoch Paterson in 1891 and succeeded him as engineer-in-chief to the Highland Railway in 1898 and designed several stations and other structures. He was responsible for the Inverness section of the Aviemore deviation line, the extension of the line from Stromeferry to Kyle of Lochalsh, the line from Wick to Lybster, the Dornoch Light Railway, and the doubling of the Highland Line between Struan and Blair Atholl.
He was appointed a Member of the Institute of Civil Engineers in 1897.
He retired from the Highland Railway in 1913 and during the First World War he was Food Commissioner for the North of Scotland Division.