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 locomotive engines were fixed upon as the working power of the railway, and that his friend George Stephenson was successful in the famous competition which the directors held at Rainshill in October 1829. ‘It was,’ says Robert Stephenson, ‘in conjunction with Mr. Booth that my father constructed the “Rocket" engine which obtained the prize at the celebrated competition which took place a little prior to the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester railway’ (, Lives of the Engineers, 1862, vol. iii. appendix, p. 495). To Booth is due the suggestion of a multitubular boiler, which “gave a very large and effective heating su ace (see his letter quoted, with remarks, in Life of George and Robert Stephenson, 1808, p, 820 et seq.) Booth had indeed a remarkable mechanical genius; also to him are due the coupling screws, spring buffers, and lubricating material for carriage axles, all of which are still in use on our railways, when.

In 1846, the London and North-Western Railway Company was formed from a union of various companies, Booth was appointed secretary for the northern section, and in October 1848 he was chosen a director. He retired from office on 18 May 1859, after being presented (9 April 1859) with 5,000 guineas by the company as a token of gratitude for valuable and faithful service. He spent the remainder of his life in his native town, where for some years he acted as a borough magistrate. He died at his residence, Eastbourne, Princess Park, Liverpool, on 28 March 1869. His wife, the eldest daughter of Abraham Crompton, of Chorley Hall, whom he had married on 27 Aug. 1812, three daughters, and one son, survived him.

In religion Booth was a unitarian, and in politics of moderate liberal. His friend Professor W.B. Hodgson, of Edinburgh, descrbes him as a ‘grave, reserved, reticent, somewhat even stern man,’ ‘above all things just and truthful,’ and ‘of rare consistency, thoroughness, and trustworthiness.' He was an indefatigable worker, ‘never idle and never hurried,’ and was the ‘main agent' in the organising of the vast railway system that during his active lifetime spread over the United Kingdom.

Booth wrote: 1. ‘Rationale of the Currency Question’ (1847), in which be defended the principle of Peel's Banking Act of 1544, considering it defective, ‘not on account of what it has done, but on account of what it has loft undone] and so was led to suggest additional precautions to avoid or mitigate commercia panica 2. ‘Case of the Railways considered (1852). 3. ‘A Letter to Lord Campbell on the 9th and 10th Vict. cap. 93' (1854), in which he vigorously protested against Lord Campbell’s act of 1846 rendering railway companies pecuniarily liable for loss of life caused in accidents on their lines. He declared ‘that the great sufferers by the establishment of railways are the railway companies. To the public they have been very nearly universal gain,’ and yet they were made subject to the losses occasionedly the operation of this act, which was made still worse by the manner in which juries interpreted it. He specially obiected to the ‘principle that those who aid the same fare should have a varying value, according to their position, put upon their lives. ‘Bishopss,' he remarks, with some humour, ‘“ appointed prior to lst January 1848,” are absolutely dangerous, and must rank in the same category with “lucifer matches,” and as for my lords of Canterbury and York, or “C. J. London," they must be regarded altogether as “prohibited articles."’ 4. ‘Moral Capability' (1814). 5. ‘An Account of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway’ (Liverpool, 1830). 6. ‘Free Trade as it affects the People,’ and ‘ A Reformed Parliament’ (Liverpool and London, 1833). 7. ‘Letter to His Majesty’s Commissioners, on Railways in Ireland’ (1830, unpublished, but described in Memoir. It urged the advisability of following one great plan in constructing the national railroads). 8. ‘Observations on the Force of the Wind and the Resistance of the Air’ (Liverpool, 1839). 9. ‘Uniformity of Time considered especially in reference to Railways and the Electric Telegraph‘ (1847). 10. ‘Master and Man, a dialogue, in which are discussed some of the important questions affecting the Social Condition of the Industrious Classes’ (1853). ll. ‘ A Letter on the Approaches to St. Georges Hall’ (Liverpool, (1857). 12. ‘Taxation, direct and indirect, in reply to the Report of the Financial Reform Association’ (1860), an argument against a system of entirely direct taxation. l3. ‘The Struggle for Existence, a Lecture’ (London and Liverpool, (1861). 14. ‘Considerations on the Licensing Question’ (Liverpool, 1862). 15. ‘The Question of Comparative Punishments considered in reference to Otfences against the Person as compared with Offences against the Pocket, with some observations on Prison Discipline’ (Liverpool, 1863). 16. A pamphlet on Atlantic Steam Navigation.

Booth was also the author of fugitive contributions to newspapers. It may be stated that those of his works dealing with special economic subjects are written in accordance with the doctrine of the orthodox laissez-faire school. 