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James Charles Inglis

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Nationality
  
British

Died
  
December 19, 1911

Role
  
Civil engineer

Name
  
James Inglis


James Charles Inglis

Institution memberships
  
Institution of Civil Engineers

Engineering discipline
  
Civil Engineering

Sir James Charles Inglis (9 September 1851 – 19 December 1911) was a British civil engineer.

Inglis was born in Aberdeen on 9 September 1851. He served in the Engineer and Railway Staff Corps, an unpaid volunteer unit of the Volunteer Force which provided technical advice to the British Army. He was appointed a Major in that corps on 24 June 1893, by which time he was also a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE). He was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel of the Engineer and Railway Staff Corps on 1 April 1908 on the date that it transferred from the disbanded Volunteer Force to the newly raised Territorial Force.

Inglis was elected president of the ICE for the November 1908 to November 1910 session. During his time as president he saw the start of construction of their new headquarters at One Great George Street. Inglis ceremoniously laid the foundation stone for the building in 1910 after placing beneath it copies of the institution's Royal Charter and the Telford, Watt and Stephenson medals awarded by the institution. He was knighted by King George V at St James' Palace on 23 February 1911 by which point he was the General Manager of the Great Western Railway. Inglis died on 19 December that year and is buried at Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Cemetery, Hanwell in London.

References

James Charles Inglis Wikipedia