D. Alan Stevenson
Scottish civil engineer, architect

D. Alan Stevenson

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
Scottish civil engineer, architect
A.K.A.
David Alan Stevenson
Gender:
Male
Birth:
7 February 1891(Edinburgh, City of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Death:
22 December 1971(Edinburgh, City of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Star sign:
Education:
University of Edinburgh
Family:
Mother:
Margaret Sherriff
Spouse(s):
Jessie Laura Margaret MacLellan
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Life Family Family tree Selected publications
The details
Biography

Introduction

Stevenson's 1950 book The Triangular Stamps of Cape of Good Hope.

David Alan Stevenson FRSE, F.I.C.E., FRSGS (7 February 1891 – 22 December 1971) was a lighthouse engineer from the famous Stevenson lighthouse-builder family and noted amateur philatelist.

In 1951, Stevenson was awarded the Crawford Medal by the Royal Philatelic Society London for his work The Triangular Stamps of Cape of Good Hope.

Life

He was born at 9 Manor Place on 7 February 1891 the son of Margaret Sherriff and Charles Alexander Stevenson. He was the last of a long line of lighthouse engineers. He was named after his uncle, David Alan Stevenson but was generally called Alan. The family lived at 9 Manor Place in Edinburgh's West End. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy 1899 to 1903, then studied civil engineering at the University of Edinburgh graduating with a BSc in 1912.

In 1911 he was living with his family at 28 Douglas Crescent.

In World War I he served as a Captain in the Royal Marines as an engineer. His duties included setting guidance lights on the Dardanelles to aid shipping there.

In 1919 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Charles Alexander Stevenson (his father), David Alan Stevenson (his uncle), William A. P. Tait, James Simpson Pirie, Sir Thomas Hudson Beare and Harry Rainy.

Until 1938 he was an engineer of the Northern Lighthouse Board and thereafter spent his life working for the Clyde Lighthouse Trust. His work on the Clyde was pre-empted in 1934 by a commission to deepen the river in order to have capacity to launch the RMS Queen Mary.

He died on 22 December 1971 and was buried in the first northern extension to Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh. The grave lies immediately alongside his parents.

Family

He was married to Jessie MacLaggan (1897–1973).

Family tree

Alan's position in the family tree shows his long pedigree as an engineer.

Thomas Smith (engineer)Jean Lille StevensonAlan Stevenson (merchant)
Thomas Smith (engineer)Jean Lille StevensonAlan Stevenson (merchant)
Joan SmithRobert Stevenson (civil engineer)
David Stevenson (engineer)Alan Stevenson (engineer)Thomas Stevenson (engineer)
Charles Alexander Stevenson (engineer)David Alan Stevenson (engineer)Robert Louis Stevenson
D. Alan Stevenson (engineer)
Thomas Smith (engineer)Jean Lille StevensonAlan Stevenson (merchant)
Joan SmithRobert Stevenson (civil engineer)
David Stevenson (engineer)Alan Stevenson (engineer)Thomas Stevenson (engineer)
Charles Alexander Stevenson (engineer)David Alan Stevenson (engineer)Robert Louis Stevenson
D. Alan Stevenson (engineer)
Joan SmithRobert Stevenson (civil engineer)
David Stevenson (engineer)Alan Stevenson (engineer)Thomas Stevenson (engineer)
Charles Alexander Stevenson (engineer)David Alan Stevenson (engineer)Robert Louis Stevenson
D. Alan Stevenson (engineer)

Selected publications

  • The Triangular Stamps of Cape of Good Hope (New York, London, Sydney: H.R. Harmer, 1950)
  • The World's Lighthouses before 1820 (1959)