In 1884 he joined the Wrexham contracting firm of Johnson Brothers and Slay, where he became manager,[2] and worked on the Glyn Valley Tramway during the rebuilding in 1886. From 1892 until 1895 he served as the engineer and surveyor of the Ffestiniog Local Highways Board, followed by a similar appointment to the Malvern Urban District Council.[2] From 1904 until 1913 Maybury served as the county surveyor for Kent during which time he was responsible for constructing new roads and classifying the existing network in light of the rapid increase in motor traffic following the revised speed limits of the Motor Car Act 1903.[1][4] He carried out experiments on road surfaces at Sidcup to try to improve durability and reduce dust produced by the increased speed of traffic.[5]
In 1904 he also developed sewerage and drinking water schemes for Ludlow County Borough and Worcestershire County Council.[4] In 1910 he was invited to become a member of the Advisory Engineering Committee to the Roads Board, who had been impressed by his road surface trials, and served as their chief engineering officer upon leaving his position in Kent.[1] He later became manager and secretary of the board.[4] One of his innovations was to divide the road network intro three categories on the basis of which road maintenance grants would be distributed and he appointed a large staff of engineers to carry out this categorisation.[5]
First World War
From the start of the First World War he was appointed by the War Office to build and maintain roads at military camps in the United Kingdom. In 1916 he visited France to advise the British Army's Engineer-in-Chief on matters to do with road transportation and was asked to form a highway engineering service in France.[5] This organisation was absorbed into the British Army later that year and Maybury was placed at the head of the Roads Directorate and commissioned as a brigadier general.[5] Maybury had charge of the roads used by the Allied forces in France, under Eric Geddes, director-general of transportation.[1] The directorate was responsible for 40,000 men and 4,000 miles of roads plus associated works such as quarries.[4] Maybury was mentioned in dispatches four times for his work during the war and was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath and an Officer of the Legion of Honour in 1917.[1][4] He retired from the army in 1919.[5]
Later career and honours
In 1919 he was created a commander and then knight commander of the Order of St Michael and St George and was appointed Director General of the Roads Department of the Ministry of Transport, a position he would hold for the next nine years.[4] In this role Maybury developed new arterial highways and modernized existing roads, providing a considerable means of employment during a period of depressed economic output.[5]
Maybury was chairman of the Lights on Vehicles; Taxation and Regulation of Road Vehicles; Licensing and Regulation of Public Service Vehicles and Traffic Signs committees of the Ministry of Transport.[4] In 1936 he chaired the committee for the Development of Civil Aviation in the United Kingdom.[4]
In 1927 he officially opened Maybury Road in Edinburgh, named in his honour, in his capacity as Director General of the Ministry of Transport.[8] In 1928 the Paviors' Company, to which he had been elected in 1918, founded a professorship in highways engineering at the University of London named after himself.[2] For 1936 he was appointed President of the Shropshire Horticultural Society and he had been President of the Shropshire Society in London.[3]
Maybury also held a number of commercial directorships up to his death, including chairmanship of the British Quarrying Company and trustee of the West Midlands Savings Bank.[3] Maybury ran a private engineering consultancy based in Aldwych.[5] He was president of the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers at the time of his death.[4]
Personal life
Maybury was twice married. He first married, in 1885, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Sheldon of Ludlow, Shropshire. By her he left a son and two daughters. She died in 1929. He married, secondly, in August 1942, when aged 77, his personal secretary, Katharine Mary, daughter of Samuel William Pring of Winchester, Hampshire.[2][3]
^
Watson, Garth (1988). The Civils. London: Thomas Telford Ltd. p. 253. ISBN0-7277-0392-7.
^Plummer, Alfred (November 1933). "The London Passenger Transport Act of 1933: A New Socialization". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 48 (1): 181–193. doi:10.2307/1884802.