Mesnier was the son of French parents Jacques Robert Mesnier de Ponsard and Marie Élodie Ronson;[1]: 1075 his father worked in Braga at its gas company.[2] He had an older brother, Pedro Gastão, born in 1846, who became a diplomatic aide.[1]: 1074
He studied at the Liceu do Porto and later mathematics and philosophy at the University of Coimbra. Following his degree, he apprenticed in mechanical engineering at shops in France, Germany and Switzerland. Returning to Portugal, in 1871 he married Sofia Adelaide Ferreira Pinto Basto in Porto on 3 September.
Mesnier contributed engineering designs for three Lisbon cable-car lines: Graça, Estrela, and São Sebastião. Worldwide, only four cable-car services were ever built outside of Anglophone countries (Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, USA).[3]: 73 Unlike the San Francisco cable-car lines, Lisbon's did not run on generally wide and straight streets. This required innovative solutions for the engineering problems posed by the geometry. To thread the Arco de Santo Andrė and its hairpin turn up the Calçada da Graça, Mesnier designed a double grip system on the cars to engage a low-tension cable through the turn.[3]: app.14 One was used to travel through the turns and the other on the rest of the route.
In 1913, Mesnier made an engineering study[4] for a railway in Mozambique linking Inhambane with Inharrime. Work on the railway took place between 1909 and 1915,[5]: app.1 and railway personnel were reported to be on-site in January 1908.[6] Mesnier may have been at work there at the time of his death.
Other projects
Mesnier published designs for other inventions,[1]: 1076 notable amongst which are a revolver (1879), a modified carbine breech loading mechanism (1879), a repeating rifle (1879 & 1880), and a mechanical calculating machine called the Aritmotecno (1882).[2]
In 1903, a syndicate that included Mesnier petitioned for a concession[7] to build an aerial cableway system in São Tomé e Principe to transport goods over its steep terrain and to provide mechanical power to remote locations where needed for industrial work, e.g. logging activity. Mesnier laid out the general advantages for such systems in the article. However, there is no evidence in S. Tomé of its ever being built.
Also in 1903, Mesnier made a bid to the minister of the Navy for a concession to operate an electrically powered system for ship cargo and train loading and unloading at the port of Lourenco Marques (Maputo), Mozambique. Included in the project were new jetties to handle deep-draft ships. Pending successful patent awards for the equipment, he hoped to form a company and find investors to build and operate the facility.[8]
Legacy
During his lifetime, Mesnier was acknowledged for his engineering accomplishments in Lisbon. On two separate occasions, transport companies affiliated with him asked him for public announcements of support for their work.[9] At the time of his death, he was memorialized by an engineering trade journal for his work on the Santa Justa Lift, particularly.[10]
Rua Raúl Mesnier du Ponsard, in the Lumiar neighborhood of Lisbon, is named after him.
^ abcPereira, Esteves; Rodrigues, Guilherme (1909). PORTUGAL, Diccionario Histórico, Chorographico, Biographico, Bibliographico, Heraldico, Numismático e Artístico Vol. 4. João Romano Torres Editores.
^ abLopes Cordeiro, José Manuel (2 May 1999). "O homem dos elevadores". O Publico. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
^ abHipólito Firmino da Costa, João Manuel (2008). Um Caso de Patromónio Local: A Tomada de Lisboa Pelos Ascensores. Lisboa: Master's thesis: Universidade Aberta.
^Mesnier, Raul (1913). Estudo: O caminho-de-ferro Inhambane-Inharrime e porto de Inhambane - transportes e comunicações. Maputo: U. Edouard Mondlaine.
^Freitas, Manuel (2014), SIPA (ed.), Ascensor da Nazaré (IPA.00035052) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 18 September 2023