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The origins of the railroad : The locomotive
of Trevithick , 1804 .
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History
of the locomotives.
The history of the early days of the locomotive is closely related to
the evolution of the automatic steam vehicle devised to circulate in the
roads and later left aside after being developed the transport on tracks.
The idea to tend a special pair of rails for the wheels of the load vehicles
goes back to the time of the Romans, who were used to paving with stone
blocks located in parallel channels the portion the road through where
they passed the wheels.
The same method was adopted frequently in the early times of the operation
of the stone coal deposits in England, where this coal was transported
from the mines in railroad cars drown by horses . Towards the 1630, nevertheless,
an individual called Beaumont ran seating wood tracks with the
same object; and by the end of XVIII century it was of current use railroads
with wood tracks that had a cleared superior surface, adjusting to them
the channeled rims of the iron wheels of the wagons; it also was appraised
the advantage for the economy represented by the easier transportation
ascending or descending the slopes, reducing the hills, filling up the
depressions of the land and constructing bridges on the rivers. |
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Later the wood tracks were covered with strained iron plates, to extend
their duration diminishing the wearing down, and in 1776 a railroad was
constructed in Sheffield (United Kingdom) tending prismatic strained iron
bars on wood beams.
Starting off from these coarse principles,
the modern railroad was developed, a road composed of parallel steel rails
supported by ties and providing a track for locomotive-drawn trains or
other wheeled vehicles , with its heavy woods resting on divided stone
and maintaining prismatic steel tracks that weigh of 45 to 65 kilograms
per meter, with all its complete cohort of auxiliary elements: nails ,
signals, dispositions for rescue, etc.
The locomotive in its childhood
and its first vacillating steps .
At the end of 18th. century , the steam
engine became a real and positive factor in the industry, and different
attempts had been made to apply it to the road vehicles. The merit to
carry out the construction of the first locomotive that marched on tracks
corresponds to Richard Trevithick, that, in February of 1804, used
a locomovible machine to carry coal in the road of Penydarran, in South
Wales , United Kingdom. |
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Locomotive of Blenkinsop, 1812 |
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The first
locomotive used successfully
The locomotive of Trevithick, according
to the most authorized references, was very similar to the attached figure
in this page . The boiler was made of strained iron with inner furnace,
and the products of the combustion were directed to a chimney located
in the same end of the mouth of the firebox . The steam engine, that is
to say, the cylinder with the piston, was arranged vertically, and the
connecting bars represented in the figure by the D, that acted as a connecting
rod, and the L, connected with the motor axis. |
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The steam, after having operated, escaped
by the chimney to increase the shot, and this system it depended on the
friction of the driving wheels on the tracks to assure sufficient traction
power . The pressure of the steam was about 40 pounds by square inch;
so that strictly speaking it was a machine of high pressure. The safety
valve, E , prevented an excessive pressure in the boiler. This locomotive
worked well, but its economic results were not satisfactory.
The following successful attempt to obtain
a steam locomotive was done by Blenkinsop in 1812. This machine, as it
appears in the corresponding figure , had two cylinders of 203 millimeters
of diameter each one and arranged vertically , like in the machine of
Trevithick. The connecting bars, nevertheless, acted on axes with pinions
that rotated a great dented wheel, that matched as well in the edges of
the rails of the track . The supporting wheels of the machine were not,
then, driving wheels. The machine of Blenkinsop was followed, in 1813,
by another denominated " Puffing Billy ", devised by Blackett,
that almost completely agreed upon the same Blenkínsop's system
in the general structure of the vehicle, but that obtained the effect
of traction by means of the supporting wheels, like in the locomotive
invented by Trevithick.
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Locomotive Killingworth , 1816 |

Locomotive "Puffing Billy"
, 1813 |
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But
the same time, Jorge Stephenson, engineer of the coalmine of Killingworth,
England , had been working in the resolution of the problem, and in 1814
introduced his first machine, denominated the " Blucher ", which
had a boiler of 863 millimeters of diameter and 2.43 meters in length,
with a heating tube of 507 millimeters of diameter. The cylinders had
203 millimeters of diameter, being the race of the piston of 609 millimeters.
This locomotive did not defer greatly from any of its precedents; but
in the second machine devised by the same Stephenson, and constructed
the following year, he began to show the originality that gave him the
merit and the triumph of making a locomotive a commercial success. In
this machine, the connecting bars were in direct communication with the
four wheels, and both axes were connected by rods that acted on trees
inside the bearings. The rods later were replaced by chains, as it is
seen in the attached figure. In a third locomotive, constructed by the
same Stephenson, the boiler was transported in steam cylinders, anticipating
then the future disposition of the support by springs .
All these locomotives were devised to drag
wagons of coal at little speed from mines of particular property, and
for a long time, after having used them with a recognized success in that
kind of job, the wagons destined to passengers still continued being dragged
by horse, and only by force of persistence Stephenson obtained allowance
to construct three locomotives for the new Stockton and Darlington railroad
, of which he was named engineer-chief in 1823, and that was constructed
to use horses as a mean of traction . |
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The "Locomotion" , built
by Stephenson in 1825 , over the first railroad bridge . |
The
first of the three machines that Stephenson constructed, and denominated
"Locomotion", was not different from the previous locomotives,
but it had outer lateral rods. The boiler had 1.21 meters of diameter and
three of length; both vertical cylinders were of 254 millimeters of diameter;
the driving wheels were connected by lateral bars, like in the modern locomotives.
The machinery altogether weighed six tons and a half, and it was accompanied
with a tender to transport coal and water. |
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The
railroad of Stockton and Darlington was the first in which the locomotives
were used with regularity for the transport of passengers and merchandise.
The cavalries were thus discarded.
The supremacy of the locomotive was definitively and totally consecrated
in the contest inaugurated by the Company of the railroad of Liverpool
and Manchester to decide what traction method would be the best one for
its new rail , and offering a prize for the best solution. The plan counted
, of course, with the opposition of the Companies of diligences and the
land owners along the way. Stephenson, that had been named engineer-chief
, was greatly ridiculed after assuring that he could construct a locomotive
that would march at the speed of 30 kilometers per hour. During the debate
that for the concession was originated in the House of Commons, a member
of a Committee of this Camera asked to him: "Let's suppose now that
one of your machines is marching at the rate of two and a half or three
kilometers per hour and that a cow crossed the line and intercepted the
way of the machine, wouldn't it be a very delicate circumstance ?, to
which the engineer responded "Yes , very delicate for the cow."
And when asked if the people and the animals would not be intimidated
themselves by the red chimney of the locomotive, he answered back with
very good sense: "But how they would know to distinguish if the chimney
did not go painted ? " .
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The locomotive "Rocket"
built by Stephenson in 1829 and winner of a public contest . |
For the contest
that took place in October of 1829, Stephenson constructed his locomotive
"Rocket", that not only defeated all its competitors, but it got
to march at the rate of 40 kilometers per hour in the tests, and two days
later it dragged 13 tons of weight at a speed of 50 kilometers per hour.
The "Rocket", that weighed only four tons and a half, had a boiler
constructed with very similar tubes to the system of the modern tubular
boilers, being its dimensions altogether of 1.82 meters in length with 1.015
meters of diameter. The cylinders were assembled in a sloped position ,
and the piston rods were connected to single great working wheel each one
of them. The steam, after acting, was expelled by the chimney by means of
sharpened exhaust pipes. The "Rocket" presented, therefore, practically
all the special characteristics of a useful and practical locomotive and
worked for many years. |
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The
first attempt to test a commercial use of the locomotive in America was
carried out in 1829 by the Company of the Channel of Delaware &
Hudson, which imported from England the locomotive "Stourbridge
Lemon" to work in the line of 25 kilometers from Carbondale to
Hones (Pennsylvania). But that the tracks were too weak, and the use of
the machine was stopped immediately .
The first locomotive constructed in the United States of America was a
small model, designed by Peter Cooper and tried successfully in the railroad
of Baltimore to Ohio. The tubes of the boiler were done with rifle barrels,
and the machine developed only 1.43 horsepower. This was the principle,
and just in a short time they appeared, in the order that follows, the
locomotives denominated: "Best Friend", 1830; the "West
Point", 1831; the "Sonth Carolina", 1831; the
"Witt Clinton", 1831; the "Atlantic",
1832; the "Old Ironsides", 1832.
The last machine mentioned was the first locomotive constructed by Matthias
W. Baldwin, founder of the great factories of locomotives "Baldwin",
in Philadelphia. The development of the locomotive marched then by good
way in the United States; and many special facilities, several of which
were destined to become famous world-wide institutions, began to occupy
the place of what were in the beginning small factories destined to construct
machines in general, and without nothing of the special instruments that
are common in the modern industry.
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Locomotive "South Carolina"
, 1831 . |

Locomotive "Best Friend"
, 1839 |
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Locomotive "West Point"
, 1831 . |
Many peculiar
and interesting improvements of the essential parts of the locomotive were
tried by the rival constructors before arising the definitive type of locomotive.
The boiler was then installed along its length, and the motor cylinder,
with their pistons and accessories, placed horizontally in the previous
end. Two axis-motors were adopted, and the connector bar of the steam engine
was linked directly to one of the motor wheels. These wheels were connected
to each other by means of lateral bars .The furnace was still sufficiently
narrow to be placed between the wheels, and it was found that it was necessary
to add an auxiliary set of front wheels, due to the length of the boiler
and to help the locomotive to turn the curves. |
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Other
accessories, such as the bell, the whistle, the sand table, etc., were
added to the locomotive later, increasing the gross weight to more than
30 tons. Since then it has been constructed machines of greater power
and dimensions ; but the general characteristics of the steam locomotive
, in which the alterations have not been truly fundamental, were finally
determined more precisely around the year 1850.
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Photo of 1925 of the "Twentieth
Century Limited", the most famous train of the world at the beginning
the XX Century, this luxurious and fast train circulated from New York
to Chicago, crossing a distance of 1,546 kilometers on the lines of
the New York Central in 20 hours, it was provided with all the necessary
comforts for long trips.
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The train "Overland
Limited" crossing the great Salty Lake in the United States,
the first American transcontinental railroad was shortened by cuts that
added 161 kilometers.
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Photo Canadian Pacific
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Train crossing the viaduct
at Lethbridge, 1622 meters of steel through the valley of Alberta
in Canada , in the line of the Crow's Nest Pass .
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Photo 1920 - Entrance
to the tunnel of the Summit ("La Cumbre") on the Andes
in Chile's side . |
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Locomotive of the Argentine
State Railways , built by Baldwin Locomotive Works for the
heavy service in the government railways of the Huapi-Viedma section in
the province of Rio Negro . Powered by petroleum.
Los
viejos tiempos - The old times | Español
: Historia de la locomotora
The
development of the locomotive, old photos | Great locomotives in the 1930's | Electrical locomotives in the dawn of XX Century | Operation
of a steam locomotive | Photos
of old locomotives | History
of the automobile , the steam engine | History
of the Aeronautics
>>
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