登陆注册
19985700000021

第21章

The contest resulted in the triumph of Stephenson's Rocket.The others fell early out of the race.The Rocket alone met all the requirements and won the prize.So it happened that George Stephenson came into fame and has ever since lived in popular memory as the father of the locomotive.There was nothing new in his Rocket, except his own workmanship.Like Robert Fulton, he appears to have succeeded where others failed because he was a sounder engineer, or a better combiner of sound principles into a working, whole, than any of his rivals.

Across the Atlantic came the news of Stephenson's remarkable success.And by this time railroads were beginning in various parts of the United States: the Mohawk and Hudson, from Albany to Schenectady; the Baltimore and Ohio; the Charleston and Hamburg in South Carolina; the Camden and Amboy, across New Jersey.

Horses, mules, and even sails, furnished the power for these early railroads.It can be imagined with what interest the owners of these roads heard that at last a practicable locomotive was running in England.

This news stimulated the directors of the Baltimore and Ohio to try the locomotive.They had not far to go for an experiment, for Peter Cooper, proprietor of the Canton Iron Works in Baltimore, had already designed a small locomotive, the Tom Thumb.This was placed on trial in August, 1830, and is supposed to have been the first American-built locomotive to do work on rails, though nearly coincident with it was the Best Friend of Charleston, built by the West Point Foundry, New York, for the Charleston and Hamburg Railroad.It is often difficult, as we have seen, to say which of two or several things was first.It appears as though the little Tom Thumb was the first engine built in America, which actually pulled weight on a regular railway, while the much larger Best Friend was the first to haul cars in regular daily service.

The West Point Foundry followed its first success with the West Point, which also went into service on the Charleston and Hamburg Railroad, and then built for the newly finished Mohawk and Hudson (the first link in the New York Central Lines) the historic De Witt Clinton.This primitive locomotive and the cars it drew may be seen today in the Grand Central Station in New York.

Meanwhile, the Stevens brothers, sons of John Stevens, were engaged in the construction of the Camden and Amboy Railroad.The first locomotive to operate on this road was built in England by George Stephenson.This was the John Bull, which arrived in the summer of 1831 and at once went to work.The John Bull was a complete success and had a distinguished career.Sixty-two years old, in 1893, it went to Chicago, to the Columbian Exposition, under its own steam.The John Bull occupies a place today in the National Museum at Washington.

With the locomotive definitely accepted, men began to turn their minds towards its improvement and development, and locomotive building soon became a leading industry in America.At first the British types and patterns were followed, but it was not long before American designers began to depart from the British models and to evolve a distinctively American type.In the development of this type great names have been written into the industrial history of America, among which the name of Matthias Baldwin of Philadelphia probably ranks first.But there have been hundreds of great workers in this field.From Stephenson's Rocket and the little Tom Thumb of Peter Cooper, to the powerful "Mallets" of today, is a long distance--not spanned in ninety years save by the genius and restless toil of countless brains and hands.

If the locomotive could not remain as it was left by Stephenson and Cooper, neither could the stationary steam engine remain as it was left by James Watt and Oliver Evans.Demands increasing and again increasing, year after year, forced the steam engine to grow in order to meet its responsibilities.There were men living in Philadelphia in 1876, who had known Oliver Evans personally;at least one old man at the Centennial Exhibition had himself seen the Oruktor Amphibolos and recalled the consternation it had caused on the streets of the city in 1804.It seemed a far cry back to the Oruktor from the great and beautiful engine, designed by George Henry Corliss, which was then moving all the vast machinery of the Centennial Exhibition.But since then achievements in steam have dwarfed even the great work of Corliss.And to do a kind of herculean task that was hardly dreamed of in 1876 another type of engine has made its entrance:

the steam turbine, which sends its awful energy, transformed into electric current, to light a million lamps or to turn ten thousand wheels on distant streets and highways.

同类推荐
  • 太上洞玄灵宝灭度五炼生尸妙经

    太上洞玄灵宝灭度五炼生尸妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 浑元剑经

    浑元剑经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 悟真直指

    悟真直指

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说末利支提婆花鬘经

    佛说末利支提婆花鬘经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 杂曲歌辞 秋夜曲

    杂曲歌辞 秋夜曲

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 仙人传

    仙人传

    传说中的神仙是不许谈情说爱的,然而事实却不是那样……由于王母不同意常飞的婚事,被常飞破口大骂,以至于王母震怒,常飞被贬下凡间,开始了自己在凡间称王称帝的旅途!
  • 随心修仙录

    随心修仙录

    世人都说神仙好,谁人能晓神仙恼。不做仙人做凡人,痴痴笑笑一生了。
  • 斗天逆魂

    斗天逆魂

    这里,没有斗气,这里,只是一个花花绿绿的世界,这里,没有圣人,有的,只有为力量默默努力的元士,“为她,我愿成魔,”一声怒吼,他拔剑而起,纵望大地,他已然成魔!!!大地一片凄凉,星空暗淡无光,有的,只是他那秉视星月的目光!?!!
  • 魂武道

    魂武道

    天元大陆万族林立,自亘古以来,惊才绝艳者辈出,演绎着一段段令人向往的传说。妖域之内,妖王吞吐星河,手掷乾坤。幽冥之境,冥王摘星拿月,生人勿进。人皇治下,号令天下,莫敢不从。……罗君应运而生,手握惊世魂武,且看他如何笑谈天下群雄。
  • 作价

    作价

    现今的古玩市场,鱼目混珠,真假难辨;尔虞我诈,防不胜防。而对于资深藏友,这些还不是最操心的问题,他们更操心的是,如何用一个合适的价钱买到中意的藏品?又如何让手中的藏品稳稳升值且能卖个好价钱?本文的主人公是一个有实力但无名气的画家。一次偶然的机会,让他得以窥见这个行业最令人触目惊心的运作内幕,并情不自禁地被卷入一场专业炒作之中。一夜之间,他的画作被拍出天价,隐藏在幕后的各种炒作手段及潜规则令他瞠目结舌……
  • 珍爱生命,拒绝邪教

    珍爱生命,拒绝邪教

    邪教目前已经成为全世界密切关注的对象,也将是人类当前和今后必须正视、不可回避的重大课题,为使人类能齐心合力地共同解决这一难题,很有必要给邪教下一个统一的定义,不仅要有专门的称谓,而且也要有相对一致的内涵。但眼下的现实情况仍需我们深入研究,广泛探讨,清除分歧,尽快达成共识。
  • 性格决定一生成败

    性格决定一生成败

    好的性格,能屈能伸,知进知退,稳得住成功得意,也经得起挫折失败,赢得起也输得起。韩信昔日能忍街头混混的胯下之辱,功成名就后,非但没有报复,反倒给予那个小混混赏赐,还封了个小官。就凭这气度襟怀,也足以令人钦服,也无怪乎当初萧何慧眼识珠,月下追韩信。其赢得拜将封侯,谁人又有疑义呢?正是这同一个韩信,因为骨子里的懦弱,关键时刻也不免婆婆妈妈,明明可利用天赐良机与刘邦、项羽三分天下,却犹疑逡巡,当断不断;刘邦建汉后却又听任别人挑唆,在叛与不叛之间首鼠两端、莫衷一是,终至被一个女人擒杀。实在令人感慨万千。
  • 荣生堂下之盛宠

    荣生堂下之盛宠

    “我们结婚吧!”她对只有一面之缘的总裁大人说。于是没有感情基础的两人就去了民政局。“你怎么这么笨?”他觉得自己受到了欺诈。“以前也不是这样的,可是跟你在一起,我就放松警惕,智商下降,总爱做些傻事。”她楚楚可怜表示自己也不理解。他邪魅笑笑,拥她入怀。“你以为这样就可以逃避掉你的过去吗?呵……不,只有我们才能一辈子在一起!哪怕受尽折磨!”她曾经最爱的人把她捆在雕花椅子上,欺身而下。昔日的爱恋随着儿时的记忆裂成碎片。“我这辈子就只爱这最后一次了。”以为和他会幸福厮守就是故事结局,可深不可测的大哥,无尽的豪门争斗……“我重吗?”她伏在他背上轻轻地问。“重死了,像块石头。”雪地里,他故意逗她。“胡说!我才不重呢!”伸手敲了敲他银白色的头发,继续说“那你要背这块大石头一辈子。”既然那么相爱,怎舍得让彼此受伤害。“痛吗?我会一直守在你身边,直到看见你痛苦地……死去。”
  • 生当长歌

    生当长歌

    人生自当一路长歌!且看在神州浩土之上,龙小飞演绎出一曲斩妖除魔的强者长歌!
  • 霸爱之已婚不离

    霸爱之已婚不离

    十七岁被父亲抵债,险些成为禁脔;二十岁遭遇车祸,险象环生。为了家人,她被迫嫁给他。可这个让人仰望的男人,费尽心思打破她的骄傲倔强,宠她入骨,让她泥足深陷,难以抽身!