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(1803-1813)

  • 1 Stewart's Admiralty Reports

    Юридический термин: сборник решений по морским делам (Новая Шотландия, составитель Стюарт, 1803-1813)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Stewart's Admiralty Reports

  • 2 Stewart's Admiralty Reports, Nova Scotia

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Stewart's Admiralty Reports, Nova Scotia

  • 3 Stew.Adm.

    сокр. от Stewart's Admiralty Reports, Nova Scotia
    сборник решений по морским делам, Новая Шотландия, составитель Стюарт (1803-1813)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Stew.Adm.

  • 4 West Florida Controversy

    ист
    Территориальный спор между США и Испанией по поводу земель южнее 31 град. сев. широты между реками Миссисипи [ Mississippi River] и Пердидо [Perdido River] в период между покупкой Луизианы [ Louisiana Purchase] (1803) и заключением договора Адамса-Ониса [ Adams-Onis Treaty] (1819). После покупки Луизианы часть границ приобретенной США территории не была определена, и США считали западную часть Флориды своей территорией, так как до 1763 она входила в состав территории Луизианы. В 1810 американские поселенцы г. Батон-Ружа восстали против испанских колониальных властей, провозгласили независимость и обратились с просьбой о приеме в США. В апреле 1812 США оккупировали земли восточнее р. Перл [Pearl River] и включили их в состав штата Луизиана. В мае 1812 Конгресс создал Территорию Миссисипи [Mississippi Territory], в состав которой в 1813 были включены остальные земли, бывшие предметом спора с Испанией. Испанская крепость Мобил [ Mobile] была захвачена генералом Дж. Уилкинсоном [Wilkinson, James] в апреле 1813. Окончательно спор был урегулирован только в 1819 после заключения договора, по которому к США отошли и западная, и восточная части Флориды

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > West Florida Controversy

  • 5 Buffalo

    Город на западе штата Нью-Йорк, на озере Эри [ Erie, Lake], у истока р. Ниагара [Niagara River]. Мостом мира [ Peace Bridge] соединен с канадским городом Форт-Эри. 292,6 тыс. жителей (2000), с г. Ниагара-Фоллс [ Niagara Falls] и пригородами - 1,1 млн. человек. Порт [Gateway Metroport], в пригороде - международный аэропорт [Greater Buffalo International Airport], железнодорожный узел. Крупный промышленный и торгово-финансовый центр с развитым банковским сектором. Металлообработка (производство энергетического оборудования, станков, автодеталей и авиатехники), пищевая промышленность. Несколько колледжей, в том числе Канисиус [ Canisius College], филиал университета штата Нью-Йорк[ State University of New York]. "Уолден-галлериа" [Walden Galleria] - один из крупнейших в стране торговых центров [ shopping mall]. Поселок, основанный в 1803 в этих местах, во время англо-американской войны 1812-14 [ War of 1812] полностью сожжен англичанами (1813), восстановлен к 1816. Ключевую роль в развитии города сыграло его стратегическое местоположение, сделавшее Буффало важным транспортным узлом, портом на канале Эри [ Erie Canal]. Через Буффало осуществляется значительная часть торговли с Канадой, однако с 50-х гг. XX в. его значение как порта постепенно снижается, хотя он является крупнейшим в стране по объемам перевозки зерна с середины XIX в. В 1882 будущий президент США Г. Кливленд [ Cleveland, (Stephen) Grover] избран мэром города. В Буффало во время посещения Панамериканской выставки [ Pan-American Exposition] был смертельно ранен президент У. Маккинли [ McKinley, William]. В городе - крупные общины потомков иммигрантов из Польши, Ирландии и Италии. Среди достопримечательностей - памятники архитектуры в центре Буффало, Художественная галерея Олбрайт-Нокс [Albright Art Gallery], Музей истории науки [Buffalo Museum of Science], Музей исторического общества [Buffalo and Erie Co. Historical Society Museum], городской зоопарк [Buffalo Zoological Gardens], место инаугурации президента Т. Рузвельта [ Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site], в пригороде Ниагарский водопад [ Niagara Falls].

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Buffalo

  • 6 Dearborn, Henry

    (1751-1829) Дирборн, Генри
    Военный и государственный деятель периода Войны за независимость [ Revolutionary War, War of Independence]. Принимал участие в битве за Банкер-Хилл [ Bunker Hill], затем после плена - в битвах при Тикондероге и Саратоге. Участник зимовки в Вэлли-Фордж [ Valley Forge]. Занимался политической деятельностью в 1792-97. В 1801 стал военным министром в администрации Т. Джефферсона [ Jefferson, Thomas], в 1803 стал инициатором строительства укрепленного района "Чикаго" ["Chicago"], отдал приказ о строительстве форта [ Fort Dearborn] (ныне на этом месте расположены г. Чикаго и прилежащий к нему г. Дирборн). В англо-американской войне 1812-14 [ War of 1812] командовал Северным фронтом (против Канады), но проявил некомпетентность, терпел одно за другим поражения от англичан и в 1813 был освобожден от должности. Известен также как автор проекта повозки [ dearborn wagon], получившей его имя.

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Dearborn, Henry

  • 7 Nebraska

    Штат в группе штатов Северо-Западного Центра [ West North Central States]. Граничит на севере с Южной Дакотой, на западе с Колорадо и Вайомингом, на юге с Канзасом, на востоке с Айовой и Миссури. Площадь 200,3 тыс. кв. км. Население 1,7 млн. человек (2000). Кроме столицы - г. Линкольна [ Lincoln] в штате только один крупный город - Омаха [ Omaha]. Два небольших города (около 30 тыс. жителей): Белвью [Bellevue] и Гранд-Айленд [Grand Island]. Небраска расположена на Великих равнинах [ Great Plains] к западу от р. Миссури [ Missouri River]. Поверхность штата постепенно повышается к западу. В центральной части обширный район песчаных холмов [Sand Hills region]. Умеренный континентальный климат с жарким летом и холодной зимой, с частыми и сильными засухами; однако штат обладает богатыми и доступными ресурсами подземных вод. Важнейшие полезные ископаемые: нефть (открыта в 1939), песок, гравий. Первые следы жизни человека на территории штата относятся к IX тысячелетию до н.э. До появления европейцев здесь жили племена пауни [ Pawnee], арапахо [ Arapaho], шайенны [ Cheyenne], омаха [ Omaha], сиу [ Sioux]. Первыми европейцами были испанцы из отряда П. де Вилласура [de Villasur, Pedro] (1720). В колониальный период борьбу за обладание этим регионом вели между собой Испания, Франция и Великобритания. В 1763-1801 Небраска входила в состав испанских владений, затем была недолго в руках Франции, в 1803 приобретена США при покупке Луизианы [ Louisiana Purchase]. Небраску начали изучать экспедиции Льюиса и Кларка [ Lewis and Clark Expedition] (1805), З. Пайка [ Pike, Zebulon Montgomery] (1806) и С. Лонга [ Long, Stephen Harriman] (1820). Отчет Лонга не способствовал созданию у переселенцев благоприятного образа Великих равнин, поэтому первые их потоки предпочитали лишь пересекать этот район т.н. "Великой американской пустыни" [ Great American Desert], двигаясь дальше на запад. Здесь проходили Орегонская тропа [ Oregon Trail] и Мормонская тропа [ Mormon Trail]. В 1804-05 Небраска входила в состав Территории Индиана [Territory of Indiana], в 1805-12 - в состав Территории Луизиана [Louisiana Territory]. В 1813-21 была частью Территории Миссури [Territory of Missouri], а после образования штата Миссури Небраска стала частью района, известного как Индейские земли [ Indian Territory, Indian country], границы которого были определены лишь в 1834. Новая территория была образована по Закону "Канзас-Небраска" [ Kansas-Nebraska Act] (1854). Небраска вступила в состав США в качестве штата только в 1867. В конце XIX в. в политической жизни Небраски доминировала Популистская партия [ Populist Party], на этот же период приходится расцвет сельского хозяйства, развитие которого продолжалось вплоть до Великой депрессии [ Great Depression]. В результате экономического спада, засух и пыльных бурь [ Dust Bowl, The] штат потерял до 4,5 процента населения, и эта тенденция продолжалась до 1950-х. Возрождению экономики помогли военные заказы на поставки продовольствия во время второй мировой войны. В сельском хозяйстве штата традиционно занято около половины трудоспособного населения. Преобладают крупные семейные фермы. Основные культуры: кукуруза, соя, сеяные травы, пшеница. В животноводстве преобладает мясное направление. К 1990 штат стал ведущим в США по удельному весу поливных сельскохозяйственных угодий. Преобладающие отрасли промышленности - обрабатывающие. Наблюдается рост числа рабочих мест в сфере обслуживания. Жители штата преимущественно голосуют за кандидатов от Республиканской партии [ Republican Party].

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Nebraska

  • 8 Ohio

    [ǝuˊhaɪǝu] Огайо, штат на Среднем Западе США <инд. большая река>. Сокращение: OH. Прозвища: «штат конского каштана» [*Buckeye State], «современная родина президентов» [*Modern Mother of Presidents]. Житель штата: Ohioan. Столица: г. Колумбус [Columbus]. Девиз: «С Божьей помощью всё возможно» [‘With God, all things are possible’]. Песня: «Прекрасный Огайо» [‘Beautiful Ohio’]. Цветок: алая гвоздика [scarlet carnation]. Дерево: конский каштан [buckeye]. Птица: кардинал [cardinal]. Насекомое: божья коровка [ladybug]. Камень: кремень [flint]. Напиток: томатный сок [tomato juice]. Площадь: 106125 кв. км (41,330 sq. mi.) (35- е место). Население (1992): св. 11 млн. (7- е место). Крупнейшие города: Кливленд [*Cleveland], Колумбус [*Columbus], Цинциннати [*Cincinnati], Толидо [*Toledo], Акрон [*Akron], Дейтон [*Dayton], Янгстаун [Youngstown]. Экономика. Один из наиболее экономически развитых штатов. Основные отрасли: обрабатывающая промышленность, машиностроение, резиновая, электротехническая, радиоэлектронная, сталелитейная, автомобильная промышленность, торговля, обслуживание. Основная продукция: транспортное оборудование, резина, машины, металл и металлоизделия. Сельское хозяйство. Основные культуры: кукуруза, озимая пшеница, овёс, соя, сеяные травы. Животноводство (1992): скота — 1,6 млн., свиней — 1,9 млн., бройлеров — 24,9 млн., индеек — 5 млн. Лесное хозяйство: дуб, ясень, клён, орех, бук. Полезные ископаемые: уголь, нефть, газ, соль, строительный песок и гравий, известь. История. В районе Огайо в 1669 побывал французский исследователь Ла Саль [*La Salle]. Начиная с 1685 сюда стали проникать американские скупщики пушнины, французы и индейцы пытались воспрепятствовать этому. Огайо стал территорией США в 1783, после Войны за независимость. Первое поселение было официально зарегистрировано в районе Мариетты [Marietta] в 1788. Войны с индейцами закончились их разгромом американскими войсками под командованием Энтони Уэйна [Wayne, Anthony] у Фоллен-Тимберс [Fallen Timbers] в 1794. В войне 1812 победа Оливера Перри [*Perry, Oliver H.] на оз. Эри и вторжение в Канаду Уильяма Харрисона [*Harrison, William] в 1813 положили конец английским притязаниям на территорию Огайо. В состав США штат Огайо вошёл в 1803. Достопримечательности: индейские погребения в Маунд-Сити [Mound City Group National Monument]; Музей авиации и космоса им. Нила Армстронга в Уопаконета [Wapakoneta]; Музей военно-воздушных сил [Air Force Museum] в Дейтоне; Зал славы профессионального футбола [*Pro Football Hall of Fame] в Кантоне [*Canton]; парк аттракционов на о-в е Кингс-Айленд [King's Island]; парк аттракционов Сидар-Пойнт [Cedar Point]; места рождения, дома и мемориалы восьми огайцев, ставших президентами США: Уильяма Гаррисона [*Harrison, William Henry], Гранта [*Grant], Гарфилда [*Garfield], Хейса [*Hayes], Мак-Кинли [*McKinley], Гардинга [*Harding], Тафта [*Taft], Бенджамина Гаррисона [*Harrison, Benjamin]; мемориал Перри [Perry's Victory International Peace Memorial]; острова на оз. Эри [*Lake Erie]; район эмишей [*Amish Region]; немецкая деревня в Колумбусе [Columbus]; спортивный центр Джека Никлоса в Мэйсоне [Mason]. Знаменитые огайцы: Андерсон, Шервуд [*Anderson, Sherwood], писатель; Армстронг, Нил [*Armstrong, Neil], астронавт; Беллоуз, Джордж [*Bellows, George], художник; Бирс, Амброуз [*Bierce, Ambrose], писатель; Дарроу, Кларенс [*Darrow, Clarence], адвокат; Эдисон, Томас [*Edison, Thomas], изобретатель; Гейбл, Кларк [*Gable, Clark], киноактёр; Гленн, Джон [*Glenn, John], первый американский астронавт; Хоуп, Боб [*Hope, Bob], комик; Никлос, Джек [*Nicklaus, Jack], чемпион по игре в гольф; Оуэнс, Джесси [*Owens, Jesse], легкоатлет, олимпийский чемпион; Рокфеллеры [*Rockefeller John D. Sr. and Jr.], финансисты; Роуз, Пит [*Rose, Pit], бейсболист; Шерман, Уильям [*Sherman, William], генерал; Бичер-Стоу, Гарриет [*Stowe, Harriet Beecher], писательница; Тафт, Уильям [*Taft, William H.], 27-й президент США; Тёрбер, Джеймс [*Thurber, James], писатель; братья Райт, Орвилл и Уилбур [*Wright, Orville and Wilbur], авиаторы и авиаконструкторы, изобретатели аэроплана. Ассоциации: «штат конского каштана» [*Buckeye State] ныне один из наиболее населённых и экономически развитых штатов США с многочисленными городами и посёлками ( наиболее известны Кливленд и живописный Цинциннати); назв. штата, начинающееся и оканчивающееся на «о», послужило поводом для школьной шутки-загадки: What has nothing in the beginning, nothing in the end, and high in the middle?

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > Ohio

  • 9 Davy, Sir Humphry

    [br]
    b. 17 December 1778 Penzance, Cornwall, England
    d. 29 May 1829 Geneva, Switzerland
    [br]
    English chemist, discoverer of the alkali and alkaline earth metals and the halogens, inventor of the miner's safety lamp.
    [br]
    Educated at the Latin School at Penzance and from 1792 at Truro Grammar School, Davy was apprenticed to a surgeon in Penzance. In 1797 he began to teach himself chemistry by reading, among other works, Lavoisier's elementary treatise on chemistry. In 1798 Dr Thomas Beddoes of Bristol engaged him as assistant in setting up his Pneumatic Institution to pioneer the medical application of the newly discovered gases, especially oxygen.
    In 1799 he discovered the anaesthetic properties of nitrous oxide, discovered not long before by the chemist Joseph Priestley. He also noted its intoxicating qualities, on account of which it was dubbed "laughing-gas". Two years later Count Rumford, founder of the Royal Institution in 1800, appointed Davy Assistant Lecturer, and the following year Professor. His lecturing ability soon began to attract large audiences, making science both popular and fashionable.
    Davy was stimulated by Volta's invention of the voltaic pile, or electric battery, to construct one for himself in 1800. That enabled him to embark on the researches into electrochemistry by which is chiefly known. In 1807 he tried decomposing caustic soda and caustic potash, hitherto regarded as elements, by electrolysis and obtained the metals sodium and potassium. He went on to discover the metals barium, strontium, calcium and magnesium by the same means. Next, he turned his attention to chlorine, which was then regarded as an oxide in accordance with Lavoisier's theory that oxygen was the essential component of acids; Davy failed to decompose it, however, even with the aid of electricity and concluded that it was an element, thus disproving Lavoisier's view of the nature of acids. In 1812 Davy published his Elements of Chemical Philosophy, in which he presented his chemical ideas without, however, committing himself to the atomic theory, recently advanced by John Dalton.
    In 1813 Davy engaged Faraday as Assistant, perhaps his greatest service to science. In April 1815 Davy was asked to assist in the development of a miner's lamp which could be safely used in a firedamp (methane) laden atmosphere. The "Davy lamp", which emerged in January 1816, had its flame completely surrounded by a fine wire mesh; George Stephenson's lamp, based on a similar principle, had been introduced into the Northumberland pits several months earlier, and a bitter controversy as to priority of invention ensued, but it was Davy who was awarded the prize for inventing a successful safety lamp.
    In 1824 Davy was the first to suggest the possibility of conferring cathodic protection to the copper bottoms of naval vessels by the use of sacrificial electrodes. Zinc and iron were found to be equally effective in inhibiting corrosion, although the scheme was later abandoned when it was found that ships protected in this way were rapidly fouled by weeds and barnacles.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1812. FRS 1803; President, Royal Society 1820. Royal Society Copley Medal 1805.
    Bibliography
    1812, Elements of Chemical Philosophy.
    1839–40, The Collected Works of Sir Humphry Davy, 9 vols, ed. John Davy, London.
    Further Reading
    J.Davy, 1836, Memoirs of the Life of Sir Humphry Davy, London (a classic biography). J.A.Paris, 1831, The Life of Sir Humphry Davy, London (a classic biography). H.Hartley, 1967, Humphry Davy, London (a more recent biography).
    J.Z.Fullmer, 1969, Cambridge, Mass, (a bibliography of Davy's works).
    ASD

    Biographical history of technology > Davy, Sir Humphry

  • 10 Fulton, Robert

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 14 November 1765 Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA
    d. 24 February 1815 New York, USA
    [br]
    American pioneer of steamships and of North American steam navigation.
    [br]
    The early life of Fulton is documented sparsely; however, it is clear that he was brought up in poor circumstances along with three sisters and one brother by a widowed mother. The War of Independence was raging around them for some years, but despite this it is believed that he spent some time learning the jeweller's trade in Philadelphia and had by then made a name for himself as a miniaturist. Throughout his life he remained skilled with his hands and well able to record technical detail on paper. He witnessed many of the early trials of American steamboats and saw the work of William Henry and John Fitch, and in 1787 he set off for the first time to Europe. For some years he examined steamships in Paris and without doubt saw the Charlotte Dundas on the Forth and Clyde Canal near Glasgow. In 1803 he built a steamship that ran on the Seine at 4 1/2 mph (7.25 km/h), and when it was lost, another to replace it. All his designs were based on principles that had been tried and proved elsewhere, and in this respect he was more of a developer than an inventor. After some time experimenting with submersibles and torpedoes for the British and French governments, in 1806 he returned to the United States. In 1807 he took delivery of the 100 ton displacement paddle steamer Clermont from the yard of Charles Browne of East River, New York. In August of that year it started the passenger services on the Hudson River and this can be claimed as the commencement of world passenger steam navigation. Again the ship was traditional in shape and the machinery was supplied by Messrs Boulton and Watt. This was followed by other ships, including Car of Neptune, Paragon and the world's first steam warship, Demolgos, launched in New York in October 1814 and designed by Fulton for coastal defence and the breaking of the British blockade. His last and finest boat was named Chancellor Livingston after his friend and patron Robert Livingston (1746–1813); the timber hull was launched in 1816, some months after Fulton's death.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    H.P.Spratt, 1958, The Birth of the Steamboat, London: Griffin. J.T.Flexner, 1978, Steamboats Come True, Boston: Little, Brown.
    "Robert Fulton and the centenary of steam navigation", Engineer (16 August 1907).
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Fulton, Robert

  • 11 Jenner, Edward

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 17 May 1749 Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England
    d. 26 January 1823 Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England
    [br]
    English medical practitioner, pioneer of vaccination against smallpox.
    [br]
    In 1770, following a local surgical apprenticeship in Gloucestershire, he became a resident pupil in London under John Hunter. In 1773 he returned to Berkeley to practise, but he continued correspondence with Hunter on a variety of topics of natural history, including the study of earthworms and hibernation.
    From his apprentice days he had known of the country belief that an attack of cowpox would protect against smallpox. Soon after 1775 he had been in touch with Hunter, who gave him the celebrated advice to "trie the experiment". However, it was not until 14 May 1796 that he made the first vaccination from a case of cowpox. The practice of vaccination from mild cases of smallpox was already well established.
    He was unable to undertake further observations until 1798, when he published the results of twenty-two more cases. The procedure gained wide acceptance and in 1802 he received a parliamentary award of £10,000; the Royal Jennerian Society for the promotion of smallpox vaccination was founded in 1803. In 1806 he was awarded a further £20,000. He received his first degree, of MD, from Oxford in 1813.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Further Reading
    Crookshank, 1889, Pathology and History of Vaccination.
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Jenner, Edward

  • 12 Koenig, Friedrich

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 17 April 1774 Eisleben, Thuringia, Germany
    d. 17 January 1833 Oberzell, near Würzburg, Germany
    [br]
    German inventor of the machine printing press.
    [br]
    Koenig became a printer and bookseller. Around 1800 he was among those who conceived the idea of mechanizing the hand printing press, which apart from minor details had survived virtually unchanged through the first three and a half centuries of printing. In 1803, in Sühl, Saxony, he designed a press in which the flat forme, carrying the type, was mechanically inked and passed to and from the platen. Whether this ma-chine was ever constructed is not known, but Koenig found little support for his ideas because of lack of technical and financial resources. So, in 1806, he went to England and was introduced to Thomas Bensley, a book printer off Fleet Street in London. Bensley agreed to support Koenig and brought in two other printers to help finance Koenig's experiments. Another German, Andreas Bauer, an engineer, assisted Koenig and became largely responsible for the practical execution of Koenig's plans.
    In 1810 they patented a press which was steam-driven but still used a platen. It was set to work in Bensley's office the following year but did not prove to be satisfactory. Koenig redesigned it, and in October 1811 he obtained a patent for a steam-driven press on an entirely new principle. In place of the platen, the paper was fixed around a hollow rotating cylinder, which impressed the paper on to the inked forme. In Bensley's office it was used for book printing, but its increased speed over the hand press appealed to newspaper proprietors and John Walter II of The Times asked Koenig to make a double-cylinder machine, so that the return stroke of the forme would be productive. A further patent was taken out in 1813 and the new machine was made ready to print the 29 November 1814 issue—in secrecy, behind closed doors, to forestall opposition from the pressmen working the hand presses. An important feature of the machine was that the inking rollers were not of the traditional leather or skin but a composite material made from glue, molasses and some soda. The inking could not have been achieved satisfactorily with the old materials. The editorial of that historic issue proclaimed, 'Our Journal of this day presents to the public the practical result of the greatest improvement connected with printing, since the discovery of the art itself Koenig's machine press could make 1,200 impressions an hour compared to 200 with the hand press; further improvements raised this figure to 1,500–2,000. Koenig's last English patent was in 1814 for an improved cylinder machine and a perfecting machine, which printed both sides of the paper. The steam-driven perfecting press was printing books in Bensley's office in February 1816. Koenig and Bauer wanted by that time to manufacture machine presses for other customers, but Bensley, now the principal shareholder, insisted that they should make machines for his benefit only. Finding this restriction intolerable, Koenig and Bauer returned to Germany: they became partners in a factory at Oberzell, near Würzburg, in 1817 and the firm of Koenig and Bauer flourishes there to this day.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Moran, 1973, Printing Presses, London: Faber \& Faber.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Koenig, Friedrich

  • 13 Trevithick, Richard

    [br]
    b. 13 April 1771 Illogan, Cornwall, England
    d. 22 April 1833 Dartford, Kent, England
    [br]
    English engineer, pioneer of non-condensing steam-engines; designed and built the first locomotives.
    [br]
    Trevithick's father was a tin-mine manager, and Trevithick himself, after limited formal education, developed his immense engineering talent among local mining machinery and steam-engines and found employment as a mining engineer. Tall, strong and high-spirited, he was the eternal optimist.
    About 1797 it occurred to him that the separate condenser patent of James Watt could be avoided by employing "strong steam", that is steam at pressures substantially greater than atmospheric, to drive steam-engines: after use, steam could be exhausted to the atmosphere and the condenser eliminated. His first winding engine on this principle came into use in 1799, and subsequently such engines were widely used. To produce high-pressure steam, a stronger boiler was needed than the boilers then in use, in which the pressure vessel was mounted upon masonry above the fire: Trevithick designed the cylindrical boiler, with furnace tube within, from which the Cornish and later the Lancashire boilers evolved.
    Simultaneously he realized that high-pressure steam enabled a compact steam-engine/boiler unit to be built: typically, the Trevithick engine comprised a cylindrical boiler with return firetube, and a cylinder recessed into the boiler. No beam intervened between connecting rod and crank. A master patent was taken out.
    Such an engine was well suited to driving vehicles. Trevithick built his first steam-carriage in 1801, but after a few days' use it overturned on a rough Cornish road and was damaged beyond repair by fire. Nevertheless, it had been the first self-propelled vehicle successfully to carry passengers. His second steam-carriage was driven about the streets of London in 1803, even more successfully; however, it aroused no commercial interest. Meanwhile the Coalbrookdale Company had started to build a locomotive incorporating a Trevithick engine for its tramroads, though little is known of the outcome; however, Samuel Homfray's ironworks at Penydarren, South Wales, was already building engines to Trevithick's design, and in 1804 Trevithick built one there as a locomotive for the Penydarren Tramroad. In this, and in the London steam-carriage, exhaust steam was turned up the chimney to draw the fire. On 21 February the locomotive hauled five wagons with 10 tons of iron and seventy men for 9 miles (14 km): it was the first successful railway locomotive.
    Again, there was no commercial interest, although Trevithick now had nearly fifty stationary engines completed or being built to his design under licence. He experimented with one to power a barge on the Severn and used one to power a dredger on the Thames. He became Engineer to a project to drive a tunnel beneath the Thames at Rotherhithe and was only narrowly defeated, by quicksands. Trevithick then set up, in 1808, a circular tramroad track in London and upon it demonstrated to the admission-fee-paying public the locomotive Catch me who can, built to his design by John Hazledine and J.U. Rastrick.
    In 1809, by which date Trevithick had sold all his interest in the steam-engine patent, he and Robert Dickinson, in partnership, obtained a patent for iron tanks to hold liquid cargo in ships, replacing the wooden casks then used, and started to manufacture them. In 1810, however, he was taken seriously ill with typhus for six months and had to return to Cornwall, and early in 1811 the partners were bankrupt; Trevithick was discharged from bankruptcy only in 1814.
    In the meantime he continued as a steam engineer and produced a single-acting steam engine in which the cut-off could be varied to work the engine expansively by way of a three-way cock actuated by a cam. Then, in 1813, Trevithick was approached by a representative of a company set up to drain the rich but flooded silver-mines at Cerro de Pasco, Peru, at an altitude of 14,000 ft (4,300 m). Low-pressure steam engines, dependent largely upon atmospheric pressure, would not work at such an altitude, but Trevithick's high-pressure engines would. Nine engines and much other mining plant were built by Hazledine and Rastrick and despatched to Peru in 1814, and Trevithick himself followed two years later. However, the war of independence was taking place in Peru, then a Spanish colony, and no sooner had Trevithick, after immense difficulties, put everything in order at the mines then rebels arrived and broke up the machinery, for they saw the mines as a source of supply for the Spanish forces. It was only after innumerable further adventures, during which he encountered and was assisted financially by Robert Stephenson, that Trevithick eventually arrived home in Cornwall in 1827, penniless.
    He petitioned Parliament for a grant in recognition of his improvements to steam-engines and boilers, without success. He was as inventive as ever though: he proposed a hydraulic power transmission system; he was consulted over steam engines for land drainage in Holland; and he suggested a 1,000 ft (305 m) high tower of gilded cast iron to commemorate the Reform Act of 1832. While working on steam propulsion of ships in 1833, he caught pneumonia, from which he died.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Trevithick took out fourteen patents, solely or in partnership, of which the most important are: 1802, Construction of Steam Engines, British patent no. 2,599. 1808, Stowing Ships' Cargoes, British patent no. 3,172.
    Further Reading
    H.W.Dickinson and A.Titley, 1934, Richard Trevithick. The Engineer and the Man, Cambridge; F.Trevithick, 1872, Life of Richard Trevithick, London (these two are the principal biographies).
    E.A.Forward, 1952, "Links in the history of the locomotive", The Engineer (22 February), 226 (considers the case for the Coalbrookdale locomotive of 1802).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Trevithick, Richard

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