Part 16 (1/2)
A second engine (Fig. 61) was built for this road, at the West Point Foundery, from plans furnished by Horatio Allen, and was received and set at work early in the spring of 1831. The engine, called the ”West Point,” had a horizontal tubular boiler, but was in other respects very similar to the ”Best Friend.” It is said to have done very good work.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 61.--The ”West Point,” 1831.]
The Mohawk & Hudson Railroad ordered an engine at about this time, also, of the West Point Foundery, and the trials, made in July and August, 1831, proved thoroughly successful.
This engine, the ”De Witt Clinton,” was contracted for by John B.
Jervis, and fitted up by David Matthew. It had two steam-cylinders, each 5-1/2 inches in diameter and 16 inches stroke of piston. The connecting-rods were directly attached to a cranked axle, and turned four coupled wheels 4-1/2 feet in diameter. These wheels had cast-iron hubs and wrought-iron spokes and tires. The tubes were of copper, 2-1/2 inches in diameter and 6 feet long. The engine weighed 3-1/2 tons, and hauled 5 cars at the rate of 30 miles an hour.
Another engine, the ”South Carolina” (Fig. 62), was designed by Horatio Allen for the South Carolina Railroad, and completed late in the year 1831. This was the first eight-wheeled engine, and the prototype, also, of a peculiar and lately-revived form of engine.
In the summer of 1832, an engine built by Messrs. Davis & Gartner, of York, Pa., was put on the Baltimore & Ohio road, which at times attained a speed, unloaded, of 30 miles an hour. The engine weighed 3-1/2 tons, and drew, usually, 4 cars, weighing altogether 14 tons, from Baltimore to Ellicott's Mills, a distance of 13 miles, in the schedule-time, one hour.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 62.--The ”South Carolina,” 1831.]
Horatio Allen's engine on the South Carolina Railroad is said to have been the first eight-wheeled engine ever built.
It was at about the time of which we are now writing that the first locomotive was built of what is now distinctively known as the American type--an engine with a ”truck” or ”bogie” under the forward end of the boiler. This was the ”American” No. 1, built at the West Point Foundery, from plans furnished by John B. Jervis, Chief Engineer, for the Mohawk & Hudson Railroad. Ross Winans had already (1831) introduced the pa.s.senger-car with swiveling trucks.[56] It was completed in August, 1832, and is said by Mr. Matthew to have been an extremely fast and smooth-running engine. A mile a minute was repeatedly attained, and it is stated by the same authority,[57] that a speed of 80 miles an hour was sometimes made over a single mile.
This engine had cylinders 9-1/2 inches diameter, 16 inches stroke of piston, two pairs of driving-wheels, coupled, 5 feet in diameter each; and the truck had four 33-inch wheels. The boiler contained tubes 3 inches in diameter, and its fire-box was 5 feet long and 2 feet 10 inches wide. Robert Stephenson & Co. subsequently built a similar engine, from the plans of Mr. Jervis, and for the same road. It was set at work in 1833. In both engines the driving-wheels were behind the fire-box. This engine is another ill.u.s.tration of the fact--shown by the description already given of other and earlier engines--that the independence of the American mechanic, and the boldness and self-confidence which have to the present time distinguished him, were among the earliest of the fruits of our political independence and freedom.
[56] ”History of the First Locomotives in America,” Brown.
[57] ”Ross Winans _vs._ The Eastern Railroad Company--Evidence.”
Boston, 1854.
These American engines were all designed to burn anthracite coal. The English locomotives all burned bituminous coal.
Robert L. Stevens, the President and Engineer of the Camden & Amboy Railroad, and a distinguished son of Colonel John Stevens, of Hoboken, was engaged, at the time of the opening of the Liverpool & Manchester Railroad, in the construction of the Camden & Amboy Railroad. It was here that the first of the now standard form of _T_-rail was laid down. It was of malleable iron, and of the form shown in the accompanying figure. It was designed by Mr. Stevens, and is known in the United States as the ”Stevens” rail. In Europe, where it was introduced some years afterward, it is sometimes called the ”Vignolles” rail. He purchased an engine of the Stephensons soon after the trial at Rainhill, and this engine, the ”John Bull,” was set up on the then uncompleted road at Bordentown, in the year 1831. Its first public trial was made in November of that year. The road was opened for traffic, from end to end, two years later. This engine had steam-cylinders 9 inches in diameter, 2 feet stroke of piston, one pair of drivers 4-1/2 feet in diameter, and weighed 10 tons. This engine, and that built by Phineas Davis for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, were exhibited at the Centennial Exhibition at Philadelphia, in the year 1876.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 63.--The ”Stevens” Rail. Enlarged Section.]
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 64.--”Old Ironsides,” 1832.]
Engines supplied to the Camden & Amboy Railroad subsequent to 1831 were built from the designs of Robert L. Stevens, in the shop of the Messrs. Stevens, at Hoboken. The other princ.i.p.al roads of the country, at first, very generally purchased their engines of the Baldwin Locomotive Works, then a small shop owned by Matthias W. Baldwin.
Baldwin's first engine was a little model built for Peale's Museum, to ill.u.s.trate to the visitors of that then well-known place of entertainment the character of the new motor, the success of which, at Rainhill, had just then excited the attention of the world. This was in 1831, and the successful working of this little model led to his receiving an order for an engine from the Philadelphia & Germantown Railroad. Mr. Baldwin, after studying the new engine of the Camden & Amboy road, made his plans, and built an engine (Fig. 64), completing it in the autumn of 1832, and setting it in operation November 23d of that year. It was kept at work on that line of road for a period of 20 years or more. This engine was of Stephenson's ”Planet” cla.s.s, mounted on two driving-wheels 4-1/2 feet in diameter each, and two separate wheels of the same size, uncoupled. The steam-cylinders were 9-1/2 inches in diameter, 18 inches stroke of piston, and were placed horizontally on each side of the smoke-box.
The boiler, 2-1/2 feet in diameter, contained 72 copper tubes 1-1/2 inches in diameter and 7 feet long. The engine cost the railroad company $3,500. On the trial, steam was raised in 20 minutes, and the maximum speed noted was 28 miles an hour. The engine subsequently attained a speed of over 30 miles. In 1834, Mr. Baldwin completed for Mr. E. L. Miller, of Charleston, a six-wheeled engine, the ”E. L.
Miller” (Fig. 65), with cylinders 10 inches in diameter and 16 inches stroke of piston. He made the boiler of this engine of a form which remained standard many years, with a high dome over the fire-box. At about the same time, he built the ”Lancaster,” an engine resembling the ”Miller,” for the State road to Columbia, and several others were soon contracted for and built. By the end of 1834, 5 engines had been built by him, and the construction of locomotive-engines had become one of the leading and most promising industries of the United States.
Mr. William Norris established a shop in Philadelphia in 1832, which he gradually enlarged until it, like the Baldwin Works, became a large establishment. He usually built a six-wheeled engine, with a leading-truck or bogie, and placed his driving-wheels in front of the fire-box.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 65.--The ”E. L. Miller,” 1834.]
At this time the English locomotives were built to carry 60 pounds of steam. The American builders adopted pressures of 120 to 130 pounds per square inch, the now generally standard pressures throughout the world. In the years 1836 and 1837, Baldwin built 80 engines. They were of three cla.s.ses: 1st, with cylinders 12-1/2 inches in diameter and of 16 inches stroke, weighing 12 tons; 2d, with cylinders 12 by 16, and a weight of 10-1/2 tons; and 3d, engines weighing 9 tons, and having steam-cylinders of 10-1/2 inches diameter and of the same stroke. The driving-wheels were usually 4-1/2 feet in diameter, and the cylinder ”inside-connected” to cranked axles. A few ”outside-connected” engines were made, this plan becoming generally adopted at a later period.
The railroads of the United States were very soon supplied with locomotive-engines built in America. In the year 1836, William Norris, who had two years before purchased the interest of Colonel Stephen H.
Long, an army-officer who patented and built locomotives of his own design, built the ”George Was.h.i.+ngton,” and set it at work. This engine, weighing 14,400 pounds, drew 19,200 pounds up an incline 2,800 feet long, rising 369 feet to the mile, at the speed of 15-1/2 miles an hour. This showed an adhesion not far from one-third the weight on the driving-wheels. This was considered a very wonderful performance, and it produced such an impression at the time, that several copies of the ”George Was.h.i.+ngton” were made, on orders from British railroads, and the result was the establishment of the reputation of the locomotive-engine builders of the United States upon a foundation which has never since failed them. The engine had Jervis's forward-truck, now always seen under standard engines, which had already been placed under railroad-cars by Ross Winans.
In New England, the Locks & Ca.n.a.ls Company, of Lowell, began building engines as early as 1834, copying the Stephenson engine. Hinckley & Drury, of Boston, commenced building an outside-connected engine in 1840, and their successors, the Boston Locomotive Works, became the largest manufacturing establishment of the kind in New England. Two years later, Ross Winans, the Baltimore builder, introduced some of his engines upon Eastern railroads, fitting them with upright boilers, and burning anthracite coal.