Timeline of transportation technology

This is a timeline of transportation technology.

Antiquity

A traditional Polynesian catamaran
Dionysus riding on a small galley-like craft in a painting from the Dionysus cup by Exekias, from c. 530 BC[1]

Middle Ages

Horse collars and cart between 1350 and 1375

17th century

  • 1620 – Cornelius Drebbel builds the world's first known submarine, which is propelled by oars (although there are earlier ideas for and depictions of submarines).
  • 1655 - Stephan Farffler was a Nuremberg watchmaker of the seventeenth century whose invention of a manumotive carriage in 1655 is widely considered to have been the first self-propelled wheelchair.
  • 1662 – Blaise Pascal invents a horse-drawn public bus which has a regular route, schedule, and fare system.
  • 1672 – Ferdinand Verbiest has built what may have been the first steam-powered scale model car.[4][5]

18th century

19th century

Early 19th century

  • 1801 – Richard Trevithick ran a full-sized steam 'road locomotive' on the road in Camborne, England.[7]
  • 1803 – Richard Trevithick built his 10-seater London Steam Carriage.[7]
  • 1803 – William Symington's Charlotte Dundas, generally considered to be the world's first practical steamboat, makes her first voyage.
  • 1804 – Richard Trevithick built a prototype steam-powered railway locomotive and it ran on the Pen-y-Darren Line near Merthyr Tydfil Wales.
  • 1804 – Oliver Evans (claimed to have) demonstrated a steam-powered amphibious vehicle.
  • 1807 - The Swansea and Mumbles Railway ran the world's first passenger horsecar tram service.
  • 1807 – Robert Fulton's North River Steamboat, the world's first commercially successful steamboat, makes her maiden voyage.
  • 1807 – Nicéphore Niépce installed his Pyréolophore internal combustion engine in a boat and powered up the river Saone in France.
  • 1807 – Isaac de Rivas made a hydrogen gas powered internal combustion engine and mounted it on a vehicle.
  • 1812 – First commercially successful self-propelled engine on land was Mathew Murray's Salamanca on Middleton Railway using toothed wheels and rail.
  • 1812 – Timothy Hackworth's "Puffing Billy" ran on smooth Cast Iron Rails at Wylam Colliery near Newcastle
  • 1814 – George Stephenson built the first practical steam-powered railway locomotive "Blutcher" at Killingworth Colliery.[8]
  • 1816 – The most likely originator of the Bicycle is the German, Baron Karl von Drais, who rode his 1816 machine while collecting taxes from his tenants.
  • 1819 – SS Savannah, the first vessel to cross the Atlantic Ocean partly under steam power, arrives at Liverpool, England from Savannah, Georgia.
  • 1822 – Stevenson built a locomotive and designed the railway for Hetton Colliery which is first railway not to use any horse-traction but it did have several rope hauled sections.
  • 1822 – First Meeting of Liverpool Manchester Railway Company Permanent Committee.[9]
  • 1825 - Stevenson's Locomotion No. 1 runs on Stockton & Darlington Railway which opens as first public railway and uses horses and self-propelled steam engines and stationary engines with ropes along a single track. No stations and no timetables as anyone could hire the track to use their own vehicle on it.[10]
  • 1825 – Sir Goldsworthy Gurney invented a series of steam-powered passenger carriages and by 1829 completed the 120-mile journey from London to Bath, Somerset and back.
  • 1826 – Bill passed for Liverpool and Manchester Railway at second attempt and George Stevenson commences work on 35-mile twin track line permitting simultaneous travel in both directions between the 2 towns. Means of traction not specified to reduce opposition.[11]
  • 1828 – Stevenson's "Lancashire Witch" runs on Bolton and Leigh Railway line - a public goods line to connect Leeds and Liverpool Canal and Manchester Bolton & Bury Canal. Railway has rope hauled and self-propelled steam engines and single track.[12]
  • 1829 – Rainhill Trials to find best self-propelled engine for Liverpool Manchester line are won by Robert Stephenson's Rocket proving there is no need for horse traction or static engines on the main line.[13] Rocket becomes basic formula for all future steam engines with boiler tubes, blast pipe, and the use of coal rather than coke.
  • 1830 – Liverpool and Manchester Railway opens. First public transport system without animal traction, first public line with no rope hauled sections for main journey, first twin track, first railway between 2 large towns, first timetabled trains, first railway stations, first train faster than a mail coach, first tunnels under streets, first proper modern railway which formed the template for all subsequent railways.[14]
  • 1838 – Isambard Kingdom Brunel's SS Great Western, the first purpose-built transatlantic steamship, inaugurates the first regular transatlantic steamship service.
  • 1839 - An early electric boat was developed by the German inventor Moritz von Jacobi in 1839 in St Petersburg, Russia. It was a 24-foot (7.3 m) boat which carried 14 passengers at 3 miles per hour (4.8 km/h). It was successfully demonstrated to Emperor Nicholas I of Russia on the Neva River.
  • 1840s – Railway Mania sweeps UK and Ireland. 6,220 miles (10,010 km) of railway line were built
  • 1843 - Dalkey Atmospheric railway opens.
  • 1847 - The first steam railcar was designed by James Samuel, the Eastern Counties Railway Locomotive Engineer, built by William Bridges Adams in 1847, and trialled between Shoreditch and Cambridge on 23 October 1847.

Late 19th century

Late 19th century modes of transport, Japan, horsecar, bicycle etc.
First Zeppelin ascent, 1900

20th century

Early 20th century

Early 20th Century modes of road transport in Dublin, 1929
  • 1903
  • 1904 - The first non-experimental trolleybus system was a seasonal municipal line installed near Nantasket Beach in 1904; the first year-round commercial line was built to open a hilly property to development just outside Los Angeles in 1910.
  • 1907 - The London Electrobus Company started running a service of battery-electric buses between London's Victoria Station and Liverpool Street on 15 July 1907.
  • 1908 – Henry Ford develops the assembly line method of automobile manufacturing with the introduction of the Ford Model T.
  • 1910 - Fabre Hydravion first seaplane.
  • 1911 – Selandia launched – First ocean-going, diesel engine-driven ship.
  • 1912 - The world's first diesel locomotive (a diesel-mechanical locomotive) was operated in the summer of 1912 on the Winterthur–Romanshorn railway in Switzerland.
  • 1912 - Articulated trams, invented and first used by the Boston Elevated Railway.
  • 1915
    • The Luftkissengleitboot Hovercraft – First hovering vehicle was created by Dagobert Müller. It could only travel on water.
    • Motorized scooter invented.
    • A British commission was tasked with creating a vehicle able to cross a 4 ft wide trench – the tank.[23]
  • 1916 – First tank prototype, nicknamed "mother", was created by Britain during World War 1.[24]
  • 1924 - The world's first functional diesel locomotive (diesel-electric locomotive) (Eel2 original number Юэ 001/Yu-e 001) started operations, designed by a team led by Yuri Lomonosov and built 1923–1924 by Maschinenfabrik Esslingen in Germany.
  • 1926 – Robert Goddard launches the first liquid-fueled rocket.
  • 1932 - The first electric golf cart was custom-made in 1932, but did not gain widespread acceptance.[25]
  • 1935 – First flight of the DC-3, one of the most significant transport aircraft in the history of aviation.[26]
  • 1939 – First jet engine powered aircraft, the Heinkel He 178, takes flight.
  • 1942 – V2 rocket covers a distance of 200 kilometres (120 mi).
  • 1947 – Chuck Yeager in the Bell X1 completes the first supersonic manned flight.

Late 20th Century

A 0 series Shinkansen high-speed rail set in Tokyo, May 1967
Concorde 001 first flight in 1969
Space shuttle launch
C5 enthusiasts gather at the Brooklands Museum

21st century

Concept modes of transport, AVENUE21 – Autonomer Verkehr, 2017

See also

Notes

  1. A "tube" railway is an underground railway constructed in a cylindrical tunnel by the use of a tunnelling shield, usually deep below ground level.

References

  1. Casson (1971), pp. 68–69
  2. David W. Anthony, The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World. Princeton University Press, 2010 ISBN 1400831105 p461
  3. King, David A. (1987). Islamic Astronomical Instruments. London: Variorum Reprints. ISBN 0860782018.
  4. "1679–1681 – R P Verbiest's Steam Chariot". History of the Automobile: origin to 1900. Hergé. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  5. Setright, L. J. K. (2004). Drive On!: A Social History of the Motor Car. Granta Books. ISBN 1-86207-698-7.
  6. "HOVERCRAFT BILL (Hansard, 16 May 1968)". Hansard.millbanksystems.com. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  7. C.D. Buchanan (1958). "1". Mixed Blessing: The Motor in Britain. Leonard Hill.
  8. Smiles, Samuel (1906). Lives of the engineers: Work of James Brindley; John Smeaton; John Rennie; Thomas Telford; George Stephenson; Robert Stephenson and others. UK: The Folio Society. p. 256. ISBN 0-7153-4279-7.
  9. Thomas, RHG (1980). The Liverpool and Manchester Railway. UK: BT Batsford Ltd. p. 15. ISBN 0713405376.
  10. Smiles, Samuel (2006). The Liverpool and Manchester Railway. The Folio Society. pp. 268–270. ISBN 0-7153-4279-7.
  11. Carlson, Robert (1969). The Liverpool and Manchester Railway Project. UK: David and Charles :Newton Abbot. p. 179. ISBN 0-7153-4646-6.
  12. Thomas, RHG (1980). The Liverpool and Manchester Railway. UK: BT Batsford Ltd. p. 95. ISBN 07134-05376.
  13. Thomas, RHG (1980). The Liverpool and Manchester Railway. UK: BT Batsford Ltd. p. 75. ISBN 07134-05376.
  14. Carlson, Robert (1969). The Liverpool and Manchester Railway Project 1821–1831. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. pp. 11–16. ISBN 0-7153-4646-6.
  15. Falco, Charles M.; Guggenheim Museum Staff (1998), "Issues in the Evolution of the Motorcycle", in Krens, Thomas; Drutt, Matthew (eds.), The Art of the Motorcycle, Harry N. Abrams, pp. 24–31, 98–101, ISBN 0-89207-207-5
  16. C. N. Pyrgidis. Railway Transportation Systems: Design, Construction and Operation. CRC Press, 2016. P. 156
  17. Ye. N. Petrova. St. Petersburg in Focus: Photographers of the Turn of the Century; in Celebration of the Tercentenary of St. Petersburg. Palace Ed., 2003. P. 12
  18. "Benz Patent Motor Car: The first automobile (1885–1886)". Daimler. Archived from the original on 21 October 2018.
  19. Wolmar 2005, p. 4.
  20. Eckermann, Erik (2001), World History of the Automobile, SAE, pp. 67–68, ISBN 9780768008005, retrieved 6 October 2013
  21. Electric Bicycle Guide
  22. "The First Zeppelins: LZ-1 through LZ-4". Airships.net. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  23. "World War One: The tank's secret Lincoln origins". BBC News. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  24. Glanfield, Appendix 2.
  25. Golfer Follows Ball In Car Run By Electricity", May 1932, Popular Mechanics article bottom of page 801
  26. The DC-3 Archived 5 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  27. Wand, George. “Fuel Cell History, Part 2” Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine. “Fuel Cell Today”, April 2006, accessed August 2, 2011
  28. "Welcome to the Parasail Safety Council - Mark McCulloh".
  29. "Parasailing - Aloha Surf Guide".
  30. Al-Khatib, Talal (5 December 2011). "Parasailing: What You Need to Know Before You Go".
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