| Trevithick, Richard (1771-1833) |
| English engineer, constructor
of a steam road locomotive 1801, the first to carry passengers, and probably
the first steam engine to run on rails 1804. Trevithick also built steamboats, river dredgers, and threshing machines. Trevithick was born in Illogan, Cornwall. As a boy he was fascinated by mining machinery and the large stationary steam engines that worked the pumps. He made a working model of a steam road locomotive 1797 and went on to build various full-sized engines. Trevithick's road locomotive Puffing Devil made its debut on Christmas Eve 1801, but burned out while he and his friends were celebrating their success at a nearby inn. He then made a larger version which he drove from Cornwall to London the following year, at a top speed of 19 kph/12 mph. By 1804 he had produced his first railway locomotive, able to haul 10 tonnes and 70 people for 15 km/9.5 mi on rails used by horse-drawn trains at a mine in Wales. He set up in London 1808 giving novelty rides on the engine Catch-me-who-can. Then in 1816 he left England for Peru. When he returned, after making and losing a fortune, he found that steam transport had become a thriving concern. Trevithick had been overtaken, and he died a poor man. |