When was the first steamboat built?
The first boat ever to be moved by steam power was
designed by a Frenchman Jacques Périer and tested on the Seine in
Paris in 1775. But the first really successful steamboat was built by Périer’s
fellow countryman, the Marquis Claude de Jouffroy d’ Abbans. His craft which
was 141 feet long and equipped with straight-paddled sidewheels travelled
several hundred yards against the current on the SaÔne at Lyons on July 25, 1783.
Among early American pioneers was James Rumsey who
in 1786 drove a boat at four miles an hour on the Potomac River, propelled by a
jet of water pumped out at the stern. Between 1786 and 1790 John Fitch
experimented in the Delaware River at Philadelphia with different methods of
propulsion, including paddle wheels, a screw propeller and steam-driven oars.
The first to apply successfully the principle of
steam to screw propellers was John Stevens whose boat, equipped with two
propellers, crossed the Hudson River in 1804. However, his achievement was soon
eclipsed by Robert Fulton’s 150-foot long paddlewheeler Clermont which in 1807
covered the 150 miles from New York to Albany in 30 hours at a maximum speed of
five miles an hour. With Fulton in command on the Hudson, Stevens looked
elsewhere, and in 1808 his new boat, the Phoenix, sailed out of New yourk
harbour to become the first steamboat ever to go to sea.
Both steven and Fulton were following in the steps
of the Scottish inventor William Symington who in 1802 constructed a steamboat
in Scotland, the Charlotte Dundas, which was used as a tug on the Forth and
Clyde Canal. The Charlotte Dundas was a paddle-wheel steamer. For many years
all steamboats used this method of propulsion.
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