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STEEL
Before mid-1800s
iron into steel
slow & expensive
Wm. Kelly & Henry Bessemer -- method to burn off impurities
fast & cheap
Effects of STEEL on Industry
Provided a strong, inexpensive source of building materialAllowed the expansion of the railroadsAllowed the construction of high tech machinery, bridges, tall buildings, etc.
OIL
Edwin Drake 1859 Titusville, PA 20 barrels a day 1901 – Lucas Spindletop, TX 1902 – 17 million
barrels / dry by 1904
RAILROADS
1873 – steel $100/ton 1890s - $12/ton Transcontinental
railroad -- 1869 trunk lines -- major
rail lines crossing the Great Plains (1/2 doz. by 1900)
bigger/faster trains = larger loads
TELEPHONETELEPHONE
BellBell demonstrated demonstrated
invention in 1876 at invention in 1876 at Phila. Centennial Phila. Centennial ExpositionExposition
By turn of the century By turn of the century more than 1 million more than 1 million
Bell telephone company Bell telephone company later became A T & Tlater became A T & T
THOMAS EDISON
Wizard of Menlo ParkAssistant – Lewis LatimerElectric light bulbElectric power plants Westinghouse & Tesla transformer to send electricity over great distancesPhonograph recordsMoving pictures
OVER 1000 patents at his death
An exceedingly ODD number!
• Why was a 4 foot 8 ½ inch gauge used?
• Because that’s the way they built them in England.
• And former Englishmen built the US railroads.
Why did the English build them like that?
• Because the same people who built the trams built the railroad.
• And the trams used a 4 foot 8 and ½ inch gauge.
Why did the tram builders used that gauge?
• Because the people who built the tramways used the same jigs and tools used for building wagons,
• which used a wheel spacing of 4 feet 8 and ½ inches.
Okay, now you’re asking, “Why did the wagons have such an odd
spacing?”• If they’d tried to use
any other spacing, the wagon wheels would have broken on some of the old long distance roads in England because of the spacing of the wheel ruts (troughs in the road).
So, who built the old rutted roads?
• Imperial Rome built the first long distance roads in Europe and England for their legions.
• And the roads have been used ever since.
• But what formed the ruts?
• Roman chariots!!!
Roman chariots were 4 feet 8 and ½ inches?
• Roman chariots were just wide enough to accommodate the back ends of two war horses.
• But there is a TWIST!• The story doesn’t end
there!!
When you see a space shuttle on its launch pad, there are two big booster
rockets attached to the sides of the main fuel tank.
• These fuel tanks are solid rocket boosters (SRBs).
• They are made by Thiokol at their factory in Utah.
• The engineers who designed them would have liked them to be a bit fatter or wider,
• but
But what?
• They had to be shipped by train.
• The line from the factory to the launch site happens to run through a tunnel in the mountains.
• The SRBs had to fit through the railroad tunnel.