HISTORY OF THE AUTOMOBILE
The history of the automobile actually began about 4,000 years
ago when the first wheel was used for transportation in India. In the early 15th
century the Portuguese arrived in China and the interaction of the two cultures
led to a variety of new technologies, including the creation of a wheel that
turned under its own power. By the 1600s small steam-powered engine models had
been developed, but it was another century before a full-sized engine-powered
vehicle was created.
In 1769 French Army officer Captain
Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot built what has been called the first automobile. Cugnot’s
three-wheeled, steam-powered vehicle carried four persons. Designed to move
artillery pieces, it had a top speed of a little more than 3.2 km/h (2 mph) and
had to stop every 20 minutes to build up a fresh head of steam.
As early as 1801 successful but very heavy steam automobiles
were introduced in England. Laws barred them from public roads and forced their
owners to run them like trains on private tracks. In 1802 a steam-powered coach
designed by British engineer Richard Trevithick journeyed more than
160 km (100 mi) from Cornwall to London. Steam power caught the attention of
other vehicle builders. In 1804 American inventor Oliver Evans built a
steam-powered vehicle in Chicago, Illinois. French engineer Onésiphore Pecqueur
built one in 1828.
British inventor Walter Handcock built
a series of steam carriages in the mid-1830s that were used for the first
omnibus service in London. By the mid-1800s England had an extensive network of
steam coach lines. Horse-drawn stagecoach companies and the new railroad
companies pressured the British Parliament to approve heavy tolls on
steam-powered road vehicles. The tolls quickly drove the steam coach operators
out of business.
During the early 20th century steam
cars were popular in the United States. Most famous was the Stanley Steamer,
built by American twin brothers Freelan and Francis Stanley. A Stanley Steamer
established a world land speed record in 1906 of 205.44 km/h (121.573 mph).
Manufacturers produced about 125 models of steam-powered automobiles, including
the Stanley, until 1932.
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