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Robert Fulton

Robert Fulton (November 14, 1765 – February 24, 1815) was an American engineer and inventor who is widely credited with developing the world's first commercially successful steamboat, the North River Steamboat (also known as Clermont). In 1807, that steamboat traveled on the Hudson River with passengers from New York City to Albany and back again, a round trip of 300 nautical miles (560 kilometers), in 62 hours. The success of his steamboat changed river traffic and trade on major American rivers.

Robert Fulton
Portrait of Fulton
Born
Robert Fulton

(1765-11-14)November 14, 1765
DiedFebruary 24, 1815(1815-02-24) (aged 49)
Resting placeTrinity Church Cemetery
Occupation(s)Engineer, inventor, businessman
Years active1793–1815
Known forSteamboat, Nautilus (1800 submarine)
Spouse
Harriet Livingston
(m. 1808)
Signature

In 1800, Fulton had been commissioned by Napoleon Bonaparte, leader of France, to attempt to design a submarine; he then produced Nautilus, the first practical submarine in history.[1] Fulton is also credited with inventing some of the world's earliest naval torpedoes for use by the Royal Navy.[2]

Fulton became interested in steam engines and the idea of steamboats in 1777 when he was around age 12 and visited state delegate William Henry of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, who was interested in this topic. Henry had learned about inventor James Watt and his Watt steam engine on an earlier visit to England.

Early life

 
A drawing of Fulton's invention Nautilus

Robert Fulton was born on a farm in Little Britain, Pennsylvania, on November 14, 1765. His father, Robert Fulton, married Mary Smith, daughter of Captain Joseph Smith and sister of Col. Lester Smith,[3] a comparatively well off family.[4] He had three sisters – Isabella, Elizabeth, and Mary, and a younger brother, Abraham.[5]

For six years, he lived in Philadelphia, where he painted portraits and landscapes, drew houses and machinery, and was able to send money home to help support his mother. In 1785, Fulton bought a farm at Hopewell Township in Washington County near Pittsburgh for £80 (equivalent to $13638 in 2018),[6] and moved his mother and family into it.

Jobs

Career in Europe (1786–1806)

 
Fulton's 1806 submarine design for the U.S. government

At the age of 23, Fulton traveled to Europe, where he would live for the next twenty years. He went to England in 1786, carrying several letters of introduction to Americans abroad from prominent individuals he had met in Philadelphia. He had already corresponded with artist Benjamin West; their fathers had been close friends. West took Fulton into his home, where Fulton lived for several years and studied painting. Fulton gained many commissions painting portraits and landscapes, which allowed him to support himself. He continued to experiment with mechanical inventions.[5]

Fulton became caught up in the enthusiasm of the "Canal Mania". In 1793 he began developing his ideas for tugboat canals with inclined planes instead of locks. He obtained a patent for this idea in 1794, and also began working on ideas for the steam power of boats. He published a pamphlet about canals and patented a dredging machine and several other inventions. In 1794, he moved to Manchester to gain practical knowledge of English canal engineering. While there he became friendly with Robert Owen, a cotton manufacturer and early socialist. Owen agreed to finance the development and promotion of Fulton's designs for inclined planes and earth-digging machines; he was instrumental in introducing the American to a canal company, which awarded him a sub-contract. But Fulton was not successful at this practical effort and he gave up the contract after a short time.[7]

 
Bust of Robert Fulton by Jean-Antoine Houdon, 1803

As early as 1793, Fulton proposed plans for steam-powered vessels to both the United States and British governments. The first steamships had appeared considerably earlier. The earliest steam-powered ship, in which the engine moved oars, was built by Claude de Jouffroy in France. Called Palmipède, it was tested on the Doubs in 1776. In 1783, de Jouffroy built Pyroscaphe, the first paddle steamer, which sailed successfully on the Saône. The first successful trial run of a steamboat in America had been made by inventor John Fitch, on the Delaware River on August 22, 1787. William Symington had successfully tried steamboats in 1788, and it seems probable that Fulton was aware of these developments.

In Britain, Fulton met the Duke of Bridgewater, Francis Egerton, whose canal, the first to be constructed in the country, was being used for trials of a steam tug. Fulton became very enthusiastic about the canals, and wrote a 1796 treatise on canal construction, suggesting improvements to locks and other features. Working for the Duke of Bridgewater between 1796 and 1799, Fulton had a boat constructed in the Duke's timber yard, under the supervision of Benjamin Powell. After installation of the machinery supplied by the engineers Bateman and Sherratt of Salford, the boat was duly christened Bonaparte in honour of Fulton having served under Napoleon. After expensive trials, because of the configuration of the design, the team feared the paddles might damage the clay lining of the canal and eventually abandoned the experiment. In 1801, Bridgewater instead ordered eight vessels for his canal based on Charlotte Dundas, constructed by Symington.

 
Location and plaque of the Fulton experiment of August 9, 1803

In 1797, Fulton went to Paris, where he was well known as an inventor. He studied French and German, along with mathematics and chemistry. Fulton also exhibited the first panorama painting to be shown in Paris, Pierre Prévost's Vue de Paris depuis les Tuileries (1800), on what is still called Rue des Panoramas (Panorama Street) today.[8] While living in France, Fulton designed the first working muscle-powered submarine, Nautilus, between 1793 and 1797. He also experimented with torpedoes. When tested, his submarine operated underwater for 17 minutes in 25 feet of water. He asked the government to subsidize its construction, but he was turned down twice. Eventually, he approached the Minister of Marine and, in 1800, was granted permission to build.[9] The shipyard Perrier in Rouen built it, and the submarine sailed first in July 1800 on the Seine River in the same city.

 
Commemorative plaque to Robert Fulton in the port of Rouen, made in 1918 to thank the United States for their involvement in the First World War

In France, Fulton met Robert R. Livingston, who was appointed U.S. Ambassador to France in 1801. He also had a scientifically curious mind, and the two men decided to collaborate on building a steamboat and to try operating it on the Seine. Fulton experimented with the water resistance of various hull shapes, made drawings and models, and had a steamboat constructed. At the first trial the boat ran perfectly, but the hull was later rebuilt and strengthened. On August 9, 1803, when this boat was driven up the River Seine, it sank. The boat was 66 feet (20 m) long, with an 8-foot (2.4 m) beam, and made between 2+12 and 3+12 knots (5 and 6 km/h) against the current.

In 1804, Fulton switched allegiance and moved to Britain, where he was commissioned by Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger to build a range of weapons for use by the Royal Navy during Napoleon's invasion scares. Among his inventions were the world's first modern naval "torpedoes" (modern "mines"). These were tested, along with several other of his inventions, during the 1804 Raid on Boulogne, but met with limited success. Although Fulton continued to develop his inventions with the British until 1806, the crushing naval victory by Admiral Horatio Nelson at the 1805 Battle of Trafalgar greatly reduced the risk of French invasion. Fulton was increasingly sidelined as a result.[2]

Career in the United States (1806–1815)

In 1806, Fulton returned to the United States. In 1807, he and Robert R. Livingston built the first commercially successful steamboat, North River Steamboat (later known as Clermont). Livingston's shipping company began using it to carry passengers between New York City and up the Hudson River to the state capital Albany. Clermont made the 150-nautical-mile (280 km) trip in 32 hours. Passengers on the maiden voyage included a lawyer Jones and his family from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. His infant daughter Alexandra Jones later served as a Union nurse on a steamboat hospital in the American Civil War.[10]

The Clermont was the first real steamboat in America. While it was being built people called it "Fulton's Folly". The Clermont had sails as well as a steam engine. At each end of the boat was a short mast with a small square sail that could be unfurled when needed. The engine was in the center of the boat and was surrounded by cord wood. The engine was 24-horsepower. Above the engine was a tall and slender smoke stack. On each side was a big paddle wheel that was open and uncovered. The diameter of the paddle wheels was 15 feet (4.6 m). The boat itself was 136 feet (41 m) long and 18 feet (5.5 m) wide. Its displacement was 160 tons.[11]

From 1811 until his death, Fulton was a member of the Erie Canal Commission, appointed by the Governor of New York.

Fulton's final design was the floating battery Demologos. This first steam-driven warship in the world was built for the United States Navy for the War of 1812. The heavy vessel was not completed until after Fulton's death and was named in his honor.

From October 1811 to January 1812, Fulton, along with Livingston and Nicholas Roosevelt (1767–1854), worked together on a joint project to build a new steamboat, New Orleans, sturdy enough to take down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to New Orleans, Louisiana. It traveled from industrial Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where it was built, with stops at Wheeling, Virginia; Cincinnati, Ohio; past the "Falls of the Ohio" at Louisville, Kentucky; to near Cairo, Illinois, and the confluence with the Mississippi River; and down past Memphis, Tennessee, and Natchez, Mississippi, to New Orleans some 90 miles (140 km) by river from the Gulf of Mexico coast. This was less than a decade after the United States had acquired the Louisiana Territory from France. These rivers were not well settled, mapped, or protected. By achieving this first breakthrough voyage and also proving the ability of the steamboat to travel upstream against powerful river currents, Fulton changed the entire trade and transportation outlook for the American heartland.

Fulton was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1814.[12]

Personal life

 
Harriet Livingston, portrait by Robert Fulton

On January 8, 1808, Fulton married Harriet Livingston (1783–1826), the daughter of Walter Livingston and niece of Robert R. Livingston, prominent men in the Hudson River area, whose family dated to the colonial era.[3][13] Harriet, who was nineteen years his junior, was well educated and was an accomplished amateur painter and musician.[4] Together, they had four children:[14]

  • Robert Barlow Fulton (1808–1841), who died unmarried.[14]
  • Julia Fulton (1810–1848), who married lawyer Charles Blight of Philadelphia.[14]
  • Cornelia Livingston Fulton (1812–1893), who married lawyer Edward Charles Crary (1806–1848) in 1831.[13]
  • Mary Livingston Fulton (1813–1861), who married Robert Morris Ludlow (1812–1894), parents of Robert Fulton Ludlow.[3]

Fulton died in 1815 in New York City from tuberculosis (then known as "consumption"). He had been walking home on the frozen Hudson River when one of his friends, Thomas Addis Emmet, fell through the ice. In rescuing his friend, Fulton got soaked with icy water. He is believed to have contracted pneumonia. When he got home, his sickness worsened. He was diagnosed with consumption and died at 49 years old. After his death, his widow remarried to Charles Augustus Dale on November 26, 1816.

He is buried in the Trinity Church Cemetery for Trinity Church (Episcopal) at Wall Street in New York City, near other notable Americans such as former U.S. Secretaries of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton and Albert Gallatin. His descendants include Cory Lidle, a former Major League Baseball pitcher.[15]

Legacy

Posthumous honors

The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania donated a marble statue of Fulton to the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol. Fulton was also honored for his development of steamship technology in New York City's Hudson-Fulton Celebration of the Centennial in 1909. A replica of his first steam-powered steam vessel, Clermont, was built for the occasion.

Five ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Fulton in honor of Robert Fulton.

Fulton Hall at the United States Merchant Marine Academy houses the Department of Marine Engineering and included laboratories for diesel and steam engineering, refrigeration, marine engineering, thermodynamics, materials testing, machine shop, mechanical engineering, welding, electrical machinery, control systems, electric circuits, engine room simulators and graphics.

 
Robert Fulton (with Samuel F. B. Morse) depicted on the reverse of the 1896 $2 Silver Certificate from the United States Treasury

Bronze statues of Fulton and Christopher Columbus represent commerce on the balustrade of the galleries of the Main Reading Room in the Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. They are two of 16 historical figures, each pair representing one of the 8 pillars of civilization.

The Guatemalan government in 1910 erected a bust of Fulton in one of the parks of Guatemala City.[16]

In 2006, Fulton was inducted into the "National Inventors Hall of Fame" in Alexandria, Virginia.[17]

Places named for Fulton

Many places in the U.S. are named for Robert Fulton, including:

Counties

Cities and towns

Other places

In popular culture

20th Century-Fox's 1940 film, Little Old New York, based on a 1920 play by Rida Johnson Young, is a fictionalized version of Fulton's life from his arrival in New York to the first sailing of Clermont. British actor Richard Greene starred as Fulton with Brenda Joyce as Harriet Livingston. Alice Faye and Fred MacMurray played wharf friends who help Fulton overcome problems to realize his dream.

A fictionalized account of Fulton's role was produced by BBC television during the 1960s. In the first serial, Triton (1961,[20] re-made in 1968), two British naval officers, Captain Belwether and Lieutenant Lamb, are involved in spying on Fulton while he is working for the French. In the sequel, Pegasus (1969), they are surprised to find themselves working with Fulton after he changed sides. In the 1961 series, Fulton was played by Reed De Rouen, in the 1968 and 1969 series he was played by Robert Cawdron.

A Robert Fulton cartoon character appears in the 1955 Casper the Friendly Ghost short film Red, White, and Boo.

Author James McGee used Fulton's experiments in early submarine warfare (against wooden warships) as a major plot element in his 2006 novel Ratcatcher.

Invasion (2009), the tenth novel in the "Kydd" naval warfare series by Julian Stockwin, uses Fulton and his submarine as an important plot element.[21]

Until 2016, Disney Springs at Walt Disney World had a restaurant named Fulton's Crab House with a building in the shape of a steamboat.[22][23]

Gallery

Publications

  • Torpedo war, and submarine explosions published 1810.
  • A Treatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation 2004-12-31 at the Wayback Machine, 1796. From the University of Georgia Libraries in DjVu & layered PDF 2006-08-24 at the Wayback Machine formats.
  • A Treatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation 1796. From Rare Book Room.

See also

References

  1. ^ American Treasures of the Library of Congress: "Fulton's Submarine" 2009-03-28 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b Best, Nicholas (2005). Trafalgar: The Untold Story of the Greatest Sea Battle in History. London: Phoenix. ISBN 0-7538-2095-1.
  3. ^ a b c Reynolds, Cuyler (1911). Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs: A Record of Achievements of the People of the Hudson and Mohawk Valleys in New York State, Included Within the Present Counties of Albany, Rensselaer, Washington, Saratoga, Montgomery, Fulton, Schenectady, Columbia and Greene. Lewis Historical Publishing Company. pp. 302–303.
  4. ^ a b Philip, Cynthia Owen (2003). Robert Fulton: A Biography. iUniverse. p. 3. ISBN 9780595262038. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  5. ^ a b Buckman, David Lear (1907). . The Grafton Press. Archived from the original on August 26, 2010.
  6. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  7. ^ Boyes, Graham. The Peak Forest Canal. ISBN 9780901461599.
  8. ^ Sutcliffe, 1909, p. 63.
  9. ^ Burgess, Robert Forrest (1975). Ships Beneath the Sea. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-008958-7.
  10. ^ Alice Crary Sutcliffe, Robert Fulton and the 'Claremont'
  11. ^ Baldwin, James, Sailing the Seas, American Book Company, New York, Copyright 1920, pages 73-74,
  12. ^ "MemberListF". American Antiquarian Society.
  13. ^ a b Historical Papers and Addresses of the Lancaster County Historical Society. 1909. pp. 227–228.
  14. ^ a b c Historical Papers and Addresses of the Lancaster County Historical Society: January 8, 1909. Vol. XIII No. 1. Lancaster County Historical Society. 1909. p. 227. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  15. ^ "Lidle dies after plane crashes into NYC high-rise". ESPN.com. 11 October 2006.
  16. ^ "Fleet of Fifty Warships Built in the Brooklyn Navy Yard". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York). 12 May 1910. p. 22. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on April 8, 2013.
  18. ^ Eaton, David Wolfe (1916). How Missouri Counties, Towns and Streams Were Named. The State Historical Society of Missouri. p. 267.
  19. ^ "The School District of Lancaster".
  20. ^ "Triton: Part 2". BBC Genome. Retrieved 8 December 2018.
  21. ^ Stockwin, Julian (2009). Invasion. ISBN 9780340961155.
  22. ^ Arnold, Kyle. "Fulton's Crab House at Disney Springs changing to Paddlefish". OrlandoSentinel.com. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
  23. ^ Delgado, Lauren. "First Look: Paddlefish in Disney Springs". OrlandoSentinel.com. Retrieved 2018-01-31.

Sources

  • This article contains content first published in 1909 as .
  • Sutcliffe, Alice Crary (1909). Robert Fulton and the "Clermont". New York : The Century Co.=.

External links

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Fulton, Robert" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Robert Fulton Birthplace
  • Phair, Montgomery. . Casebook: The War of 1812. Archived from the original on October 2, 2006.
  • CHAPTER XIII: ROBERT FULTON in Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made (1871), by James D. McCabe, Jr., Illustrated by G. F. and E. B. Bensell, a Project Gutenberg eBook.
  • Harvey, W.S.; Downs-Rose, G. (1980). . Archived from the original on February 16, 2002.
  • Buckman, David Lear (1907). . The Grafton Press. Archived from the original on August 26, 2010.
  • Examples of art by Robert Fulton at the Art Renewal Center
  • Thurston, Robert H. . A history of the growth of the steam-engine. Archived from the original on 2012-02-21. Archived from the original.
  • Iles, George (1912), Leading American Inventors, New York: Henry Holt and Company, pp. 40–75
  • Booknotes interview with Kirkpatrick Sale on The Fire of His Genius: Robert Fulton and the American Dream, November 25, 2001.
  • Collection of Robert Fulton manuscripts – digital facsimile from the Linda Hall Library

robert, fulton, other, uses, disambiguation, november, 1765, february, 1815, american, engineer, inventor, widely, credited, with, developing, world, first, commercially, successful, steamboat, north, river, steamboat, also, known, clermont, 1807, that, steamb. For other uses see Robert Fulton disambiguation Robert Fulton November 14 1765 February 24 1815 was an American engineer and inventor who is widely credited with developing the world s first commercially successful steamboat the North River Steamboat also known as Clermont In 1807 that steamboat traveled on the Hudson River with passengers from New York City to Albany and back again a round trip of 300 nautical miles 560 kilometers in 62 hours The success of his steamboat changed river traffic and trade on major American rivers Robert FultonPortrait of FultonBornRobert Fulton 1765 11 14 November 14 1765Little Britain Lancaster County Province of Pennsylvania British AmericaDiedFebruary 24 1815 1815 02 24 aged 49 New York City U S Resting placeTrinity Church CemeteryOccupation s Engineer inventor businessmanYears active1793 1815Known forSteamboat Nautilus 1800 submarine SpouseHarriet Livingston m 1808 wbr SignatureIn 1800 Fulton had been commissioned by Napoleon Bonaparte leader of France to attempt to design a submarine he then produced Nautilus the first practical submarine in history 1 Fulton is also credited with inventing some of the world s earliest naval torpedoes for use by the Royal Navy 2 Fulton became interested in steam engines and the idea of steamboats in 1777 when he was around age 12 and visited state delegate William Henry of Lancaster Pennsylvania who was interested in this topic Henry had learned about inventor James Watt and his Watt steam engine on an earlier visit to England Contents 1 Early life 2 Jobs 2 1 Career in Europe 1786 1806 2 2 Career in the United States 1806 1815 3 Personal life 4 Legacy 4 1 Posthumous honors 4 2 Places named for Fulton 4 2 1 Counties 4 2 2 Cities and towns 4 2 3 Other places 4 3 In popular culture 5 Gallery 6 Publications 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEarly life Edit A drawing of Fulton s invention Nautilus Robert Fulton was born on a farm in Little Britain Pennsylvania on November 14 1765 His father Robert Fulton married Mary Smith daughter of Captain Joseph Smith and sister of Col Lester Smith 3 a comparatively well off family 4 He had three sisters Isabella Elizabeth and Mary and a younger brother Abraham 5 For six years he lived in Philadelphia where he painted portraits and landscapes drew houses and machinery and was able to send money home to help support his mother In 1785 Fulton bought a farm at Hopewell Township in Washington County near Pittsburgh for 80 equivalent to 13638 in 2018 6 and moved his mother and family into it Jobs EditCareer in Europe 1786 1806 Edit Fulton s 1806 submarine design for the U S government At the age of 23 Fulton traveled to Europe where he would live for the next twenty years He went to England in 1786 carrying several letters of introduction to Americans abroad from prominent individuals he had met in Philadelphia He had already corresponded with artist Benjamin West their fathers had been close friends West took Fulton into his home where Fulton lived for several years and studied painting Fulton gained many commissions painting portraits and landscapes which allowed him to support himself He continued to experiment with mechanical inventions 5 Fulton became caught up in the enthusiasm of the Canal Mania In 1793 he began developing his ideas for tugboat canals with inclined planes instead of locks He obtained a patent for this idea in 1794 and also began working on ideas for the steam power of boats He published a pamphlet about canals and patented a dredging machine and several other inventions In 1794 he moved to Manchester to gain practical knowledge of English canal engineering While there he became friendly with Robert Owen a cotton manufacturer and early socialist Owen agreed to finance the development and promotion of Fulton s designs for inclined planes and earth digging machines he was instrumental in introducing the American to a canal company which awarded him a sub contract But Fulton was not successful at this practical effort and he gave up the contract after a short time 7 Bust of Robert Fulton by Jean Antoine Houdon 1803 As early as 1793 Fulton proposed plans for steam powered vessels to both the United States and British governments The first steamships had appeared considerably earlier The earliest steam powered ship in which the engine moved oars was built by Claude de Jouffroy in France Called Palmipede it was tested on the Doubs in 1776 In 1783 de Jouffroy built Pyroscaphe the first paddle steamer which sailed successfully on the Saone The first successful trial run of a steamboat in America had been made by inventor John Fitch on the Delaware River on August 22 1787 William Symington had successfully tried steamboats in 1788 and it seems probable that Fulton was aware of these developments In Britain Fulton met the Duke of Bridgewater Francis Egerton whose canal the first to be constructed in the country was being used for trials of a steam tug Fulton became very enthusiastic about the canals and wrote a 1796 treatise on canal construction suggesting improvements to locks and other features Working for the Duke of Bridgewater between 1796 and 1799 Fulton had a boat constructed in the Duke s timber yard under the supervision of Benjamin Powell After installation of the machinery supplied by the engineers Bateman and Sherratt of Salford the boat was duly christened Bonaparte in honour of Fulton having served under Napoleon After expensive trials because of the configuration of the design the team feared the paddles might damage the clay lining of the canal and eventually abandoned the experiment In 1801 Bridgewater instead ordered eight vessels for his canal based on Charlotte Dundas constructed by Symington Location and plaque of the Fulton experiment of August 9 1803 In 1797 Fulton went to Paris where he was well known as an inventor He studied French and German along with mathematics and chemistry Fulton also exhibited the first panorama painting to be shown in Paris Pierre Prevost s Vue de Paris depuis les Tuileries 1800 on what is still called Rue des Panoramas Panorama Street today 8 While living in France Fulton designed the first working muscle powered submarine Nautilus between 1793 and 1797 He also experimented with torpedoes When tested his submarine operated underwater for 17 minutes in 25 feet of water He asked the government to subsidize its construction but he was turned down twice Eventually he approached the Minister of Marine and in 1800 was granted permission to build 9 The shipyard Perrier in Rouen built it and the submarine sailed first in July 1800 on the Seine River in the same city Commemorative plaque to Robert Fulton in the port of Rouen made in 1918 to thank the United States for their involvement in the First World War In France Fulton met Robert R Livingston who was appointed U S Ambassador to France in 1801 He also had a scientifically curious mind and the two men decided to collaborate on building a steamboat and to try operating it on the Seine Fulton experimented with the water resistance of various hull shapes made drawings and models and had a steamboat constructed At the first trial the boat ran perfectly but the hull was later rebuilt and strengthened On August 9 1803 when this boat was driven up the River Seine it sank The boat was 66 feet 20 m long with an 8 foot 2 4 m beam and made between 2 1 2 and 3 1 2 knots 5 and 6 km h against the current In 1804 Fulton switched allegiance and moved to Britain where he was commissioned by Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger to build a range of weapons for use by the Royal Navy during Napoleon s invasion scares Among his inventions were the world s first modern naval torpedoes modern mines These were tested along with several other of his inventions during the 1804 Raid on Boulogne but met with limited success Although Fulton continued to develop his inventions with the British until 1806 the crushing naval victory by Admiral Horatio Nelson at the 1805 Battle of Trafalgar greatly reduced the risk of French invasion Fulton was increasingly sidelined as a result 2 Career in the United States 1806 1815 Edit In 1806 Fulton returned to the United States In 1807 he and Robert R Livingston built the first commercially successful steamboat North River Steamboat later known as Clermont Livingston s shipping company began using it to carry passengers between New York City and up the Hudson River to the state capital Albany Clermont made the 150 nautical mile 280 km trip in 32 hours Passengers on the maiden voyage included a lawyer Jones and his family from Bethlehem Pennsylvania His infant daughter Alexandra Jones later served as a Union nurse on a steamboat hospital in the American Civil War 10 The Clermont was the first real steamboat in America While it was being built people called it Fulton s Folly The Clermont had sails as well as a steam engine At each end of the boat was a short mast with a small square sail that could be unfurled when needed The engine was in the center of the boat and was surrounded by cord wood The engine was 24 horsepower Above the engine was a tall and slender smoke stack On each side was a big paddle wheel that was open and uncovered The diameter of the paddle wheels was 15 feet 4 6 m The boat itself was 136 feet 41 m long and 18 feet 5 5 m wide Its displacement was 160 tons 11 From 1811 until his death Fulton was a member of the Erie Canal Commission appointed by the Governor of New York Fulton s final design was the floating battery Demologos This first steam driven warship in the world was built for the United States Navy for the War of 1812 The heavy vessel was not completed until after Fulton s death and was named in his honor From October 1811 to January 1812 Fulton along with Livingston and Nicholas Roosevelt 1767 1854 worked together on a joint project to build a new steamboat New Orleans sturdy enough to take down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to New Orleans Louisiana It traveled from industrial Pittsburgh Pennsylvania where it was built with stops at Wheeling Virginia Cincinnati Ohio past the Falls of the Ohio at Louisville Kentucky to near Cairo Illinois and the confluence with the Mississippi River and down past Memphis Tennessee and Natchez Mississippi to New Orleans some 90 miles 140 km by river from the Gulf of Mexico coast This was less than a decade after the United States had acquired the Louisiana Territory from France These rivers were not well settled mapped or protected By achieving this first breakthrough voyage and also proving the ability of the steamboat to travel upstream against powerful river currents Fulton changed the entire trade and transportation outlook for the American heartland Fulton was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1814 12 Personal life Edit Harriet Livingston portrait by Robert Fulton On January 8 1808 Fulton married Harriet Livingston 1783 1826 the daughter of Walter Livingston and niece of Robert R Livingston prominent men in the Hudson River area whose family dated to the colonial era 3 13 Harriet who was nineteen years his junior was well educated and was an accomplished amateur painter and musician 4 Together they had four children 14 Robert Barlow Fulton 1808 1841 who died unmarried 14 Julia Fulton 1810 1848 who married lawyer Charles Blight of Philadelphia 14 Cornelia Livingston Fulton 1812 1893 who married lawyer Edward Charles Crary 1806 1848 in 1831 13 Mary Livingston Fulton 1813 1861 who married Robert Morris Ludlow 1812 1894 parents of Robert Fulton Ludlow 3 Fulton died in 1815 in New York City from tuberculosis then known as consumption He had been walking home on the frozen Hudson River when one of his friends Thomas Addis Emmet fell through the ice In rescuing his friend Fulton got soaked with icy water He is believed to have contracted pneumonia When he got home his sickness worsened He was diagnosed with consumption and died at 49 years old After his death his widow remarried to Charles Augustus Dale on November 26 1816 He is buried in the Trinity Church Cemetery for Trinity Church Episcopal at Wall Street in New York City near other notable Americans such as former U S Secretaries of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton and Albert Gallatin His descendants include Cory Lidle a former Major League Baseball pitcher 15 Legacy EditPosthumous honors Edit The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania donated a marble statue of Fulton to the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol Fulton was also honored for his development of steamship technology in New York City s Hudson Fulton Celebration of the Centennial in 1909 A replica of his first steam powered steam vessel Clermont was built for the occasion Five ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Fulton in honor of Robert Fulton Fulton Hall at the United States Merchant Marine Academy houses the Department of Marine Engineering and included laboratories for diesel and steam engineering refrigeration marine engineering thermodynamics materials testing machine shop mechanical engineering welding electrical machinery control systems electric circuits engine room simulators and graphics Robert Fulton with Samuel F B Morse depicted on the reverse of the 1896 2 Silver Certificate from the United States Treasury Bronze statues of Fulton and Christopher Columbus represent commerce on the balustrade of the galleries of the Main Reading Room in the Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington D C They are two of 16 historical figures each pair representing one of the 8 pillars of civilization The Guatemalan government in 1910 erected a bust of Fulton in one of the parks of Guatemala City 16 In 2006 Fulton was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Alexandria Virginia 17 Places named for Fulton Edit Many places in the U S are named for Robert Fulton including Counties Edit Fulton County Georgia Fulton County Illinois Fulton County Indiana Fulton County Kentucky Fulton County New York Fulton County Ohio Fulton County Pennsylvania Cities and towns Edit Fulton New York disambiguation Fulton Arkansas Fulton Mississippi Fulton Illinois Fulton Missouri 18 Fulton Oswego County New York Fulton Schoharie County New York Fulton Township Lancaster County Pennsylvania Fultonham Ohio Fultonville New York Fulton Texas Other places Edit Fulton Avenue in Sacramento California Fulton Street in Berkeley California Fulton Chain Lakes New York Robert Fulton Elementary School Chicago Robert Fulton Elementary Cleveland Ohio closed Fulton Elementary School Dubuque Iowa Fulton Elementary School Fulton Township Lancaster County Pennsylvania 19 Fulton Hall State Quad University at Albany State University of New York at Albany Fulton Neighborhood in Minneapolis Minnesota Fulton Opera House Lancaster Pennsylvania Fulton Park New York City Fulton Steamboat Inn hotel in Lancaster County Pennsylvania Fulton Street in Brooklyn New York BMT Fulton Street Line subway line IND Fulton Street Line subway line Fulton Street IND Crosstown Line Fulton Street in Manhattan Fulton Center in Manhattan Fulton Fish Market Fulton Street New York City Subway subway station Fulton Houses in Manhattan Fulton Street in Alcoa Tennessee Fulton Street in Anaheim California Fulton Street in Grand Rapids Michigan Fulton Street in Hempstead New York Fulton Street in Massapequa Park New York Fulton Street in New Orleans Louisiana Fulton Street in San Francisco California Fulton Street in York Pennsylvania Fulton Street and Fulton Market in Chicago Robert Fulton Drive in Columbia Howard County Maryland Robert Fulton Drive in Reston Virginia Robert Fulton Fire Company Fulton Township Lancaster County Pennsylvania Robert Fulton Highway Lancaster County Pennsylvania Robert Fulton School Philadelphia Pennsylvania Fulton a neighborhood in Cincinnati OhioIn popular culture Edit 20th Century Fox s 1940 film Little Old New York based on a 1920 play by Rida Johnson Young is a fictionalized version of Fulton s life from his arrival in New York to the first sailing of Clermont British actor Richard Greene starred as Fulton with Brenda Joyce as Harriet Livingston Alice Faye and Fred MacMurray played wharf friends who help Fulton overcome problems to realize his dream A fictionalized account of Fulton s role was produced by BBC television during the 1960s In the first serial Triton 1961 20 re made in 1968 two British naval officers Captain Belwether and Lieutenant Lamb are involved in spying on Fulton while he is working for the French In the sequel Pegasus 1969 they are surprised to find themselves working with Fulton after he changed sides In the 1961 series Fulton was played by Reed De Rouen in the 1968 and 1969 series he was played by Robert Cawdron A Robert Fulton cartoon character appears in the 1955 Casper the Friendly Ghost short film Red White and Boo Author James McGee used Fulton s experiments in early submarine warfare against wooden warships as a major plot element in his 2006 novel Ratcatcher Invasion 2009 the tenth novel in the Kydd naval warfare series by Julian Stockwin uses Fulton and his submarine as an important plot element 21 Until 2016 Disney Springs at Walt Disney World had a restaurant named Fulton s Crab House with a building in the shape of a steamboat 22 23 Gallery Edit Fulton presents his steamship to Bonaparte in 1803 Submarine design in cross section by Robert Fulton 1806 Robert Fulton s tombstone at Trinity Church Episcopal in New York City Fulton sculpture by Caspar Buberl at the Brooklyn Museum 1872 Marble statue by Howard Roberts in Statuary Hall of the United States Capitol 1878 1883 Hudson Fulton Celebration commemorative stamp 1909 issue 200th Anniversary commemorative stamp 1965 issue based on the Houdon bustPublications EditTorpedo war and submarine explosions published 1810 A Treatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation Archived 2004 12 31 at the Wayback Machine 1796 From the University of Georgia Libraries in DjVu amp layered PDF Archived 2006 08 24 at the Wayback Machine formats A Treatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation 1796 From Rare Book Room See also EditExperiment horse powered boat References Edit American Treasures of the Library of Congress Fulton s Submarine Archived 2009 03 28 at the Wayback Machine a b Best Nicholas 2005 Trafalgar The Untold Story of the Greatest Sea Battle in History London Phoenix ISBN 0 7538 2095 1 a b c Reynolds Cuyler 1911 Hudson Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs A Record of Achievements of the People of the Hudson and Mohawk Valleys in New York State Included Within the Present Counties of Albany Rensselaer Washington Saratoga Montgomery Fulton Schenectady Columbia and Greene Lewis Historical Publishing Company pp 302 303 a b Philip Cynthia Owen 2003 Robert Fulton A Biography iUniverse p 3 ISBN 9780595262038 Retrieved 8 November 2019 a b Buckman David Lear 1907 Old Steamboat Days on The Hudson River The Grafton Press Archived from the original on August 26 2010 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved June 11 2022 Boyes Graham The Peak Forest Canal ISBN 9780901461599 Sutcliffe 1909 p 63 Burgess Robert Forrest 1975 Ships Beneath the Sea McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 008958 7 Alice Crary Sutcliffe Robert Fulton and the Claremont Baldwin James Sailing the Seas American Book Company New York Copyright 1920 pages 73 74 MemberListF American Antiquarian Society a b Historical Papers and Addresses of the Lancaster County Historical Society 1909 pp 227 228 a b c Historical Papers and Addresses of the Lancaster County Historical Society January 8 1909 Vol XIII No 1 Lancaster County Historical Society 1909 p 227 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Lidle dies after plane crashes into NYC high rise ESPN com 11 October 2006 Fleet of Fifty Warships Built in the Brooklyn Navy Yard The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Brooklyn New York 12 May 1910 p 22 Retrieved 16 August 2018 National Inventors Hall of Fame Archived from the original on April 8 2013 Eaton David Wolfe 1916 How Missouri Counties Towns and Streams Were Named The State Historical Society of Missouri p 267 The School District of Lancaster Triton Part 2 BBC Genome Retrieved 8 December 2018 Stockwin Julian 2009 Invasion ISBN 9780340961155 Arnold Kyle Fulton s Crab House at Disney Springs changing to Paddlefish OrlandoSentinel com Retrieved 2018 01 31 Delgado Lauren First Look Paddlefish in Disney Springs OrlandoSentinel com Retrieved 2018 01 31 Sources EditThis article contains content first published in 1909 as Old Steamboat Days on The Hudson River Sutcliffe Alice Crary 1909 Robert Fulton and the Clermont New York The Century Co External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Fulton Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Fulton Robert Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Fulton Robert Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Robert Fulton Birthplace Photos of Fulton s Birthplace Phair Montgomery Robert Fulton and the Secret War of 1812 Casebook The War of 1812 Archived from the original on October 2 2006 CHAPTER XIII ROBERT FULTON in Great Fortunes and How They Were Made 1871 by James D McCabe Jr Illustrated by G F and E B Bensell a Project Gutenberg eBook Harvey W S Downs Rose G 1980 William Symington Archived from the original on February 16 2002 Buckman David Lear 1907 Old Steamboat Days on The Hudson River The Grafton Press Archived from the original on August 26 2010 Examples of art by Robert Fulton at the Art Renewal Center Thurston Robert H Chapter V The Modern Steam Engine A history of the growth of the steam engine Archived from the original on 2012 02 21 Archived from the original Iles George 1912 Leading American Inventors New York Henry Holt and Company pp 40 75 Booknotes interview with Kirkpatrick Sale on The Fire of His Genius Robert Fulton and the American Dream November 25 2001 Collection of Robert Fulton manuscripts digital facsimile from the Linda Hall Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Fulton amp oldid 1143626935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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