|
1692 |
Languedoc Canal connects the Mediterranean with the Bay of Biscay. 240
miles long, with 100 locks, 3 major aqueducts, 1 tunnel, and a summit
reservoir. The largest canal project
between Roman times and the nineteenth century. |
|
1708 |
Jethro Tull's mechanical (seed) sower permits large-scale planting in
rows, for easier cultivation between the rows. |
|
1709 |
Abraham Darby uses coke to smelt iron ore, replacing wood and charcoal
as fuel. |
|
1712 |
Thomas Newcomen builds first commercially successful steam engine.
Able to keep deep coal mines clear of water. First significant powers source
other than wind and water. |
|
1733 |
John Kay's flying shuttle. |
|
1758 |
First threshing machine. |
|
1761 |
James Brindley's Bridgewater Canal opens. Barges carry coal from
Worsley to Manchester. |
|
1765 |
James Hargreaves invents the spinning jenny, automating weaving the
warp (in the weaving of cloth). |
|
1769 |
Arkwright's "water" (powered) frame automates the weft. |
|
1772 |
Bridgewater Canal extended to the Mersey, thus connecting with
Liverpool. Its success kicks off extensive canal construction ("canal
mania"). |
|
1775 |
Watt's first efficient steam engine, much more efficient than the
Newcomen. |
|
1777 |
Grand Trunk Canal establishes a cross-England route connecting the
Mersey to the Trent and connecting the industrial Midlands to the ports of
Bristol, Liverpool, and Hull. |
|
1779 |
First steam powered mills. Crompton's "mule" combines
Hargreaves' and Arkwright's machines, fully automating the weaving process. |
|
1786 |
Arkwright puts a Watt engine in the Albion cotton mill, Blackfriars
Bridge, London. |
|
1787 |
Cartwright builds a power loom. |
|
1789 |
Thames-Severn Canal links the Thames to the Bristol Channel. |
|
1792 |
William Murdock (James Watt's assistant) lights his home with coal gas. |
|
1793 |
Eli Whitney develops his cotton gin (a device to clean raw cotton). |
|
1803 |
Thomas Telford builds his two great iron aqueducts, over the Dee and
the Cierog valleys. |
|
1801 |
Robert Trevithick demonstrates a steam locomotive. |
|
1803-22 |
Caledonian Ship Canal cuts clear across Scotland via the Great Glen. |
|
1807 |
Robert Fulton's Clermont first successful steamboat. |
|
1811-15 |
Luddite riots: labourers attack factories and break up the machines
they fear will replace them. |
|
1821 |
Faraday demonstrates electro-magnetic rotation, the principle of the
electric motor. |
|
1825 |
Marc Brunel invents a tunnelling shield, making sub aqueous tunnelling
possible. |
|
1826-42 |
Brunel builds the first sub aqueous tunnel, under the Thames. |
|
1827 |
Berkeley Ship Canal connects Sharpness (on the Severn) to Gloucester. |
|
1830 |
Manchester–Liverpool railway begins first regular commercial rail
service. |
|
1831 |
Faraday discovers electro-magnetic current, making possible generators
and electric engines. |
|
1834 |
Charles Babbage develops his analytic engine--the forerunner of the
computer. |
|
1837 |
Morse develops the telegraph and Morse Code. |
|
1838 |
Daguerre perfects the Daguerrotype. |
|
1839 |
Fox Talbot introduces photographic paper. |
|
1843 |
Great Britain--first large, iron, screw-propelled steamship. |
|
1844 |
Commercial use of Morse's telegraph (Baltimore to Washington). |
|
1846 |
Pneumatic tire patented |
|
1849 |
Monier develops reinforced concrete. |
|
1850 |
Petrol (gasoline) refining first used. |
|
1851 |
Singer invents first practical sewing machine. |
|
1854 |
Bessemer invents steel converter. |
|
1855 |
Regius Chair of Technology founded at Edinburgh. |
|
1856 |
W.H. Perkin produces aniline dyes, permitting brightly coloured
cottons. |
|
1857 |
Pasteur experiments with fermentation. |
|
1858 |
First Trans-Atlantic Cable completed |
|
1859 |
Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species Edwin Drake strikes oil in
Pennsylvania. Etienne Lenoir demonstrates the first successful gasoline
engine. |
|
1860 |
Science degrees at University of London. |
|
1863 |
Siemens-Martin open-hearth process (along with the Bessemer converter)
makes steel available in bulk. Steel begins to replace iron in building:
steel framing and reinforced concrete make possible "curtain-wall"
architecture--i.e. the skyscraper. |
|
1867 |
Alfred Nobel produces dynamite, the first high explosive that can be
safely handled. |
|
1873 |
Christopher Sholes invents the Remington typewriter. James Clerk
Maxwell states the laws of electro-magnetic radiation |
|
1876 |
Bell invents the telephone |
|
1877 |
Edison invents the phonograph. |
|
1878 |
Microphone invented. |
|
1879 |
Edison invents the incandescent lamp. |
|
1883 |
First skyscraper (ten stories) in Chicago. The Brooklyn Bridge opens.
This large suspension bridge, built by the Roeblings (father and son), is a
triumph of engineering. |
|
1884 |
Maxim invents the machine gun, making possible mass slaughter and
beginning the mechanization of warfare. |
|
1885 |
Benz develops first automobile to run on internal- combustion engine. |
|
1888 |
Hertz produces radio waves. |
|
1889 |
Eiffel Tower. |
|
1892 |
Rudolf Diesel invents his namesake. |
|
1895 |
Lumière brothers develop Cinematograph Roentgen discovers X-rays. |
|
1896 |
Marconi patents wireless telegraph. |
|
1897 |
Joseph Thomson discovers particles smaller than atoms. |
|
1899 |
Aspirin invented. |
|
1900 |
First Zeppelin built. |
|
1901 |
Marconi transmits first trans-Atlantic radio message (from Cape Cod). |
|
1903 |
Wright brothers make first powered flight. |
|
1908 |
Henry Ford mass-produces the Model T. |
Back to Top
Life During Industrial
Revolution -- Transport