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Aeolus Railroad Car

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

One of the early experiments in railroad cars, the yachtlike Aeolus, named in honor of Aeolus from mythology, was designed to sail before the wind. Evan Thomas designed the vehicle, which was tried on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in 1830.[1] On one occasion the Aeolus failed to stop when it reached the end of the finished track, and ran into an embankment.[2] Nevertheless, the invention worked on windy days, and impressed the Russian Ambassador, Pavel Kridener. The Aeolus was never put into regular service.[3]

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References

  1. ^ Adams, Herbert B. (1877). Maryland's Influence in Founding a National Commonwealth. Baltimore: Maryland Historical Society. p. 111. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Kumpa, Peter (4 February 1991). "The horse-drawn railroad: lumbering toward new technology". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
  3. ^ Drinker, Henry S. (January–June 1878). "A History of Tunneling During the Thirty-Four Centuries Succeeding the Reign of Rameses V". The Engineering and Mining Journal. XXV: 149.
  • Pangborn, J.G. (1974) [1894]. The Worlds's Railway (reprint ed.). Bramwell House. pp. 60–61. ASIN B001AOPM4Y.
This page was last edited on 23 May 2023, at 18:43
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