00:00:03
Today, it is hard to imagine our
lives without trains and railways.
00:00:08
The invention of the steam locomotive has been a
major turning point in the history of humanity.
00:00:14
The first railway lines appeared in England
at the beginning of the nineteenth century,
00:00:20
during the industrial revolution. In
that moment, there was a huge need for
00:00:25
transportation of goods and materials from one
city to another. As a result, from that point on,
00:00:32
many people were hired to build new railways
tracks and operate them all over the world.
00:00:39
Over time, travel conditions began to
improve, and trains became faster and safer.
00:00:51
The first rudimentary form of railway was the
Diolkos, a paved trackway built by ancient Greeks
00:00:58
where today is the Corinth Canal. This about 7
km long trackway was operated from around 600 BC
00:01:07
until the middle of the 1st century AD.
Wheeled vehicles pulled by men and animals
00:01:14
ran in grooves in limestone,
which provided the track element,
00:01:18
preventing the wagons from leaving the
intended route.
00:01:22
The Diolkos saved ships sailing from the Ionian Sea to the Aegean Sea
a dangerous sea journey round the Peloponnese.
00:01:34
The oldest operational railway is the Reisszug,
a funicular railway at the Hohensalzburg Fortress
00:01:40
in Austria, documented for the first time in
1515. The line originally used wooden rails
00:01:48
and a hemp haulage rope and was operated by
human or animal power, through a treadwheel.
00:01:57
Around the year 1550 began the use of wagonways
with wooden rails and horse-drawn traffic to
00:02:04
facilitate transportation of ore tubs to and
from mines. Minecarts became popular in Europe,
00:02:11
and miners called the wagons Hunde ("dogs")
from the noise they made on the tracks.
00:02:20
In 1726 was built the Causey Arch, the world's
first large masonry railway bridge in the world,
00:02:27
for the Tanfield Wagonway, in northern England.
00:02:31
It is also the oldest surviving
single-arch railway bridge in the world.
00:02:39
In the late 1760s plates of cast iron began to
be fixed to the upper surface of wooden rails,
00:02:46
which increased their durability
and load-bearing ability,
00:02:50
marking the beginning of the era of metal rails.
00:02:57
In 1793 was built in England the Fritchley Tunnel,
considered the first railway tunnel in the world.
00:03:05
It remained in use until 1933 when the
railway closed, and was sealed up in 1977.
00:03:15
In 1784 William Murdoch, an employee of
the famous Scottish inventor James Watt,
00:03:22
built a steam carriage.
The first full-scale
00:03:26
working railway steam locomotive was built in
the United Kingdom in 1804 by Richard Trevithick,
00:03:34
a neighbor of William Murdoch.
On the 21st of February 1804,
00:03:40
the world's first steam-powered railway journey
took place when Trevithick's steam locomotive
00:03:46
hauled a train along a tramway in South Wales.
Trevithick's locomotive never got beyond the
00:03:53
experimental stage , because it was too heavy
for the cast iron track in use at that time.
00:04:03
The first commercially successful steam locomotive
was Matthew Murray's rack locomotive Salamanca
00:04:10
built in 1812. This was followed in
1813 by the locomotive Puffing Billy,
00:04:17
the first successful locomotive
running by adhesion only,
00:04:21
and the oldest locomotive still in existence,
now on display in the Science Museum in London.
00:04:31
In the following years, the design of
the locomotives continue to improve,
00:04:35
although it was used both horse power
and steam power on different runs.
00:04:41
In 1829, George Stephenson built the locomotive
Rocket, which won the Rainhill Trials,
00:04:49
also setting a speed record of 47 km/h. In 1830
was opened the Liverpool and Manchester Railway,
00:04:58
the first public railway which used only steam
locomotives all the time, without animal power.
00:05:06
It marked the beginning of the
first steam passenger service.
00:05:10
The line had the first timetables
for passengers and proper stations,
00:05:15
with ticketing offices and platforms, and went
on to prove the viability of rail transport.
00:05:24
In 1837 Robert Davidson built the
first known electric locomotive,
00:05:30
powered by batteries. However, the limited
power from batteries prevented its general use,
00:05:38
and it was destroyed by railway workers, who
saw it as a threat to their job security.
00:05:47
The world' first urban underground railway
was the Metropolitan Railway in London,
00:05:52
which began operations on the 10th of January
1863. It was worked by steam trains and despite
00:06:01
the creation of numerous vents, was unhealthy and
uncomfortable for passengers and operating staff.
00:06:10
In the late 1860s began to appear the first
steel rails, replacing the iron rails. Steel
00:06:18
rails were lasting several times longer than the
iron ones, and made heavier locomotives possible.
00:06:27
Before dining cars in passenger trains were
common, a rail passenger's option for meal service
00:06:34
in transit was to eat at one of the roadhouses
often located near the railroad's "water stops".
00:06:42
The first dinning car was
introduced in England in 1879,
00:06:46
and by the mid-1880s, dedicated dining cars
were a normal part of long-distance trains.
00:06:56
Werner von Siemens constructed in
1881 in Lichterfelde near Berlin,
00:07:01
the first electric tram line,
supplied by running rails.
00:07:06
In 1891 the track was equipped with an overhead
wire and the line was extended.
00:07:14
In 1891, the first practical
AC electric locomotive
00:07:18
was designed by Charles Brown, using three-phase
AC for long-distance power transmission.
00:07:27
In 1912 was operated the first Diesel
locomotive in Switzerland,
00:07:33
and during the 1920s they were improved,
00:07:36
beginning to be used more and more often in several countries.
00:07:42
In 1938 was set the world speed record for a
steam locomotive by the Mallard,
00:07:48
which reached a speed of 203 km/h.
00:07:53
However, in the first 20 years after the war, the steam locomotives
00:07:58
were replaced on the main routes in Europe and
North America by diesel and electric engines.
00:08:06
The first electrified high-speed rail, Shinkansen,
00:08:10
was introduced in 1964 between Tokyo and Osaka
in Japan. Since then high-speed rail transport,
00:08:19
functioning at speeds up and above 300 km/h,
has been built in more developed countries.
00:08:29
In 1984 was opened the first commercial
maglev system between the Birmingham
00:08:34
International Airport and the nearby
Birmingham International railway station,
00:08:40
but was closed after only 11 years because
of the problems with the electronic systems.
00:08:48
In 2007 was set the speed world record for a
conventional wheeled passenger train, by the
00:08:55
France's TGV, of 575 km/h. A new record was set
in 2015, when Japan's experimental maglev train
00:09:06
L0 Series achieved a top speed of 603
km/h on a magnetic levitation track.
00:09:17
In September 2018, the world's first
commercial hydrogen-powered passenger train
00:09:23
entered service in Lower Saxony, Germany.
00:09:27
The trains developed by Alstom are using a
hydrogen fuel cell which emits no carbon dioxide.