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Plate taken from 'History and Progress of the Steam Engine', by Elijah Galloway (1831). The 'Cycloped', owned by Thomas Brandreth, took part in the Rainhill Trials of 1829 which were a competition set up to find the most suitable locomotive for haulage on the Liverpool & Manchester Railway. Powered by a horse walking on a drive belt, it was withdrawn from the competition after the horse fell through the belt after only reaching a speed of five miles per hour. The competition was won by the 'Rocket', designed by Robert Stephenson (1803-1859) and George Stephenson (1781-1848).
Picture Reference: 10319098
Subject:
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Rainhill Trials 1829
Credit: Science Museum Library
Keywords:
1780-1818, 1800s, 1829, 19th Century, Brandreth, Thomas, Brandreth, Competition, Cycloped, Death, England, Europe, Galloway, Elijah, Gravestone, Graveyard, Horse, Horse Powered, Industrial Revolution, Liverpool, Liverpool & Manchester Railway, Locomotive, Locos, Manchester, Merseyside, Powered, Rail Transport, Rail Travel, Railway, Rainhill, Rainhill Trials 1829, Railway Transport, Thomas, Train, Transportation, Transport, Trial, Uk, Unattributed, United Kingdom
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