登陆注册
19874000000010

第10章

FRANCIS PETTIT SMITH: PRACTICAL INTRODUCER OF THE SCREWPROPELLER.

"The spirit of Paley's maxim that 'he alone discovers who proves,' is applicable to the history of inventions and discoveries; for certainly he alone invents to any good purpose, who satisfies the world that the means he may have devised have been found competent to the end proposed."--Dr. Samuel Brown.

"Too often the real worker and discoverer remains unknown, and an invention, beautiful but useless in one age or country, can be applied only in a remote generation, or in a distant land.

Mankind hangs together from generation to generation; easy labour is but inherited skill; great discoveries and inventions are worked up to by the efforts of myriads ere the goal is reached."--H. M. Hyndman.

Though a long period elapsed between the times of Phineas Pett and "Screw" Smith, comparatively little improvement had been effected in the art of shipbuilding. The Sovereign of the Seas had not been excelled by any ship of war built down to the end of last century.At a comparatively recent date, ships continued to be built of timber and plank, and impelled by sails and oars, as they had been for thousands of years before.

But this century has witnessed many marvellous changes. A new material of construction has been introduced into shipbuilding, with entirely new methods of propulsion. Old things have been displaced by new; and the magnitude of the results has been extraordinary. The most important changes have been in the use of iron and steel instead of wood, and in the employment of the steam-engine in impelling ships by the paddle or the screw.

So long as timber was used for the construction of ships, the number of vessels built annually, especially in so small an island as Britain, must necessarily have continued very limited.

Indeed, so little had the cultivation of oak in Great Britain been attended to, that all the royal forests could not have supplied sufficient timber to build one line-of-battle ship annually; while for the mercantile marine, the world had to be ransacked for wood, often of a very inferior quality.

Take, for instance, the seventy-eight gun ship, the Hindostan, launched a few years ago. It would have required 4200 loads of timber to build a ship of that description, and the growth of the timber would have occupied seventy acres of ground during eighty years.It would have needed something like 800,000 acres of land on which to grow the timber for the ships annually built in this country for commercial purposes. And timber ships are by no means lasting. The average durability of ships of war employed in active service, has been calculated to be about thirteen years, even when built of British oak.

Indeed, years ago, the building of shipping in this country was much hindered by the want of materials.

The trade was being rapidly transferred to Canada and the United States. Some years since, an American captain said to an Englishman, Captain Hall, when in China, "You will soon have to come to our country for your ships: your little island cannot grow wood enough for a large marine." "Oh!" said the Englishman, "we can build ships of iron!" "Iron?" replied the American in surprise, "why, iron sinks; only wood can float!" "Well! you will find I am right." The prophecy was correct. The Englishman in question has now a fleet of splendid iron steamers at sea.

The use of iron in shipbuilding had small beginnings, like everything else. The established prejudice--that iron must necessarily sink in water--long continued to prevail against its employment. The first iron vessel was built and launched about a hundred years since by John Wilkinson, of Bradley Forge, in Staffordshire. In a letter of his, dated the 14th July, 1787, the original of which we have seen, he writes: "Yesterday week my iron boat was launched. It answers all my expectations, and has convinced the unbelievers, who were 999 in 1000. It will be only a nine days' wonder, and afterwards a Columbus's egg." It was, however, more than a nine days' wonder; for wood long continued to be thought the only material capable of floating.

Although Wilkinson's iron vessels continued to ply upon the Severn, more than twenty years elapsed before another shipbuilder ventured to follow his example. But in 1810, Onions and Son, of Brosely, built several iron vessels, also for use upon the Severn. Then, in 1815, Mr. Jervons, of Liverpool, built a small iron boat for use on the Mersey. Six years later, in 1821, Mr.

Aaron Manby designed an iron steam vessel, which was built at the Horsley Company's Works, in Staffordshire. She sailed from London to Havre a few years later, under the command of Captain (afterwards Sir Charles) Napier, RN. She was freighted with a cargo of linseed and iron castings, and went up the Seine to Paris. It was some time, however, before iron came into general use. Ten years later, in 1832, Maudslay and Field built four iron vessels for the East India Company. In the course of about twenty years, the use of iron became general, not only for ships of war, but for merchant ships plying to all parts of the world.

When ships began to be built of iron, it was found that they could be increased without limit, so long as coal, iron, machinery, and strong men full of skill and industry, were procurable. The trade in shipbuilding returned to Britain, where iron ships are now made and exported in large numbers; the mercantile marine of this country exceeding in amount and tonnage that of all the other countries of the world put together. The "wooden walls"of England exist no more, for iron has superseded wood. Instead of constructing vessels from the forest, we are now digging new navies out of the bowels of the earth, and our "walls," instead of wood, are now of iron and steel.

同类推荐
  • 周易举正

    周易举正

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 杨时诗话

    杨时诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Crotchet Castle

    Crotchet Castle

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大乘要语

    大乘要语

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Augustus Does His Bit

    Augustus Does His Bit

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 初音未来与杂音未来

    初音未来与杂音未来

    杂音未来:一个处事果断,尤其讨厌人类,表演时个性鲜明,因为有着痛苦经历,较初音成熟很多,也比初音有更多演唱技能,擅长节奏比初音快很多,且变化幅度大,但声音较初音却比较沙哑。其实内心不坏,看起来冷漠无情,其实有着呆呆的软绵绵的性格,有点腹黑,属于外冷内热那种妹子,有一颗少女心。初音未来:杂音未来的原版......
  • 《废材小姐逆天王妃》

    《废材小姐逆天王妃》

    靠,不会这么倒霉吧。竟然被朋友出卖了,靠还穿越了还穿越到一个废柴小姐身上。好,我就闯出我的一片天地
  • 女扮男装之那个神盗又傲娇了

    女扮男装之那个神盗又傲娇了

    什么?不就是真心话大冒险玩输了吗?你居然让我堂堂国际大盗去偷一串不值钱的项链?好吧!我忍,我认栽!可为什么不告诉我那项链的具体位置?什么?你说它就在洛樱学院,让我自己去找!这算什么回答?你知道具体是什么意思吗?混蛋!一朝不慎,她国际大盗血泪居然沦为洛樱学院的学员!嘤嘤!此仇不报非神盗!等项链到手,本盗一定偷得你一毛不剩!可是当她入了洛樱学院,才知道事情不是这么简单!诶!小子!你脖子上是什么?给我看看!某盗两眼发光,扒拉着某男的上半身。什么?非礼!!?你知道你在说什么吗?就你那身板?你行吗?某盗一脸怀疑。验吗?某男咬牙切齿扑向某盗。
  • 王妃是只喵

    王妃是只喵

    闲赋在家的将军,突然带回了一个呆萌呆萌的小姑娘。府中上下以为自家将军是好心救回了一个身世孤苦的丫头,没想到他竟是将这姑娘当媳妇地养着,一边逗弄一边爱护。可是为什么她进府之后会有那么多莫名其妙之事的发生?苏越查了半天,才发现,原来自己养的不是傲娇呆萌小姑娘,而是一只有女王气质并且知恩图报的喵咪……这个世界还真是奇妙啊!
  • 不一样的天空

    不一样的天空

    《不一样的天空》共4辑文字,篇篇皆有很强的可读性。这些文字以意象纷繁的深度联想打破了游记散文的惯有格局,虽然作者并未避开那些身边的小情、小景、小事物,但不把眼光囿于狭小的个人天地,文字本身体现为一种精神延伸。作者随时感受着现实与自然的剑拔弩张,深情款款地表达对生命的敬畏和对世道人心的观察。作者用心接近事物背后那些神奇而广阔的世界,在这个世界中,读者借助那些清丽的记录,完全可以感悟文字背后的精神重量。所有的一切共同指向一种我们久违的安如磐石的生活:平易、平等、本分、自重。
  • 韩娱之悠然一生

    韩娱之悠然一生

    一个为了活着而活着的人,重生到平行的地球。睁开双眼看着这熟悉而陌生的世界。决定这一世,我要采菊东篱下,悠然见南山。活出自己的精彩
  • 做自己的女王

    做自己的女王

    这是一本揭秘奥普拉成功秘籍,解读奥普拉超强气场的神奇读本。从叛逆少女到心灵女王,奥普拉实现了丑小鸭到白天鹅的巅峰飞跃。作为当今世界上最具影响力的妇女之一,她在书中与我们分享了其成功的40个气场修炼术,“你能经历的最大冒险,就是过你梦想的生活。”成为气质女人,要从自我修炼开始……
  • 致你,524先生

    致你,524先生

    因为我喜欢你,所以我会对你喜欢的人很好很好很好。因为我喜欢你,所以我会一直一直一直不放弃。因为我喜欢你,所以我会很坚强。因为我喜欢你,所以我会慢慢改变自己,不要变成一个惹你讨厌的爱哭鬼。因为我喜欢你,所以我总是想方设法的试着去靠近你一点点。因为我喜欢你,所以为你做再多的事也不喊累。因为我喜欢你,所以我不会有任何骗你的事。因为我喜欢你,所以我总是小心翼翼的和你说话。因为我喜欢你,所以我总是对你绽放最真挚的笑。因为我喜欢你,所以只对你一个人坚持说晚安。因为我喜欢你,所以和你有关的所有都是我开心的缘由。因为我喜欢你,所以我不管有多难过在看到你时还是会觉得很安心。因为我喜欢你,所以我喜欢你。
  • 佑本纪

    佑本纪

    如果有人抢了你一大笔钱,你会不会找法官去惩治他呢?一定会的,大自然也一定会的。想要永生,注定付出不可想象的代价。佑在此为自己作传记,记录一个魔法师的永生路。
  • tfboys之爱你的承诺

    tfboys之爱你的承诺

    “嘿!原来你在这啊,”身穿白色衬衫的男孩站在树下,一缕温和的阳光照在他身上显得格外温暖。“对呀,好巧哦,你也在这”女孩看着他微笑的回答。