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ROBERT See also: American engineer, was See also: born in 1765 in Little Britain (now See also: Fulton, See also: Lancaster county), Pa
.
His parents were Irish, and so poor that they could afford him only a very scanty See also: education
.
At an early age he was bound apprentice to a jeweller in See also: Philadelphia, but subsequently adopted portrait and landscape See also: painting as his profession
.
In his twenty-second See also: year, with the See also: object of studying with his countryman, Benjamin West, he went to See also: England, and there became acquainted with the duke of Bridgewater, See also: Earl Stanhope and See also: James
See also: Watt
.
Partly by their influence he was led to devote his See also: attention to See also: engineering, especially in connexion with canal construction; he obtained an See also: English patent in 1794 for superseding canal locks by inclined planes, and in 1796 he published a See also: Treatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation
.
He then took up his residence in See also: Paris, where he projected the first panorama ever exhibited in that city, and constructed a submarine boat, the " See also: Nautilus," which was tried in See also: Brest harbour in 1801 before a commission appointed by See also: Napoleon I., and by the aid of which he was enabled to See also: blow up a small vessel with a See also: torpedo
.
It was at, Paris also in 1803 that he first succeeded in propelling a boat by steam-power, thus realizing a design which he had conceived ten years previously
.
Returning to See also: America he continued his experiments with submarine See also: explosives, but failed to convince either the English, French or See also: United States governments of the adequacy of his methods
.
With steam navigation he had more success
.
In association with Robert R
.
Livingston (q.v.), who in 1798 had been granted the exclusive right to navigate the See also: waters of New See also: York See also: state with steam-vessels, he constructed the " Clermont," which, engined by See also: Boulton & Watt of See also: Birmingham, began to ply on the Hudson between New York and Albany in 1807
.
The See also: privilege obtained by Livingston in 1798 was granted jointly to Fulton and Livingston in 1803, and by an See also: act passed in 1808 the See also: monopoly was secured to them and their associates for a See also: period depending on the number of steamers constructed, but limited to a maximum of See also: thirty years
.
In 1814—1815, on behalf of the United States See also: government, he constructed the " Fulton," a vessel of 38 tons with central See also: paddle-wheels, which was the first steam warship
.
He died at New York on the 24th of See also: February 1815
.
Among Fulton's inventions were See also: machines for spinning See also: flax, for making See also: ropes, and for sawing and polishing marble
.
See C
.
D
.
See also: Colden, See also: Life of Robert Fulton (New York, 1817) ; Robert H
.
Thurston, See also: History of the Growth of the Steam-See also: Engine (New York, 1878) ; See also: George H
.
Preble, See also: Chronological History of Steam
.
Navigation (Philadelphia, 1883) ; and Mrs A
.
C
.
Sutcliffe, Robert Fulton and the Clermont (New York, 1909)
.
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