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Fulton, Robert

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Fulton, Robert, 1765–1815, American inventor, engineer, and painter, b. near Lancaster, Pa. He was a man remarkable for his many talents and his mechanical genius. An expert gunsmith at the time of the American Revolution, he later turned to painting (1782–86) landscapes and portraits in Philadelphia. In England and France his painting gained some notice, but he became interested in canal engineering and the invention of machinery. He worked at making underwater torpedoes and submarines as well as other mechanical devices. In 1802 he contracted to build a steamboat for Robert R. Livingston, who held a monopoly on steamboat navigation on the Hudson. In 1807 the Clermont, equipped with an English engine, was launched. A number of men had built steamboats before Fulton (see steamship steamship, watercraft propelled by a steam engine or a steam turbine.

Early Steam-powered Ships



Marquis Claude de Jouffroy d'Abbans is generally credited with the first experimentally successful application of steam power to navigation; in 1783 his
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), including John Fitch and William Symington. Fulton's steamship, however, was the first to be commercially successful in American waters, and Fulton was therefore popularly considered the inventor of the steamboat. He also designed other vessels, among them a steam warship.

Bibliography

See biographies by B. Richnak (1984) and C. O. Philip (1985).


Fulton, Robert

(born Nov. 14, 1765, Lancaster county, Pa., U.S.—died Feb. 24, 1815, New York, N.Y.) U.S. inventor and engineer. Born to Irish immigrant parents, he studied painting with Benjamin West in London but soon turned to engineering. After designing a system of inland waterways, he tried unsuccessfully to interest the French and British governments in his prototypes of submarines (see Nautilus) and torpedoes. In 1801 he was commissioned by Robert R. Livingston to build a steamboat, and in 1807 Fulton's Clermont made the 150-mi (240-km) journey up the Hudson River from New York City to Albany in 32 hours, cutting 64 hours off the usual sailing time. It became the first commercially successful steamboat in the U.S. He later designed several other steamboats, including the world's first steam warship (1812). He was a member of the commission that recommended building the Erie Canal.


Fulton, Robert (1765–1815) engineer, inventor, artist; born in Lancaster County, Pa. He worked as a jeweler's apprentice, gunsmith, and a painter in Philadelphia before he went to England in 1786 to study under the artist Benjamin West. He remained abroad for the next 20 years, abandoning painting for his interest in mechanical and engineering inventions. Fascinated by water transport systems, he published A Treatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation (1796). During a long stay in France (1797–1806), he got some encouragement from Napoleon and developed the Nautilus diving boat (1800). Failing to receive research funds from either the French or British governments, he returned to the United States, and with the support of Robert R. Livingston, completed the steamboat Clermont, which made its first trial run on the Hudson River in August 1807; although not really the inventor of the steamboat, his was the first to be commercially successful in America. He later developed the New Orleans, the first steamboat on the Mississippi River, and constructed a steam-powered warship to defend New York harbor during the War of 1812.


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