ABSTRACT

First published in 1938, this volume details the steam engine as the most dynamic factor in the Industrial Revolution, freeing humanity from their age-long dependence upon the power of water, wind, and animals, or of their own muscles. Itself the offspring of coal and iron, it made possible the sinking of deeper mines and the casting and forging of greater quantities of iron, from which machines were constructed to be powered by steam in the factories of the rapidly growing industrial areas. Soon the mass-produced goods from these mills were transported by steam locomotives and steamships all over the world. This was the Age of Steam. Even today, steam turbines still drive the dynamos of our electric power stations, whether fuelled by coal, oil or nuclear energy.

Much has been written about the steam engine, but this book, first produced by the late Dr. H.W. Dickinson just before the second World War, is still the best short account. It describes developments from the pioneering efforts of Savery and Newcomen, through the achievements of Watt and Trevethick, down to Parsons and modern times.

part I

The Reciprocating Engine

chapter Chapter I|17 pages

Introductory

chapter Chapter II|11 pages

Savery and his Fire Engine

chapter Chapter III|25 pages

Newcomen and his Vacuum Engine

chapter Chapter V|24 pages

Watt and his Separate Condenser Engine

chapter Chapter VI|27 pages

Low-Pressure and High-Pressure Engines, 1801–50

chapter Chapter VII|18 pages

Land Boilers up to 1850

chapter Chapter VIII|24 pages

From Heyday to Recession, 1851 to the Present Day

chapter Chapter IX|14 pages

Land Boilers, 1851 to 1900

chapter Chapter X|10 pages

Philosophy of the Steam Engine

part II|63 pages

The Steam Turbine

chapter Chapter XI|22 pages

Kinetic Energy of Steam and Pioneers of its Use

chapter Chapter XII|18 pages

Other Turbine Pioneers

chapter Chapter XIII|11 pages

General Development from 1900 to the Present Time

chapter Chapter XIV|10 pages

Development in Boilers, 1901 to the Present Time

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion