The first ride of a carload of dignitaries behind the Cooper steam engine was on August 28, 1830 from Baltimore to Ellicott mills on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The open car, fashioned after a canal boat, was a "perfect jam" and whisked along the curves at 15 miles an hour - 18 when full speed!
Monday, July 24, 2017
Monday, July 17, 2017
Colonel Gassaway Watkins and "Walnut Grove" family cemetery
Gassaway Watkins (1752-1840) fought in the Revolutionary War, and later as a Colonel in the War of 1812. He lived at "Richland" until his father-in-law Capt John Dorsey died and with wife Ruth (Dorsey) Watkins moved to the nearby Dorsey lands and built their home "Walnut Grove". He and his third wife are buried on a hill by their home (right side of photo), which was cleared, sodded and the site of July 15 Boy Scout Eagle Project commemoration. Links with more info at end of post.
Monday, July 10, 2017
Winans friction wheel for the new railroads
Ross Winans (1796-1877) was born
in NJ and moved to Md in the late 1820s as the B&O railroad was starting. He invented the friction wheel with ‘outside bearing’ in 1828, sold his
locomotives also to the Russian Czar during his highly successful business
1843-1863, was arrested as a southern sympathizer, designed cigar boats 1859 (submarines)
with son Thomas and although invented by Charles S. Dickinson in 1860 in
Boston, the 'Winans Steam Gun' was worked on in his shop.
Monday, July 3, 2017
The Baltimore or Winans Steam Gun - Civil War
At the start of the Civil War, a bullet proof "steam gun" was patented by Charles Dickinson and worked on in Ross Winans foundry in Baltimore. Dickinson was on his way to sell it to the Confederacy, when it was captured in Ellicott City by Col. Jones and the 6th Mass. It was kept at Relay to guard the Thomas Viaduct. The muzzle of the gun/cannon protruded from the slit of the cone (see below) and it was dragged by a team of horses. A large replica can be seen at Elkridge.