SH Archive 19th century Canal Trolley Boats

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KorbenDallas
SH.org OP Date
2020-02-18 22:16:35
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Not actually KorbenDallas
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This is an FYI type thread, the contents of which I do find interesting nevertheless. May be at some point we will understand the 19th century infrastructure capabilities. As it stands we are left to marvel various technological innovations those people were able to come up with in between fighting wars, with limited population numbers and with inferior education and education system. Well, at least this is the general concept we get through our education. Here is one additional mode of transportation available back in the day.
  • Of course prior to having these trolley boats, they had to create them canals first.
canal-trolley-boats-4.jpg

As far as I understand one of the very first canals to have trolley boat travel tested on was the Erie Canal.
  • Frank W. Hawley converted a conventional steam-driven canal boat into a trolley boat and demonstrated its benefits and limitations 1893 on the Erie Canal. It had two electric motors with 19 kW (25 hp) each, which drove the propellers.
  • Trolley boat - Wikipedia
erie-canal-troley boat-2.jpg

At the same time, just like with anything else, time frames are probably flexible, for this is a tiny snippet from an 1872 publication.

trolley-boat.jpg

This thread goes hand in hand with some of the canals built in the 19th century.

Canal Trolley Boats
A trolley boat (a descriptive neologism not used contemporaneously) is an electrically driven boat on canals and particularly in canal tunnels. It takes its energy like a tram or trolleybus from one or two overhead wires respectively. One of the first alternatives for animal power was the trolley propeller system. Only four years after the first experimental trolleybus, Frank W. Hawley adapted an ordinary steam canal boat to a trolleyboat (named after him), which was tested on the Erie Canal in the US in 1893.

erie-canal-troley boat.jpg

The two electric motors (of 25 HP each) powered two screw propellers and received current from a pair of wires suspended over the canal through two ordinary underbearing trolley poles.

Trolley_boat_on_Teltow_canal_retuschiert_f.jpg

As the boat had more or less lateral movement, the contact arrangement had to be flexible, and as the canal could not be used as a return, a double metallic circuit had to be used. This necessitated two wires for boats going in each direction.

trolley-system-1.jpg
Below is a picture of what seems to be the only propeller powered trolleyboat line that was ever operated in a commercial way. It was installed along a 4 kilometre (2.5 miles) stretch of the Charleroi Canal in Belgium in 1899. The trolleyboats towed unpowered canal barges. The line formed part of a 47 kilometre (29 miles) long trajectory served by electric mules and was only operated for a couple of years.

canal-trolley-boats-3.jpg

Additional Images
trolley-boat-8.jpg
canal-trolley-boats-2.jpg
trolley-boat-7.jpg


KD: Anyways, I figured to share this little thing I ran into. For those interested in gaining further knowledge please visit the below linked webpage I quoted from.
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Username: anotherlayer
Date: 2020-02-19 16:35:13
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I live within an earshot of the Erie Canal, I have never heard of this. The heck?
 
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Username: Banta
Date: 2020-02-19 17:37:53
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Some of those pictures look like a ride at a theme park, with so many trolley boats available. Seems like you could move some serious volume this way.
 
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Username: jd755
Date: 2020-02-19 18:07:25
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All the source materials used for the lowtechmagazine article

Sources (in chronological order):
This one has a lot of detail and more photographs. Electrical boats and navigation : Martin, Thomas Commerford, 1856-1924
 
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Username: Palaiolagash
Date: 2020-02-20 00:20:54
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Same, and I have explicitly checked out canal sites and our local maritime museum within the last few months.

I wonder if I stop by the major Buffalo history museum if I can dig up anything.
 
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Username: wizz33
Date: 2020-02-23 04:49:43
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what i find interesting that none of the electric canal boats, have space for large family sized cabin.
so it looks like they shared in costs of the maintenance of the canal.
 
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