When James Watt first heard about the new tubular 
boiler he publicly claimed that Trevithick should be hanged for creating
 something so lethal. And it was lethal – mainly because the quality of 
metal available at the time, and the rivets used to bolt the plates together, were simply not strong enough to withstand 
the enormous pressures.  Trevithick
 also invented a safety valve for the boiler – after he left one of his 
engines on a cart outside an inn where he remained drinking for several 
hours, and it blew up.
High pressure steam cut coal consumption by four 
fifths, which was a huge financial saving. So after the new Cornish high-pressure steam boiler proved to be successful, Boulton & Watt registered 
patents which, for over 40 years, made further development by any other engineers impossible. Any attempts to work round these provoked immediate threats of litigation. 
Richard Trevithick’s fertile mind meant he 
invariably worked on several inventions at the same time. This made him 
hard to pin down to a particular project. He had a quick temper, fell out with his patrons, was 
invariably short of money, and hopeless at business.  
He married Jane Harvey whose father had established
 an iron foundry and engineering works in Hayle. All too aware of 
Richard Trevithick’s poor money management, and anxious that his sister 
did not suffer, Jane’s brother installed her as manager of his hotel, The White Hart,
 which she ran while raising six children. This income sustained the 
family during the sixteen years that Trevithick was in South America. He
 walked a thousand miles from one side of the continent to the other, 
maintaining engines and boilers built in Cornwall and sent out to 
the mines in Chile, Peru and Mexico.
Despite his many remarkable inventions Richard died a pauper.  But at the ‘Trevithick Day’ celebrations in Camborne, a replica of 
his ‘Puffing Devil,’ the world’s first successful self-propelled vehicle, reminded the crowds of the achievements of this remarkable 
Cornishman.  
 

 
 
4 comments:
Poor Trevithick is still struggling for recognition - Locomotion: Dan Snow's History of Railways started by looking at the birth of steam pumps and steam engines but my recollection is that he didn't even mention Trevithick, let alone give him the credit he deserves. I kept yelling his name at the TV but to no avail...
I feel sorry for poor Jane Trevithick, left to bring up six children on her own and run an inn, to boot!
Helena, it's so frustrating when someone like Dan Snow, whose audience will assume what he says to be factual and accurate, gets it wrong.
To be honest, Elizabeth, Richard was such a disruptive and erratic influence on everyone when he was at home, her life was perhaps a lot less fraught during his absence even with the responsibility of six children and the inn!
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