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Trains of the 1850s were loud, unreliable, and dangerous. They commonly caused fires along the tracks that burned forests and grasslands. Some were comfortable, but most were very hard to ride in over long distances.

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9y ago
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11y ago

There were no railways in Britain in 1750.

The first steam locomotive prototype was built in 1784 by William Murdoch, who was born in Scotland and worked as an engineer and inventor in Birmingham, England. The prototype was the basis for a later design that could carry 4.5 tons of cargo in addition to the driver.

The first locomotive to be able to pull cargo cars on a track was developed in 1804 by Richard Trevithick, a British inventor and mining engineer. It could pull five cargo and passenger cars at a speed of 4 km/h.

In 1820, George Stephenson, English civil and mechanical engineer, overcame the problem of the weight of the engine crushing wooden and iron rails by distributing the weight with a series of wheels and built the first successful railway. It was a line of 8 miles, from Hetton to Sunderland and the first railway that did not use animal power.

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5y ago

Yes, from late 1840s onwards.

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Q: Were there trains in the 1800s?
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