== == The very first trains were designed around 1825. Then in 1829 people were allowed to ride trains. Diesel and electric trains were invented somewhere around the 1950's. The maglev dates back to 1930. Trains were invented around 1825. People were allowed to ride the trains in 1829. Maglev trains date back to 1930. Diesel and electric trains were invented in the 1950's.
The earliest evidence found so far of a wagonway, a predecessor of the railway, is of the 6 to 8.5 km long Diolkos wagonway, which transported boats across the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece from around 600 BC. Wheeled vehicles pulled by men and animals ran in grooves cut into the limestone, which provided the track element, preventing the wagons from leaving the intended route. It cannot be determined who built it as no records (if they ever existed) survived the collapse of the Roman Empire at which time this wagonway quit being used.
In 1515, Cardinal Matthäus Lang wrote a description of the Reisszug cable railway at the Hohensalzburg Castle in Austria. The line originally used wooden rails and a hemp haulage rope, and was operated by human or animal power, through a treadwheel. The line still exists, albeit in updated form, and is possibly the oldest railway still to operate. However who designed and built it is not recorded.
The first railways were built for hauling coal from mines. At first these were horse-drawn and later pulled by a stationary steam engine. Someone then had the idea of putting small steam engines on wheels and pulling the wagons to nearby docks for loading into ships. In 1825 a group of businessmen from Darlington and Stockton-on-Tees in England built a railway from coal-mines near Shildon in the County of Durham, England, to Darlington and on to Stockton for loading coal into ships there, a total of 26 miles, (40km).
The line was officially opened by a train pulling mainly coal wagons full of up to 600 people.
While the line was built for the movement of coal, a regular passenger service was instigated shortly after the opening but this, at first, was horse-drawn while the coal, being more important, was pulled by various steam engines.
Rather surprisingly it was in the 6th century BC in Greece - the trucks were pushed by slaves. The railway ran for 1300 years.
London to Brighton
Richard Trevithick in 1804.
volta
Thomas Edison built his first lab at age 10 ten.
Qin (dynasty) Shi Huangdi, first emperor of China(259-210BC). He had the wall built to protect his empire from attacks by northern tribes (e.g. the Huns). It was built by joining together series of smaller walls built by earlier rulers. It is 3, 460 km (2150 miles) long.
thomas Edison
This was at a time when there were no aircraft at all. It was the first of its kind. They also built the aircraft, so they had no one they could ask for advice. So beyond familiarising themselves with the thing they had built, there was no special training.
Canada
1830
The first train was built to carry coal from a mine in Wales, I think. The railway was short and narrow.
dunno do u amazing that such an idiotic answer is allowed.....The first locomotive was built in Britain by Stephenson
The first railway journey was on 24 Feb 1804 when the Trevithick steam locomotive drew carriages along the Penydaren Ironworks tramway near Merthyr Tydfil, south Wales. The Stockton to Darlington Railway (County Durham, England), the first purpose built public transport steam railway, was opened in 1825.
The first public railway in Ireland ran from Dublin to Kingstown (now Dun Laoghaire).and was opened on 17t December 1834.
The Stockton to Darlington train.
he did engineering, he built the first ever public railway line in the world.
The forth railway bridge was built by Sir William Arroll.
It was built in Britain in 1804. The first public railway for steam locomotives in 1825.
Yes ! George Stephenson built the first passenger railway in the UK in 1825 !
its was Built in 1906.