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  • July 30, 1859
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  • BIRTH OF THE STEAM ENGINE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 30, 1859: Page 3

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Birth Of The Steam Engine.

describe the progress from one improvement to another , illustrating as Ave proceed , a few of the results that have been brought about by its agency . We uoticed , in our last , some antecedents of the steam engine . It happened , singularly enough , that in the very year that old Jonathan Hulls published his proposal to furnish vessels which could by the

agency of steam be conveyed in and ovit of port , Avas born the child whose matured genius was to reduce to practical utility the dreams of the enthusiasts . About the year 1763 , Watts Avas a young man , carrying on the business of a mathematical instrument maker in Glasgow . A model of a steam enginesuch as the steam engine was at that timeAA'as brought

, , to him for repair . In the experiments which it became his duty to make , the shreAvd artificer soon observed that Avhich aroused his attention and directed him more particularly to the princi ples of its construction and the purposes of its use . Great men have been led to their discoveries by common incidents . ISTeAvton ' s falling apple was the key which opened

up to the eye of genius the laws of the upper universe . Galileo ' s pendulum led him to discoA'er tlie truths in connexion with earth's density , and to weigh it , so to speak , in his hand . The simple device by which the needle

manufacturer of our time is enabled to arrange his wares for the market , in a former time suggested the loadstone aud the mariner ' s compass . To natural but insignificant changes may be traced the discovery of the means by which mankind might be preserved and improved . So it was Avith Watt . He observed that the quantity of steam consumed at each stroke of the piston was many times more than the cylinder

could contain . This struck him as an anomaly , aud he at once meditated a remedy . The immense quantity of water required to effect condensation , also created surprise , and led him to make certain experiments by which some ofthe most important phenomena connected Avith latent heat ancl evaporation AA ere evolved . The student hastens to a professor

in the GlasgoAv University AA'ho had some theory on the subject , and from whom he received encouragement to prosecute his inquiries . These kind words increased his energy , aud he Ai'orked AA'ith a more exalted feeling of his business . Ho had , perhaps , no visions of tho great things he AVUS destined to achieve . He did not foresee the miht }* agency that

g was to grow up under his hand , but ho Averted on patiently , confidently , and hopefully , inspired by those noble princi ples which it is the province of our glorious Craft to inspire , and of which Craffc Watt became an illustrious member .

When the steam engine AVUS applied only to the purpose of pumping water out of coal , mines , as AA * O have already explained , ifc ivas simply necessary to raise tlie pump rod , tho Avei ght of AA'hich was sufficient to cause ifc to descend , and in the interval give tho steam machine a rest-, sufficient to prepare it for the next exertion . Watt had no such

consideration for the repose of the iron monster . Saving of time is a saving of money , ancl as tlie creature ate more coals and drank more water than AVUS necessary for the sustenance of active and energetic health , the mechanician determined to supply it with a . kind of second stomach , which AVUS to be found iu a separate condensing vessel . By this means

condensation became immediate Avithout suffering any diminution from obviating causes , such as had previously existed . The functions of the creature were now performed without obstruction . It required but another improvement to give a neAV motion , ancl the quiet mathematical instrument maker was not long in finding out the moans for its

accomplishment . 'The first experiments were failures , but each failure brought its li ght with it , and so from experiment to experiment a sum of expedients and means to ends were discovered , ivhich intelligently combined ancl ordered , gave to the labourer ultimate success . We hear now more frequently of cranks , throttle valves , governors , fly wheels , connecting rods . This was called a double acting condensing steam eng - , and is in reality the first parent of the modern

locomotive . This engine performed every function after having been supplied Avith its alloAvance of coals and water . It effected an enormous saving both of time and material . But all this was not enough to give the inventor an interest in his discovery . At the end of tiventy years from the date of his first experiments , Watt and his partner found that the

manufacture of these engines had not been a source of profit to them , but had entailed upon them a loss of capital amounting to about £ 50 , 000 ; an application had to be made to parliament to extend the patent , which the legislature was with difficulty induced to grant until the year 1800 . Although there have been many improvements since the time

of Watt , there has been no change or alteration of the principles upon which he worked . Next in order came the expansion steam engine , the rotatory steam engine , the marine engines , which as they UOAV form the bulwarks of our navy and our commerce , we may pause a feAV moments to describe .

Brethren who may be travelling on the silvery bosom of sAveet smelling Thames to a Greenwich dinner this fine weather , will generally find the skyli ghts of the engine room open , and if they are disposed to gratify their curiosity , or gather information upon this subject , they will have abundant opportunity . Looking clown into this marine dungeonif

, they are not deterred by the presence of an oleaginous vapour that is by no means agreeable , they will see tAvo enormous wedges of metal rising and falling alternately , and as each one falls or rises there is a rumble coincident ivith a

perceptible effort the more apparent if the river be smooth . For the benefit ¦ of such as have not paid attention to the skeleton of this steam marine horse which pushes them along , we give a short description , premising that Ave do not intend to be either as luminous or as lucid as Professor OAVCII is said

to be upon the organization of the megatherium , but briefer by a long ivay , which compensation AVO offer as amply sufficing for the use of hard words and harder names . A shaft then , we will say , is carried across the vessel , being continued on either side beyond the timbers . At the extremities of this shaft , on the outside of the vessel , are attached a pair of

wheels constructed like undershot water Avheels , having fixed upon their rims a number of flat boards , called paddle boards . As the Avheels revolve , these paddle boards strike the water , driA'ing it in a direction contrary to that in which it is intended the vessel shall be propelled . The moving force imparted to the water , thus driven backwards by reaction

on the vessel , propels it . ISTOAV , on the shaft in the interior are fixed tAvo cranks—the wedges of metal spoken of—placed at right angles to each other , so that whenever one of them , is thrown into the hig hest or lowest position , the other is horizontal . These cranks are Avorked by strong iron rods , called connecting rods , which may be seen attached to them , and which are themselves either driven directly by the

p istons of tho steam engine , or aro worked by those pistons , in this particular fche medium of working being precisely the same as in the ordinary land engines . The tAvo cranks being placed at rig ht angles , it folloAvs that when one piston is at tho top or bottom of its stroke , and the crank is driven by ifc into the hig hest or lowest position , the other will be at it ivill be

tho middle of its stroke , and the crank driven , by in a horizontal position . One of the pistons is therefore ahvays in a position to produce the most advantageous effect on the crank at the moment that the other piston loses its power , and in the same manner it may be seen that while the power of the one piston is augmented from zero to its

highest effect , the power of the other is decreasing from its greatest effect fco zero , thus tho combined action of the two p istons is nearlj uniform in its efficiency . If one engine only were used , the motion of the Avheels would be unequal , beiii" - most rap id Avhen the piston is at the middle of the stroke , ancl slowest at the extremities . Watt had scarcely fulfilled his mission , when another

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-07-30, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_30071859/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY. APOLLO AND MAY. Article 1
BIRTH OF THE STEAM ENGINE. Article 2
OPERATIVE MASONRY AND FREEMASONRY. Article 4
UNIFORMITY OF WORKING. Article 6
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 7
NEW MUSIC. Article 9
Poetry. Article 9
IZAAK WALTON. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
AMERICA. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Birth Of The Steam Engine.

describe the progress from one improvement to another , illustrating as Ave proceed , a few of the results that have been brought about by its agency . We uoticed , in our last , some antecedents of the steam engine . It happened , singularly enough , that in the very year that old Jonathan Hulls published his proposal to furnish vessels which could by the

agency of steam be conveyed in and ovit of port , Avas born the child whose matured genius was to reduce to practical utility the dreams of the enthusiasts . About the year 1763 , Watts Avas a young man , carrying on the business of a mathematical instrument maker in Glasgow . A model of a steam enginesuch as the steam engine was at that timeAA'as brought

, , to him for repair . In the experiments which it became his duty to make , the shreAvd artificer soon observed that Avhich aroused his attention and directed him more particularly to the princi ples of its construction and the purposes of its use . Great men have been led to their discoveries by common incidents . ISTeAvton ' s falling apple was the key which opened

up to the eye of genius the laws of the upper universe . Galileo ' s pendulum led him to discoA'er tlie truths in connexion with earth's density , and to weigh it , so to speak , in his hand . The simple device by which the needle

manufacturer of our time is enabled to arrange his wares for the market , in a former time suggested the loadstone aud the mariner ' s compass . To natural but insignificant changes may be traced the discovery of the means by which mankind might be preserved and improved . So it was Avith Watt . He observed that the quantity of steam consumed at each stroke of the piston was many times more than the cylinder

could contain . This struck him as an anomaly , aud he at once meditated a remedy . The immense quantity of water required to effect condensation , also created surprise , and led him to make certain experiments by which some ofthe most important phenomena connected Avith latent heat ancl evaporation AA ere evolved . The student hastens to a professor

in the GlasgoAv University AA'ho had some theory on the subject , and from whom he received encouragement to prosecute his inquiries . These kind words increased his energy , aud he Ai'orked AA'ith a more exalted feeling of his business . Ho had , perhaps , no visions of tho great things he AVUS destined to achieve . He did not foresee the miht }* agency that

g was to grow up under his hand , but ho Averted on patiently , confidently , and hopefully , inspired by those noble princi ples which it is the province of our glorious Craft to inspire , and of which Craffc Watt became an illustrious member .

When the steam engine AVUS applied only to the purpose of pumping water out of coal , mines , as AA * O have already explained , ifc ivas simply necessary to raise tlie pump rod , tho Avei ght of AA'hich was sufficient to cause ifc to descend , and in the interval give tho steam machine a rest-, sufficient to prepare it for the next exertion . Watt had no such

consideration for the repose of the iron monster . Saving of time is a saving of money , ancl as tlie creature ate more coals and drank more water than AVUS necessary for the sustenance of active and energetic health , the mechanician determined to supply it with a . kind of second stomach , which AVUS to be found iu a separate condensing vessel . By this means

condensation became immediate Avithout suffering any diminution from obviating causes , such as had previously existed . The functions of the creature were now performed without obstruction . It required but another improvement to give a neAV motion , ancl the quiet mathematical instrument maker was not long in finding out the moans for its

accomplishment . 'The first experiments were failures , but each failure brought its li ght with it , and so from experiment to experiment a sum of expedients and means to ends were discovered , ivhich intelligently combined ancl ordered , gave to the labourer ultimate success . We hear now more frequently of cranks , throttle valves , governors , fly wheels , connecting rods . This was called a double acting condensing steam eng - , and is in reality the first parent of the modern

locomotive . This engine performed every function after having been supplied Avith its alloAvance of coals and water . It effected an enormous saving both of time and material . But all this was not enough to give the inventor an interest in his discovery . At the end of tiventy years from the date of his first experiments , Watt and his partner found that the

manufacture of these engines had not been a source of profit to them , but had entailed upon them a loss of capital amounting to about £ 50 , 000 ; an application had to be made to parliament to extend the patent , which the legislature was with difficulty induced to grant until the year 1800 . Although there have been many improvements since the time

of Watt , there has been no change or alteration of the principles upon which he worked . Next in order came the expansion steam engine , the rotatory steam engine , the marine engines , which as they UOAV form the bulwarks of our navy and our commerce , we may pause a feAV moments to describe .

Brethren who may be travelling on the silvery bosom of sAveet smelling Thames to a Greenwich dinner this fine weather , will generally find the skyli ghts of the engine room open , and if they are disposed to gratify their curiosity , or gather information upon this subject , they will have abundant opportunity . Looking clown into this marine dungeonif

, they are not deterred by the presence of an oleaginous vapour that is by no means agreeable , they will see tAvo enormous wedges of metal rising and falling alternately , and as each one falls or rises there is a rumble coincident ivith a

perceptible effort the more apparent if the river be smooth . For the benefit ¦ of such as have not paid attention to the skeleton of this steam marine horse which pushes them along , we give a short description , premising that Ave do not intend to be either as luminous or as lucid as Professor OAVCII is said

to be upon the organization of the megatherium , but briefer by a long ivay , which compensation AVO offer as amply sufficing for the use of hard words and harder names . A shaft then , we will say , is carried across the vessel , being continued on either side beyond the timbers . At the extremities of this shaft , on the outside of the vessel , are attached a pair of

wheels constructed like undershot water Avheels , having fixed upon their rims a number of flat boards , called paddle boards . As the Avheels revolve , these paddle boards strike the water , driA'ing it in a direction contrary to that in which it is intended the vessel shall be propelled . The moving force imparted to the water , thus driven backwards by reaction

on the vessel , propels it . ISTOAV , on the shaft in the interior are fixed tAvo cranks—the wedges of metal spoken of—placed at right angles to each other , so that whenever one of them , is thrown into the hig hest or lowest position , the other is horizontal . These cranks are Avorked by strong iron rods , called connecting rods , which may be seen attached to them , and which are themselves either driven directly by the

p istons of tho steam engine , or aro worked by those pistons , in this particular fche medium of working being precisely the same as in the ordinary land engines . The tAvo cranks being placed at rig ht angles , it folloAvs that when one piston is at tho top or bottom of its stroke , and the crank is driven by ifc into the hig hest or lowest position , the other will be at it ivill be

tho middle of its stroke , and the crank driven , by in a horizontal position . One of the pistons is therefore ahvays in a position to produce the most advantageous effect on the crank at the moment that the other piston loses its power , and in the same manner it may be seen that while the power of the one piston is augmented from zero to its

highest effect , the power of the other is decreasing from its greatest effect fco zero , thus tho combined action of the two p istons is nearlj uniform in its efficiency . If one engine only were used , the motion of the Avheels would be unequal , beiii" - most rap id Avhen the piston is at the middle of the stroke , ancl slowest at the extremities . Watt had scarcely fulfilled his mission , when another

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