"The creation of the age of steam meant many things to America. At the end of the century, historian Henry Adams, in assessing Fulton's feat that day, marked it 'as the beginning of a new era in America--a date which separated the colonial from the independent stage of growth,' for the U.S. was alone in possessing such a vessel and would be for decades. He added that 'the problem of steam navigation, so far as it applied to rivers and harbors, was settled, and for the first time America could consider herself mistress of her vast resources.'"
In the Los Angeles Times, Kirkpatrick Sale marks the two hundredth anniversary of Robert Fulton's steamship trip up the Hudson River.
Friday, August 17, 2007
Full Steam Ahead
Labels:
Early Republic,
Henry Adams,
history,
Jefferson,
New Jersey,
New York,
technology,
transportation
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