Steamboat facts for kids
A steamboat (also called a steamship or steamer) is a ship that uses a steam engine or steam turbine to move. At first, these were paddle steamboats. Some had a paddle wheel on the back. Others had two wheels on the sides. Most went down rivers. From about 1836, marine propellers, invented by Josef Ressel, were used. Claude François Jouffroy d’Abbans built the first working steamship in 1783.
There were many steamboats in the 19th century in the United States and other countries. However, the first steamboat was built by John Fitch in 1787. It had many paddles. Fitch tried to make money from the steamboat, but could not do so. He died in 1798, and did not live long enough to see Robert Fulton become the first person to build a steamboat that could make money. In 1807, Fulton built a steamboat that could travel from New York City to Albany in 32 hours. Steamboats became much faster later in the 19th century.
After the middle 19th century paddle steamers became rare, as the marine propeller gave more speed and burned less fuel. The new vessels were suited to the open ocean, and were usually called "steamships". During the 20th century, marine Diesel engines largely replaced steam propulsion.
Images for kids
-
Lookout, transport steamer on the Tennessee River, c. 1860-1865
-
Charlotte Dundas, built by William Symington.
-
The 1909 replica of the North River Steamboat, the first steamboat to achieve commercial success transporting passengers along the Hudson River.
-
Mississippi Riverboats at Memphis, Tennessee (1906)
-
SS California (1848), the first paddle steamer to steam between Panama City and San Francisco—a Pacific Mail Steamship Company ship.
-
Chromolithograph depicting the Monitor and the Merrimack
-
S.S. Inlander on the Skeena River at Kitselas Canyon, 1911
-
The SS Keno in Dawson City
-
"Enterprise on her fast trip to Louisville, 1815"
-
Paddle steamer PS Waverley steaming down the Firth of Clyde.
-
Turbine steamer TS Queen Mary.
-
SS Shieldhall steams down the Firth of Clyde.
-
Delta Queen racing
-
American Queen docked at the Riverwalk in 2015
See also
In Spanish: Barco de vapor para niños