CHAPTER
III.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE MODERN STEAM-ENGINE. JAMES WATT AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES
THE world is now entering upon the mechanical Epoch. There is nothing in the future more sure than the great triumphs which that epoch is to achieve. It has already advanced to some glorious conquests. What miracles of invention now crowd upon us! Look abroad, and contemplate the infinite achievements of the steampower.
And yet we have only begunwe are but on the threshold of this epoch....
What is it but the setting of the great distinctive seal upon the nineteenth
century ?an advertisement of the fact that society has risen to occupy
a higher platform than ever before ?a proclamation from the high places,
announcing honor, honor immortal, to the workmen who fill this world with
beauty, comfort, and powerhonor to be forever embalmed in history,
to be perpetuated in monuments, to be written in the hearts of this and
succeeding generations !KENNEDY.
SECTION I. - JAMES WATT AND HIS INVENTIONS.
THE success of the Newcomen engine naturally attracted the attention of mechanics, and of scientific men as well, to the possibility of making other applications of steampower.
The best men of the time gave much attention to the subject, but, until
James Watt began the work that alas made him famous, nothing more was done
than to improve the proportions and slightly alter the details of the Newcomen
and Calley engine, even by such skillful engineers as Brindley and Smeaton.
Of the personal history of the earlier inventors and improvers of the steamengine,
very little is ascertained; but that of Watt has become well known.
JAMES WATT was of an humble lineage, and was born at Greenock, then
a little Scotch fishing village, but now a considerable and a busy town,
which annually launches

James Watt
upon the waters of the Clyde a fleet of steamships whose engines are
probably, in the aggregate, far more powerful than were all the engines
in the world at the date of Watt's birth, January 19, 1736. His grandfather,
Thomas Watt, of Crawfordsdyke, near Greenock, was a wellknown mathematician
about the year 1700, and was for many years a schoolmaster at that place.
His father was a prominent citizen of Greenock, and was at various times
chief magistrate and treasurer of the town. James Watt was a bright boy,
but exceedingly delicate in health, and quite unable to attend school regularly
or to apply himself closely to either study or play. His early education
was given by his parents, who were respectable and intelligent people,
and the tools borrowed from his father's carpenterbench served at once
to amuse him and to give him a dexterity and familiarity with their use
that must undoubtedly have been of inestimable value to him in afterlife.
M. Arago, the eminent French philosopher, who wrote one of the earliest and most interesting biographies of Watt, relates anecdotes of him which, if correct, illustrate well his thoughtfulness and his intelligence, as well as the mechanical bent of the boy's mind. He is said, at the age of six years, to have occupied himself during leisure hours with the solution of geometrical problems; and Agar discovers, in a story in which he is described as experimenting with the teakettle,' his earliest investigations of the nature and properties of steam.
When finally sent to the village school, his ill health prevented his making
rapid progress; and it was only when thirteen or fourteen years of age
that he began to show that he was capable of taking the lead in his class,
and to exhibit his ability in the study, particularly, of mathematics.
His spare time was principally spent in sketching with his pencil, in carving,
and in working at the bench, both in wood and metal. He made many ingenious
pieces of mechanism, and some beautiful models. His favorite work seemed
to be the repairing of nautical instruments. Among other pieces of apparatus
made by the boy was a very fine barrelorgan. In boyhood, as in afterlife,
he was a diligent reader, and seemed to find something to interest him
in every book that came into his hands.
At the age of eighteen, Watt was sent to Glasgow, there to reside with
his mother's relatives, and to learn the trade of a mathematicalinstrument
maker. The mechanic with whom he was placed was soon found too indolent,
or was otherwise incapable of giving much aid in the project, and Dr. Dick,
of the University of Glasgow, with whom Watt became acquainted, advised
him to go to London. Accordingly, he set out in June, 1755, for the metropolis,
where, on his arrival, he arranged with Mr. John Morgan, in Cornhill, to
work a year at his chosen business, receiving as compensation 20 guineas.
At the end of the year he was compelled, by serious illhealth, to return
home.
Having become restored to health, he went again to Glasgow in 1756, with
the intention of pursuing his calling there. But, not being the son of
a burgess, and not having served his apprenticeship in the town, he was
forbidden by the guilds, or tradesunions, to open a shop in Glasgow. Dr.
Dick came to his aid, and employed him to repair some apparatus which had
been bequeathed to the college. He was finally allowed the use of three
rooms in the University building, its authorities not being under the municipal
rule. He remained here until 1760, when, the trades no longer objecting,
he took a shop in the city; and in 1761 moved again, into a shop on the
north side of the Irongate, where he earned a scanty living without molestation,
and still kept up his connection with the college. He did some work as
a civil engineer in the neighborhood of Glasgow, but soon gave up all other
employment, and devoted himself entirely to mechanics.
He spent much of his leisure timeof which he had, at first, more than
was desirablein making philosophical experiments and in the manufacture
of musical instruments, in making himself familiar with the sciences, and
in devising improvements in the construction of organs. In order to pursue
his researches more satisfactorily, he studied German and Italian, and
read Smith's "Harmonics," that he might become familiar with
the principles of construction of musical instruments. His reading was
still very desultory; but the introduction of the Newcomen engine in the
neighborhood of Glasgow, and the presence of a model in the college collections
which was placed in his hands, in 1763, for repair, led him to study the
history of the steamengine, and to conduct for himself an experimental
research into the properties of steam, with a set of improvised apparatus.
Dr. Robison, then a student of the University, v.ho found Watt's shop
a pleasant place in which to spend his leisure, and whose tastes affiliated
so strongly with those of Watt that they became friends immediately upon
making acquaintance, called the attention of the instrumentmaker to the
steamengine as early as 1759, and suggested that it might be applied to
the propulsion of carriages. Watt was at once interested, and went to work
on a little model, having tin steam cylinders and pistons cemented to the
driving wheels by an intermediate system of gearing. The scheme was afterwards
given up, and was not revived by Watt for a quarter of a century.
Watt studied chemistry, and was assisted by the advice and instruction
of Dr. Black, who was then making the researches which resulted in the
discovery of "latent heat." His proposal to repair the model
Newcomen engine in the college collections led to his study of Desagulier's
treatise, and of the works of Switzer and others. He thus learned what
had been done by Savery and by Newcomen, and by those who had improved
the engine of the latter.
In his own experiments he used, at first, apothecaries' trials and hollow
canes for steam reservoirs and pipes, and later a Papin's digester and
a common syringe. The latter combination made a non condensing engine,
in which he used steam at a pressure of 15 pounds per square inch. The
valve was worked by hand, and Watt saw that an automatic valvegear only
was needed to make a working machine. This experiment, however, led to
no practical result. He finally took hold of the Newcomen model, which
had been obtained from London, where it had been sent for repairs, and,
putting it in good working order, commenced experiments with that.
The Newcomen model, as it had a boiler which, although made to a scale
from engines in actual use, was quite incapable of furnishing steam enough
to work the engine. It was about nine inches in diameter; the steam cylinder
was two inches in diameter, and of six inches stroke of piston, arranged
as in Fig. 24, which is a picture of the model as it now appears. It is
retained among the most carefullypreserved treasures of the University
of Glasgow.

Fig 24The Newcomen Model.
Watt made a new boiler for the experimental investigation on which he was al)out to enter, and arranged it in such a manner that he could measure the quantity of water evaporated and of steam condensed at every stroke of the engine.
He soon discovered that it requiled but a very small quantity of steam
to heat a very large quantity of water, and immediately started to determine
with precision the relative weights ot sleam and water in the steamcylinder
when condensationl took place at the dowlnstroke of the engine, and thus
independently proved the existence of that " latent heat," the
discovery of which constitutes, also, one of the greatest of Dr. Black's
claims to distinction. Watt at once went to Dr. Black and related the remarkable
fact which he had thus detected, and was, in turn, taught by Black the
character of the phenomenon as it had been explained to his classes by
the latter some little time previously. Watt found that, at the boilingpoint,
his steam, condensing, was capable of heating six times its weight of water
such as was used for producing condensation.
Perceiving that steam, weight for weight even, was a vastly greater absorbent
and reservoir of heat than water, Watt saw plainly the importance of taking
greater care to economize it than had previously been customary. He first
attempted to economize in the boiler, and made boilers with wooden "
shells," in order to prevent losses by conduction and radiation, and
used a larger number of flues to secure more complete absorption of the
heat from the furnacegases. He also covered his steampipes with nonconducting
materials, and took every precaution that his ingenuity could devise to
secure complete utilization of the heat of combustion. He soon found, however,
that he was not working at the most important point, and that the great
source of loss was to be found in defects which he noted in the action
of the steam in the cylinder. He soon concluded that the sources of loss
of heat in the Newcomen engine which w ould be greatly exaggerated
in a small modelw ere:
First, the dissipation of heat by the cylinder itself, which was of brass,
and was both a good conductor and a good radiator.
Secondly, the loss of heat eonsequent upon the neeessity of cooling down the cylinder at every stroke, in producillg the vacuum.
Thirdly, the loss of power due to the pressure of vapor beneath the piston,
wllich was a consequenec of the imperfeet method of condensation.
He first made a cylinder of nonconducting materialwood soaked in
oil and then bakedand obtained a decided advantage in economy of steam.
He then conducted a series of very accurate experiments upon the temperature
and pressure of steam at such points on the scale as he could readily reach,
and, constructing a curve with his results, the abscesses representing
temperatures and the pressures being represented by the ordinates, he ran
the curve backward until he had obtained closelyapproximate measures of
temperatures less than 212°, and pressures less than atmospheric. He
thus found that, with the amount of injection water used in the Newcomen
engine, bringing the temperature of the interior, as he found, down to
from 140° to 175° Fahr., a very considerable backpressure would
be met with.
Continuing his examination still further, he measured the amount of steam
used at each stroke, and, comparing it with the quantity that would just
fill the cylinder, he found that at least threefourths was required The
quantity of cold water necessary to produce the condensation of a given
weight of steam was next determined; and he found that one pound of steam
contained enough heat to raise about six pounds of cold water, as used
for condensation, from the temperature of 62° to the boilingpoint;
and, going still further, he found that he was compelled to use, at each
stroke of the Newcomen engine, four times as much injection water as should
suffice to condense a cylinder full of steam. This confirmed his previous
conclusion that three-fourths of the heat supplied to the engine was wasted.
Watt had now, therefore, determined by his own researclles, as he himself
enumerates them, the following facts:
"1. The capacities for heat of iron, copper, and of some sorts of
wood, as compared with ~water.
"2. The bulk of steam compared with that of water.
"3. The quantity of water evaporated in a certain boiler by a pound
of coal.
"4. The elasticities of steam at various temperatures greater than
that of boiling water, and an approximation to the law which it follows
at other temperatures.
"5. How much water in the form of steam was required every stroke
by a small Newcomen engine, with a wooden cylinder 6 inches in diameter
and 12 inches stroke.
"6. The quantity of cold water required in every stroke to condense
the steam in that cylinder, so as to give it a workingpower of about 7
pounds on the square inch."
After these welldevised and truly scientific investigations, Watt was
enabled to enter upon his work of improving the steamengine with an intelligent
understanding of its existing defects, and with a knowledge of their cause.
Watt soon saw that, in order to reduce the losses in the working of the
steam in the steamcylinder, it would be necessary to find some means,
as he said, to keep the cylinder " always as hot as the steam that
entered it," notwithstanding the great fluctuations of temperature
and pressure of the steam during the up and the down strokes. He has told
us how, finally, the happy thought occurred to him which relieved him of
all difficulty, and led to the series of modifications which at last gave
to the world the modern type of steamengine.
He says :(1) "I had gone to take a walk on a fine Sabbath afternoon.
I had entered the Green by the gate at the foot of Charlotte street, and
had passed the old washinghouse. I was thinking upon the engine at the
time, and had gone as far as the herd's house, when the idea came into
my mind that, as steam was an elastic body, it would rush into a vacuum,
and, if a communication were made between the cylinder and an exhausted
vessel, it would rush into it, and might be there condensed without cooling
the
1 "Reminiscences of James Watt," Robert Hart;
" Transactions of the Glasgow Arch Theological Society," l709.
cylinder. I then saw that I must get rid of the condensed steam and injectionwater if I used a jet, as in Newcomen's engine. Two ways of doing this occurred to me: First, the water might be run off by a descending pipe, if an offlet could be got at the depth of 35 or 36 feet, and any air might be extracted by a small pump. The second was, to make the pump large enough to extract both water and air." " I had not walked farther than the Golfhouse, when the whole thing was arranged in my mind."
Referring to this invention, Watt said to Prof. Jardine (l) " When
analyzed, the invention would not appear so great as it seemed to be. In
the state in which I found the steamengine, it was no great effort of
mind to observe that the quantity of fuel necessary to make it work would
forever prevent its extensive utility. The next step in my progress was
equally easyto inquire what was the cause of the great consumption
of fuel. This, too, was readily suggested, viz., the waste of fuel which
was necessary to bring the whole cylinder, piston, and adjacent parts from
the coldness of water to the heat of steam, no fewer than from 15 to 20
times in a minute." It was by pursuing this train of thought that
he was led to devise the separate condenser.
On Monday morning Watt proceeded to make an experimental test of his new
invention, using for his steamcylinder and piston a large brass surgeon's
syringe, 14inch diameter and 10 inches long. At each end was a pipe leading
steam from the boiler, and fitted with a cock to act as a steamvalve.
A pipe led also from the top of the cylinder to the condenser, the syringe
being inverted and the pistonrod hanging downward for convenience. The
condenser was made of two pipes of thin tin plate, 10 or 12 inches long,
and about onesixth of an inch in diameter, standing vertically, and having
a connection at the top
1 " Lives of Boulton and Watt," Smiles.
with a horizontal pipe of larger size, and fitted with a "sniftingvalve."
Another vertical pipe, about an inch in diameter, was connected to the
condenser, and Watt fitted with a piston, with a view to using it as an
"airpump." The whole was set in a cistern of cold water. The
piston rod of the little steamcylinder was drilled from end to end to
permit the water to be removed from the cylinder. This little model (Fig.
2) worked very satisfactorily, and the perfection of the vacuum was such
that the machine lifted a weight of 18 pounds hung upon the pistonrod,
as in the

Fig.25.Watt's Experiment.
sketch. A larger model was immediately afterward constructed, and the result of its test confirmed fully the anticipations which had been awakened by the first experiment.
Having taken this first step and made such a radical improvement, the success
of this invention was no sooner determined than others followed in rapid
succession, as consequences of the exigencies arising from the first challenge
in the old Newcomen engine. But in thc working out of the forms and proportions
of the details of the new engine, even Watt's powerful mind, stored as
it was with happily combined scientific and practical information, was
occupied for years. In attaching the separate condenser, he first attempted
surfacecondensation; but this not succeeding well, he substituted the
jet. Some provision became at once necessary for preventing the filling
of the condenser with water.
Watt at first intended adopting the expedient which had worked satisfactorily
with the less effective condensation of Newcomen's enginei. e., leading
a pipe from the condenser to a depth greater than the height of a column
of water which could be counterbalanced by the pressure of the atmosphere;
but he subsequently employed the airpump, which relieves the condenser
not only of the water, but of the air which also usually collects in considerable
volume in the condenser, and vitiates the vacuum. He next substituted oil
and tallow for water in the lubrication of the piston and keeping it steamtight,
in order to avoid the cooling of the cylinder incident to the use of the
latter. Another cause of refrigeration of the cylinder, and consequent
waste of power in its operation, was seen to be the entrance of the atmosphere,
which followed the piston down the cylinder at each stroke, cooling its
interior by its contact. This the inventor concluded to prevent by covering
the top of the cylinder, allowing the pistonrod to play through a "
stuffingbox "which device had long been known to mechanics.
He accordingly not only covered the top, but surrounded the whole cylinder
with an external casing, or " steamjacket," and allowed the
steam from the boiler to pass around the steamcylinder and to press upon
the upper surface of the piston, where its pressure was variable at pleasure,
and therefore more manageable than that of the atmosphere. It also, besides
keeping the cylinder hot, could do comparatively little harm should it
leak by the piston, as it could be condensed, and thus readily disposed
of.
When he had concluded to build the larger experimental engine, Watt determined
to give his whole time and attention to the work, and hired a room in an
old deserted
pottery near the Broomielaw. Here he worked with a mechanicFolm Gardiner,
whom he had taken into his employuninterruptedly for many weeks. Meantime,
through his friend Dr. Black, probably, he had made the acquaintance of
Dr. Roebuck, a wealthy physician, who had, with other Scotch capitalists,
just founded the celebrated Carron IronWorks, and had opened a correspondence
with him, in which he kept that gentleman informed of the progress of his
work on the new engine.
This engine had a steamcylinder, Watt tells us, of " five or six
" inches diameter, and of two feet stroke. It was of copper, smoothhammered,
but not bored out, and " not very true." This was encased in
another cylinder of wood. In August, 1765, he tried the small engine, and
wrote Dr. Roebuck that he had had " good success," although the
machine was very imperfect. " On turning the exhaustingcock, the
piston, when not loaded, ascended as quick as the blow of a hammer, and
as quick when loaded with 18 pounds (being 7 pounds on the inch) as it
would have done if it had had an injection as usual." He then tells
his correspondent that he was about to make the larger model. In October,
1765, he finished the latter. The engine, when ready for trial, was still
very imperfect. It nevertheless did good work for so rude a machine.
Watt was now reduced to poverty, and, after borrowing considerable sums
from friends, he was finally compelled to give up his scheme for the time,
and to seek employment in order to provide for his family. During an interval
of about two years he supported himself by surveying, and by the work of
exploring? coalfields in the neighborhood of Glasgow for the magistrates
of the city. He did not, however? entirely give up his invention.
In 1767, Dr. Roebuck assumed Watt's liabilities to the amount of £1,000,
and agreed to provide capital for the prosecution of his experiments and
to introduce his invention; and, on the other hand, Watt agreed to surrender
to Dr. Roebuck twothirds of the patent. Another engine was next built,
having a steamcylinder seven or eight inches in diameter, which was finished
in 1768. This worked sufficiently well to induce the partners to ask for
a patent, and the specifications and drawings were completed and presented
in 1769.
Watt also built and set up several Newcomen engines, partly, perhaps, to
make himself thus thoroughly familiar with the practical details of enginebuilding.
Meantime, also, he prepared the plans for, and finally had built, a moderately
large engine of his own new type. Its steamcylinder was 18 inches in diameter,
and the stroke of piston was 5 feet. This engine was built at Kinneil,
and was finished in September, 1769. It was not all satisfactory in either
its construction or its operation. The condenser was a surfacecondenser
composed of pipes somewhat like that used in his first little model, and
did not prove to be satisfactorily tight. The steampiston leaked seriously,
and repeated trials only served to make more evident its imperfections.
He was assisted in this time of need by both Dr. Black and Dr. Roebuck;
but he felt strongly the risks which he ran of involving his friends in
serious losses, and became very despondent. Writing to Dr. Black, he says:
" Of all things in life, there is nothing more foolish than inventing;
" and probably the majority of inventors have been led to the same
opinion by their own experiences.
" Misfortunes never come singly; " and Watt was borne down by
the greatest of all misfortunesthe loss of a faithful and affectionate
wifewhile still unable to see a successful issue of his schemes. Only
less disheartening than this was the loss of fortune of his steadfast friend,
Dr. Roebuck, and the consequential loss of his aid. It was at about this
time, in the year 1769, that negotiations were commenced which resulted
in the transfer of the capitalized interest in Watt's engine to the wealthy
manufacturer whose name, coupled with that of Watt, afterward became known
throughout the civilized world, as the steamengine in its new form was
pushed into use by his energy and business tact.
Watt met Mr. Boulton, who next became his partner, in 1768, on his journey
to London to procure his patent, and the latter had then examined Watt's
designs, and, at once perceiving their value, proposed to purchase an interest.
Watt was then unable to reply definitely to Boulton's proposition, pending
his business arrangements with Dr. Roebuck; but, with Roebuck's consent,
afterwards proposed that Boulton should take a onethird interest with
himself and partner, paying Roebuck therefor onehalf of all expenses previously
incurred, and whatever he should choose to add to compensate " for
the risk he had run." Subsequently, Dr. Roebuck proposed to transfer
to Boulton and to Dr. Small, who was desirous of taking interest with Boulton,
onehalf of his proprietorship in Watt's inventions, on receiving "
a sum not less than one thousand pounds," which should, after the
experiments on the engine were completed, be deemed " just and reasonable."
Twelve months were allowed for the adjustment of the account. This proposal
was accepted in November, 1769.
MATTHEW BOULTON, who now became a partner with James Watt, was the son
of a Birmingham silver stamper and piecer, and succeeded to his father's
business, building up a great establishment, which, as well as its proprietor,
was well known in Watt's time. Watt, writing to Dr. Roebuck before the
final arrangement had been made, urged him to close with Boulton for "
the following considerations:
"lst. From Mr. Boulton's own character as an ingenious, honest, and
rich man. 2dly. From the difficulty and expense there would be of procuring
accurate and honest workmen and providing them with proper utensils, and
getting a proper overseer or overseers. If, to avoid this inconvenience,
you were to contract for the work to be done by a masterworkman, you must
give up a great share of the profit, 3dly. The success of the engine is
far from being verified. If Mr. Boulton takes his chance of success from
the account I shall write Dr. Small, and pays you any adequate share of
the money laid out, it lessens your risk,

Matthew Boulton
and in a greater proportion than I think it will lessen your profits, 4thly. The assistance of Mr. Boulton's and Dr. Small's ingenuity (if the latter engage in it) in improving and perfecting the machine may be very considerable, and may enable us to get the better of the difficulties that might othervise damn it. Lastly, consider my uncertain health, my irresolate and inactive disposition, my inability to bargain and d struggle for my own with mankind: all which disqualify me for any great undertaking. On our side, consider the first outlay and interest, the patent, the present engine, about £200 (though there would not be much loss in making it into a common engine), two years of my time, and the expense of models."
Watt's estimate of the value of Boulton's ingenuity and talent was wellfounded.
Boulton had shown himself a good scholar, and had acquired considerable
knowledge of the languages and of the sciences, particularly of mathematics,
after leaving the school from which he graduated into the shop when still
a boy. In the shop he soon introduced a number of valuable improvements,
and he was always on the lookout for improvements made by others, with
a view to their introduction in his business. He was a man of the modern
style, and never permitted competitors to excel him in any respect, without
the strongest efforts to retain his leading position. He always aimed to
earn a reputation for good work, as well as to make money. His father's
workshop was at Birmingham; but Boulton, after a time, found that his
rapidlyincreasing business would compel him to find room for the erection
of a more extensive establishment, and he secured land at Soho, two miles
distant from Birmingham, and there erected his new manufactory, about 1762.
The business was, at first, the manufacture of ornamental metalware, such
as metal buttons, buckles, watchchains, and light filigree and inlaid
work. The manufacture of gold and silver platedware was soon added, and
this branch of business gradually developed into a very extensive manufacture
of works of art. Boulton copied fine work wherever he could find it, and
often borrowed vases, statuettes, and bronzes of all kinds from the nobility
of England, and even from the queen, from which to make copies. The manufacture
of inexpensive clocks, such as are now well known throughout the world
as an article of American trade, was begun by Boulton. He made some fine
astronomical and valuable ornamental clocks, which were better appreciated
on the Continent than in England. The business of the Soho manufactory
in a few years became so extensive, that its goods were known to every
civilized nation, and its growth, under the management of the enterprising,
conscientious, and ingenious Boulton, more than kept pace with the accumulation
of capital; and the proprietor found himself, by his very prosperity, often
driven to the most careful manipulation of his assets, and to making free
use of his credit.
Boulton had a remarkable talent for making valuable acquaintances, and
for making the most of advantages accruing thereby. In 1758 he made the
acquaintance of Benjamin Franklin, who then visited Soho; and in 1766 these
distinguished men, who were then unaware of the existence of James Watt,
were corresponding, and, in their letters, discussing the applicability
of steampower to various useful purposes. Between the two a new steamengine
was designed, and a model was constructed by Boulton, which was sent to
Franklin and exhibited by him in London.
Dr. Darwin seems to have had something to do with this scheme, and the
enthusiasm awakened by the promise of success given by this model may have
been the origin of the now celebrated prophetic rhymes so often quoted
from the works of that eccentric physician and poet. Franklin contributed,
as his share in the plan, an idea of so arranging the grate as to prevent
the production of smoke. He says: "1911 that is necessary is to make
the smoke of fresh coals pass descending through those that are already
ignited." His idea has been, by more recent schemers, repeatedly brought
forward as new. Nothing resulted from these experiments of Boulton, Franklin,
and Darwin, and the plan of Watt soon superseded all less welldeveloped
plans.
In 1767, Watt visited Soho and carefully inspected Boulton's establishment.
He was very favorably impressed by the admirable arrangement of the workshops
and the completeness of their outfit, as well as by the perfection of the
organization and administration of the business. In the following year
he again visited Soho, and this time met Boulton, who had been absent at
the previous visit. The two great mechanics were mutually gratified by
the meeting, and each at once acquired for the other the greatest respect
and esteem. They discussed Watt's plans, and Boulton then definitely decided
not to continue his own experiments, although he had actually commenced
the construction of a pumping engine. With Dr. Small, who was also at Soho,
Watt discussed the possibility of applying his engine to the propulsion
of carriages, and to other purposes. On his return home, Watt continued
his desultory labors on his engines, as already described; and the final
completion of the arrangement with Boulton, which immediately followed
the failure of Dr. Roebuck, took place some time later.
Before Watt could leave Scotland to join his partner at Soho, it was necessary
that he should finish the work which he had in hand, including the surveys
of the Caledonian canal, and other smaller works, which he had had in progress
some months. He reached Birmingham in the spring of 1774, and was at once
domiciled at Soho, where he set at work upon the partlymade engines which
had been sent from Scotland some time previously. They had laid, unused
and exposed to the weather, at Kinneil three years, and were not in as
good order as might have been desired. The blocktin steamcylinder was
probably in good condition, but the iron parts were, as Watt said, "perishing,~
while he had been engaged in his civil engineering work. At leisure moments,
during this period, Watt had not entirely neglected his plans for the utilization
of steam. He had given much thought, and had expended some time, in experiments
upon the plan of using it in a rotary or "wheel" engine. He did
not succeed in contriving any plan which seemed to promise success.
It was in November, 1774, that Watt finally announced to His old partner,
I)r. Roebuck, the successful trial of the Kilmeil engine. He did not write
with the usual enthusiasm and extravagance of the inventor, for his frequent
disappointments and prolonged suspense had very thoroughly extinguished
his vivacity. He simply wrote: "The fire engine I have invented is
now going, and answers much better than any other that has yet been made;
and I expect that the invention will be very beneficial to me."
The change of the " atmospheric engine " of Newcomen

Fig. 26.Watt's Engine, 1774.
into the modern steamengine was now completed in its essential details. The first engine which was erected at Kinneil, near Boroughstoness, had a steamcylinder 18 inches in diameter. It is seen in the accompanying sketch.
In Fig. 26, the steam passes from the boiler through the pipe d and the
valve c to the cylindercasing or steamjacket, Y Y, and above the piston,
b, which it follows in its descent in the cylinder, a, the valve f being
at this time open, to allow the exhaust into the condenser, h.
The piston now being at the lower end of the cylinder, and the pumprods
at the opposite end of the beam, ~~, being thus raised and the pumps filled
with water, the valves c and f close, while e opens, allowing the steam
which remains above the piston to flow beneath it, until, the pressures
becoming equal above and below, the weight of the pumprods overbalancing
that of the piston, the latter is rapidly drawn to the top of the cylinder,
while the steam is displaced above, passing to the underside of the piston.
The valve e is next closed, and c and f are again opened; the downstroke
is repeated. The water and air entering the condenser are removed at each
stroke by the airpump, i, which communicates with the condenser by the
passage s. The pump g supplies condensingwater, and the pump jl takes
away a part of the water of condensation, which is thrown by the airpump
into the "hotwell," and from it the feedpump supplies the boiler.
The valves are moved by valve gear very similar to Beighton's and Smeaton's,
by the pins, m yn, in the "plugframe" or "tappetrod,"
^z n.
The engine is mounted upon a substantial foundation, B B. F is an opening
out of which, before starting the engine, the air is driven from the cylinder
and condenser.
The inventions covered by the patent of 1769 were described as follows:
"My method of lessening the consumption of steam, and consequently
fuel, in fireengines, consists in the following principles:
" 1st. That the vessel in which the powers of steam arc to be employed
to work the enginewhich is called 'the cylinder' in common fireengines,
and which I call 'the steamvessel'must, during the whole time that
the engine is at work, be kept as hot as the steam which enters it; first,
by inclosing it in a case of wood, or any other materials that transmit
heat slowly; secondly, by surrounding it with steam or other heated bodies;
and thirdly, by suffering neither water nor other substances colder than
the steam to enter or touch it during that time.
" 2dly. In engines that are to be worked, wholly or partially, by
condensation of steam, the steam is to be condensed in vessels distinct
from the steamvessel or cylinder, though occasionally communicating with
them. These vessels I call condensers; and while the engines are working,
these condensers ought at least to be kept as cold as the air in the neighborhood
of the engines, by application of water or other cold bodies.
" 3dly. Whatever air or other elastic vapor is not condensed by the
cold of the condenser, and may impede the working of the engine, is to
be drawn out of the steamvessels or condensers by means of pumps, wrought
by the engines themselves, or otherwise.
" 4thly. I intend in many cases to employ the expansive force of steam
to press on the pistons, or whatever may be used instead of them, in the
same manner as the pressure of the atmosphere is now employed in common
fireengines. In cases where cold water cannot be had in plenty, the engines
may be wrought by this force of steam only, by discharging the steam into
the open air after it has done its office.
"5thly. Where motions round an axis are required, I make the steamvessels
in form of hollow rings or circular channels, with proper inlets and outlets
for the steam, mounted on horizontal axles like the wheels of a watermill.
Within them are placed a number of valves that suffer any body to go round
the channel in one direction only. In these steamvessels are placed weights,
so fitted to them as to fill up a part or portion of their channels, yet
rendered capable of moving freely in them by the means hereinafter mentioned
or specified. When the steam is admitted in these engines between these
weights and the valves, it acts equally on both, so as to raise the weight
on one side of the wheel, and, by the reaction of the valves successively,
to give a circular motion to the wheel, the valves opening in the direction
in which the weights are pressed, but not in the contrary. As the vessel
moves round, it is supplied with steam from the boiler, and that which
has performed its office may either be discharged by means of condensers,
or into the open air.
"6thly. I intend in some cases to apply a degree of cold not capable
of reducing the steam to water, but of contracting it considerably, so
that the engines shall be worked by the alternate expansion and contraction
of the steam. " Lastly, instead of using water to render the piston
or other parts of the engine air or steamtight, I employ oils, wax, resinous
bodies, fat of animals, quicksilver, and other metals, in their fluid state."
In the construction and erection of his engines, Watt still had great difficulty
in finding skillful workmen to make the parts with accuracy, to fit them
with care, and to erect them properly when once finished. And the fact
that both Newcomen and Watt met with such serious trouble, indicates that,
even had the engine been designed earlier, it is quite unlikely that the
world would have seen the steam-engine a success until this time, when
mechanics were just acquiring the skill requisite for its construction.
But, on the other hand, it is not at all improbable that, had the mechanics
of an earlier period been as skillful and as welleducated in the manual
niceties of their business, the steam-engine might have been much earlier
brought into use.
In the time of the Marquis of Worcester it would have probably been found
impossible to obtain workmen to construct the steamengine of Watt, had
it been then invented. Indeed, Watt, upon one occasion, congratulated himself
that one of his steamcylinders only lacked threeeighths of an inch of
being truly cylindrical.
The history of the steamengine is from this time a history of the work
of the firm of Boulton & Watt. Newcomen engines continued to be built
for years after Watt went to Soho, and by many builders. A host of inventors
still worked on the most attractive of all mechanical combinations, seeking
to effect further improvements. Some inventions were made by contemporaries
of Watt, as will be seen hereafter, which were important as being the germs
of later growths; but these were nearly all too far in advance of the time,
and nearly every successful and important invention which marked the history
of steampower for many years originated in the fertile brain of James
Watt.
The defects of the Newcomen engine were so serious, that it was no sooner
known that Boulton of Soho had become interested in a new machine for raising
water by steampower, than inquiries came to him from all sides, from mineowners
who were on the point of being drowned out, and from proprietors whose
profits were absorbed by the expense of pumping, and who were glad to pay
the £5 per horsepower per year finally settled upon as royalty.
The London municipal waterworks authorities were also ready to negotiate
for pumping engines for raising water to supply the metropolis. The firm
was therefore at once driven to make preparations for a large business.
The first and most important matter, however, was to secure an extension
of the patent, which was soon to expire. If not renewed, the 15 years of
study and toil, of poverty and anxiety, through which Watt had toiled,
would prove profitless to the inventor, and the fruits of his genius would
have become the unearned property of others. Watt saw, at one time, little
hope of securing the necessary act of Parliament, and was greatly tempted
to accept a position tendered him by the Russian Government, upon the solicitation
of his old friend, Mr. Robinson, then a Professor of Mathematics at the
Naval School at Cronstadt. The salary was £1,000a princely income
for a man in Watt's circumstances, and a peculiar temptation to the needy
mechanic.
Watt, however, went to London, and, with the help of his own and of Boulton's
influential friends, succeeded in getting his bill through. His patent
was extended 24 years, and Boulton & Watt set about the work of introducing
their engines with the industry and enterprise which characterized their
every act.
In the new firm, Boulton took charge of the general business, and Watt
superintended the design, construction, and erection of their engines.
Boulton's business capacity, with Watt's wonderful mechanical abilityBoulton's
physical health, and his vigor and courage, offsetting Watt's feeble health
and depression of spiritsand, more than all, Boulton's pecuniary resources,
both in his own purse and in those of his friends, enabled the firm to
conquer all difficulties, whether in finance, in litigation, or in engineering.
It was only after the successful erection and operation of several engines
that Boulton and Watt became legally partners. The understood terms were
explicitly stated by Watt to include an assignment to Boulton of twothirds
the patentright; Boulton paying all expenses, advancing stock in trade
at an appraised valuation, on which it was to draw interest; Watt making
all drawings and designs, and drawing one-third net profits.
As soon as Watt was relieved of the uncertainties regarding his business
connections, he married a second wife, who, as Arago says, by "her
various talent, soundness of judgment, and strength of character,"
made a worthy companion to the largehearted and large-brained engineer.
Thenceforward his cares were only such as every businessman expects to
be compelled to sustain, and the next ten years were the most prolific
in inventions of any period in Watt's life.
From 1775 to 1785 the partners acquired five patents, covering a large
number of valuable improvements upon the steamengine, and several independent
inventions. The first of these patents covered the now familiar and universallyused
copyingpress for letters, and a machine for drying cloth by passing it
between copper rollers filled with steam of sufficiently high temperature
to rapidly evaporate the moisture. This patent was issued February 14,
1780.

Fig. 27.Watt's Engine, 1781.
In the following year, October 2, 1781, Watt patented five devices by which he obtained the rotary motion of the engineshaft without the use of a crank. One of these was the arrangement shown in Fig. 27, and known as the "sun-andplanet" wheels. The crankshaft carries a gear wheel, which is engaged by another securely fixed upon the end of the connectingrod. As the latter is compelled to revolve about the axis of the shaft by a tie which confines the connectingrod end at a fixed distance from the shaft, the shaftgear is compelled to revolve, and the shaft with it. Any desired velocityratio was secured by giving the two gears the necessary relative diameters. A flywheel was used to regulate the motion of the shaft. Boulton & Watt used the sunandplanet device on many engines, but finally adopted the crank, when the expiration of the patent held by Matthew Wasborough, and which had earlier date than Watt's patent of 1781, permitted them. Watt had proposed the use of a crank, it is said, as early as 1771, but Wasborough anticipated him in securing the patent. Watt had made a model of an engine with a crank and flywheel, and he has stated that one of his workmen, who had seen the model, described it to Wasborough, thus enabling the latter to deprive Watt of his own property. The proceeding excited great indignation on the part of Watt; but no legal action was taken by Boulton & Watt, as the overthrow of the patent was thought likely to do them injury by permitting its use by more active competitors and more ingenious men.
The next patent issued to Watt was an exceedingly important one, and of
especial interest in a history of the development of the economical application
of steam. This patent included:
1. The expansion of steam, and six methods of applying the principle and
of equalizing the expansive power.
2. The doubleaction steamengine, in which the steam acts on each side
the piston alternately, the opposite side being in communication with the
condenser.
l For the privilege of using the flywheel to regulate
the motion of the engine, Boulton & Watt paid n royalty to Matthew
Wasborough, who had patented it, and who held also the patent for its combination
with a crank, as invented by Pickard and Steed.
3. The double or coupled steamenginetwo engines capable of working
together, or independently, as may be desired.
4. The use of a rack on the pistonrod, working into a sector on the end
of the beam, thus securing a perfect rectilinear motion of the rod.
5. A rotary engine, or " steamwheel."
The efficiency to be secured by the expansion of steam had long been known
to Watt, and he had conceived the idea of economizing some of that power,
the waste of which was so plainly indicated by the violent rushing of the
exhauststeam into the condenser, as early as 1769. This was described
in a letter to Dr. Small, of Birmingham, in May of that year. When experimenting
at Kinneil, he had tried to determine the real value of the principle by
trial on his small engine.
Boulton had also recognized the importance of this improved method of working
steam, and their earlier Soho engines were, as Watt said, made with cylinders
" double the size wanted, and cut off the steam at halfstroke."
But, though "this was a great saving of steam, so long as the valves
remained as at first," the builders were so constantly annoyed by
alterations of the valves by proprietors and their engineers, that they
finally gave up that method of working, hoping ultimately to be able to
resume it when workmen of greater intelligence and reliability could be
found. The patent was issued July 17, 1782. Watt specified a cutoff at
onequarter stroke as usually best.
Watt's explanation of the method of economizing by expansive working, as
given to Dr. Small is worthy of reproduction. He says: "I mentioned
to you a method of still doubling the effect of steam, and that tolerably
easy, by using the power of steam rushing into a vacuum, at
1 " Lives of Boulton and Watt," Smiles.
present lost. This would do a little more than double the effect, but
it would too much enlarge the vessels to use it all. It is peculiarly applicable
to wheelengines, and may supply the want of a condenser where force of
steam is only used; for, open one of the steamvalves and admit steam,
until onefourth of the distance between it and the next valve is filled
with steam, shut the valve, and the steam will continue to expand and to
pass round the wheel with a diminishing power, ending in one-fourth its
first exertion. The sum of this series you will find greater than onehalf,
though only onefourth steam was used. The power will indeed be unequal,
but this can be remedied by a fly, or in several other ways."
It will be noticed that Watt suggests, above, the now wellknown noncondensing
engine. He had already, as has been seen, described it in his patent of
1769, as also the rotary engine.
Farey illustrates Watt's idea and explanation neatly, by a sketch similar
to that here driven (Fig. 28).
Steam, entering the cylinder at a, is admitted until one-fourth the stroke
has been made, when the steamvalve is closed, and the remainder of the
stroke is performed without further addition of steam. The variation of
steam pressure is approximately inversely proportional to the variation
of its volume. Thus, at halfstroke, the pressure becomes onehalf that
at which the steam was supplied to the cylinder. At the end of the stroke
it has fallen to one-fourth the initial pressure. The pressure is always
nearly equal to the product of the initial pressure and volume divided
by the volume at the given instant. In symbols,
P= nrt/V
It is true that the condensation of steam doing work changes this law in a marked manner; but the condensation and re-evaporation of steam, due to the transfer of heat to and from the metal of the cylinder, tends to compensate the first variation by a reverse change of pressure with change of volume.
The sketch shows this progressive variation of pressure as expansion proceeds.
It is seen that the work done per unit of volume of steam as taken from
the boiler is much

Fig. 28. Expansion of Steam.
greater than when working without expansion. The product of the mean
pressure by the volume of the cylinder is less, but the quotient obtained
by dividing this quantity by the volume or weight of steam taken from the
boiler, is much greater with than without expansion. For the case assumed
and illustrated, the work done during expansion is one and twofifths times
that done previous to cutting off the steam, and the work done per pound
of steam is 2.4 times that done without expansion.
Were there no losses to be met with and to be exaggerated by the use of
steam expansively, the gain would become very great with moderate expansion,
amounting to twice the work done when "following" full stroke,
when the steam is cut off at oneseventh. The estimated gain is, however,
never realized. Losses by friction, by conduction and radiation of heat,
and by condensation and re-evaporation in the cylinderof which losses
the latter are most seriousafter passing a point which is variable,
and which is determined by the special conditions in each case, augment
with greater rapidity than the gain by expansion.
In actual practice, it is rarely found, except where special precautions
are taken to reduce these losses, that economy follows expansion to a greater
number of volumes than about onehalf the square root of the steampressure;
i. e., about twice for 15 or 20 pounds pressure, three times for about
30 pounds, and four and five times for 60 or 65 and for 100 to 125 pounds
respectively. Watt very soon learned this general principle; but neither
he, nor even many modern engineers, seem to have learned that too great
expansion often gives greatlyreduced economy.
The inequality of pressure due to expansion, to which he refers, was a
source of much perplexity to Watt, as he was for a long time convinced
that he must find some method of " equalizing" the consequent
irregular effort of the steam upon the piston. The several methods of "
equalizing the expansive power" which are referred to in the patent
were attempts to secure this result. By one method, he shifted the centre
as the beam vibrated, thus changing the lengths of the arms of that great
lever, to compensate the change of moment consequent upon the change of
pressure. He finally concluded that a flywheel, as first proposed by Fitzgerald,
who advised its use on Papin's engine, would be the best device on engines
driving a crank, and trusted to the inertia of a balanceweight in his
pumpingengines, or to the weight of the pumprods, and permitted the piston
to take its own speed so far as it was not thus controlled.
The doubleacting engine was a modification of the singleacting engine,
and was very soon determined upon after the successful working of the latter
had become assured.
Watt had covered in the top of his singleacting engine, to prevent cooling
the interior of the cylinder by contact with the comparatively cold atmosphere.
When this had been done, there was but a single step required to convert
the machine into the doubleacting engine. This alteration, by which the
steam was permitted to act upon the upper and the lower sides of the piston
alternately, had been proposed by Watt as early as 1767, and a drawing
of the engine was laid before a committee of the House of Commons in 177S'75.
By this simple change Watt doubled the power of his engine. Although invented
much earlier, the plan was not patented until he was, as he states, driven
to take out the patent by the " plagiarists and pirates " who
were always ready to profit by his ingenuity. This form of engine is now
almost universally used. The singleacting pumpingengine remains in use
in Cornwall, and in a few other localities, and now and then an engine
is built for other purposes, in which steam acts only on one side of the
piston; but these are rare exceptions to the general rule.
The subject of his next invention was not less interesting. The doublecylinder
or " compound " engine has now, after the lapse of nearly a century,
become an important and usual type of engine. It is impossible to determine
precisely to whom to award the credit of its first conception. Dr. Falk,
in 1779, had proposed a doubleacting engine, in which there were two single-acting
cylinders, acting in opposite directions and alternately on opposite sides
of a wheel, with which a rack on the pistonrod of each geared.
Watt claimed that Hornblower, the patentee of the " compound engine,"
was an infringer upon his patents; and, holding the patent on the separate
condenser, he was able to prevent the engine of his competitor taking such
form as to be successfully introduced. The Hornblower engine was soon given
up.
Watt stated that this form of engine had been invented by him as early
as 1767, and that he had explained its peculiarities to Smeaton and others
several years before Hornblower attempted to use it. He wrote to Boulton:
" It is no less than our doublecylinder engine, worked upon our principle
of expansion." He never made use of the plan, however; and the principal
object sought, apparently, in patenting this, as well as many other devices,
was to secure himself against competition.
The rack and sector patented at this time was soon superseded by the parallelmotion;
and the last claim, the " steamwheel " or rotary engine, although
one was built of considerable size, was not introduced.
After the patent of 1782 had been secured, Watt turned his attention, when
not too hardpressed by business, to other schemes, and to experimenting
with still other modifications and applications of his engine. He had,
as early as 1777, proposed to make a steamhammer for Wilkinson's forge;
but he was too closely engaged with more important matters to take hold
of the project with much earnestness until late in the year 1782, when,
after some preliminary trials, he reported, December 13th: "We have
tried our little tiltingforge hammer at Soho with success. The following
are some of the particulars: Cylinder, 15 inches in diameter; 4 feet stroke;
strokes per minute, 20. The hammerhead, 120 pounds weight, rises 8 inches,
and strikes 240 blows per minute. The machine goes quite regularly, and
can be managed as easily as a watermill. It requires a very small quantity
of steamnot above half the contents of the cylinder per stroke. The
power employed is not more than onefourth of what would be required to
raise the quantity of water which would enable a waterwheel to work the
same hammer with the same velocity."
He immediately set about making a much heavier hammer, and on April 26,
1783, he wrote that he had done "a thing never done before"making
his hammer strike 300 blows a minute. This hammer weighed 7 hundredweight,
and had a drop of 2 feet. The steamcylinder had a diameter of 42 inches
and 6 feet stroke of piston, and was calculated to have sufficient power
to drive four hammers weighing 7 hundredweight each. The engine made 20
strokes per minute, the hammer giving 90 blows in the same time.
This new application of steampower proving successful, Watt next began
to develop a series of minor inventions, which were finally secured by
his patent of April 27, 1784, together with the steam tilthammer, and
a steamcarriage, or " locomotive engine."
The contrivance previously used for guiding the head of the pistonrodthe
sectors and chains, or rackhad never given satisfaction. The rudeness
of design of the contrivance was only equaled by its insecurity. Watt therefore
contrived a number of methods of accomplishing the purpose, the most beautiful
and widelyknown of which is the "parallelmotion," although
it has now been generally superseded by one of the other devices patented
at the same timethe crosshead and guides. As originally proposed,
a rod was attached to the head of the pistonrod, standing vertically when
the latter was at quarterstroke. The upper end of this rod was pivoted
to the end of the beam, and the lower end to the extremity of a horizontal
rod having a length equal to onehalf the length of the beam. The other
end of the horizontal rod was coupled to the frame of the engine. As the
piston rose and fell, the upper and lower ends of the vertical rod were
swayed in opposite directions, and to an equal extent, by the beam and
the lower horizontal rod, the middle point at which the pistonrod was
attached preserving its position in the vertical line. This form was objectionable,
as the whole effort of the engine was transmitted through the parallelmotion
rods. Another form is shown in the sketch given of the doubleacting engine
in Fig. 31, which was free from this defect.
The head of the pistonrod, g, was guided by rods connecting it with the
frame at c, and forming a "parallelogram" with the beam. Many
varieties of " parallelmotion " have been devised since Watt's
invention was attached to his engines at Soho. They usually are more or
less imperfect, guiding the pistonrod in a line only approximately straight.
The crosshead and guides are now generally used, very much as described
by Watt in this patent as his "second principle." This device
w ill be seen in the engravings given hereafter of more modern engines.
The head of the pistonrod is fitted into a transverse bar, or crosshead,
which carries properlyshaped pieces at its extremities, to which are bolted
" gibs," so made as to fit upon guides secured to the engineframe.
These guides are adjusted to precise parallelism with the centre line of
the cylinder. The crosshead, sliding in or on these guides, moves in a
perfectly straight line, and, compelling the pistonrod to move with it,
the latter is even more perfectly guided than by a parallelmotion. This
arrangement, where properly proportioned, is not necessarily subject to
great friction, and is much more easily adjusted and kept in line than
the parallel motion when wear occurs or maladjustment takes place.
By the same patent, Watt secured the now common "puppetvalve"
with beveled seat, and the application of the steamengine to driving rollingmills
and hammers for forges, and to "wheelcarriages for removing persons
or goods, or other matters, from place to place." For the latter purpose
he proposes to use boilers " of wood, or of thin metal, strongly secured
by hoops or otherwise," and containing "internal fireboxes."
He proposed to use a condenser cooled by currents of air.
It would require too much space to follow Watt in all his schemes for the
improvement and for the application of the steamengine. A few of the more
important and more ingenious only can be described. Many of the contracts
of Boulton & Watt gave them, as compensation for their engines, a
fractionusually onethirdof the value of the fuel saved by the
use of the Watt engine in place of the engine of Newcomen, the amount due
being paid annually or semi-annually, with an option of redemption on the
part of the purchaser at ten years' purchase. This form of agreement compelled
a careful determination, often, of the work done and fuel consumed by both
the engine taken out and that put in its place. It was impossible to rely
upon any determination by personal observation of the number of strokes
made by the engine. Watt therefore made a "counter," like that
now familiar to every one as used on gasmeters. It consists of a train
of wheels moving pointers on several dials, the first dial showing tens,
the second hundreds, the third thousands, etc., strokes or revolutions.
Motion was communicated to the train by means of a pen- dulum, the whole
being mounted on the beam of the engine where every vibration produced
a swing of the pendulum. Eight dials were sometimes used, the counter being
set and locked, and only opened once a year, when the time arrived for
determining the work done during the preceding twelve month.
The application of his engine to purposes for which careful adjustment
of speed was requisite, or where the load was subject to considerable variation,
led to the use of a controllingvalve in the steampipe, called the "
throttle valve," which was adjustable by hand, and permitted the supply
of steam to the engine to be adjusted at any instant and altered to any
desired extent. It is now given many forms, but it still is most usually
made just as originally designed by Watt. It consists of a circular disk,
which just closes the steampipe when set directly across it, of an elliptical
disk, which closes the pipe when standing at an angle of somewhat less
than 90° with the line of the pipe. This disk is carried on a spindle
extending through the pipe at one side, and carrying on its outer end an
arm by means of which it may be turned into any position. AZ hen placed
with its face in line with the pipc, it offers very little resistance to
the ilow of steam to the engine. When set in the other position, it shuts
off steam entirely an(l stops the engine. It is placed in such position
at any time, that the speed of the engine is just that required at the
time. In the engraving of the doubleacting engine with flywheel (Fig.
31), it is shown at T, as controlled by the governor.
The governor, or " flyball governor," as it is often

Fig. 29.The Governor.
distinctively called, w as another of Watt's minor but very essential
inventions. Two heavy iron or brass balls, B B', were suspended from pins,
C Ct', in a little crosspiece carried on the head of a vertical spindle,
A A', driven by the engine. The speed of the engine varying, that of the
spindle changed correspondingly, and the faster the balls were swung the
farther they separated. When the engine's speed decreased, the period of
revolution of the balls was increased, and they fell back toward the spindle.
Whenever the velocity of the engine was uniform, the balls preserved their
distance from the spindle and remained at the same height, their altitude
being determined by the relation existing between the force of gravity
and centrifugal force in the temporary position of equilibrium. The distance
from the point of suspension down to the level of the balls is always equal
to 9.78 inches divided by the square of the number of revolutions per secondi.
e., h = 9.78N,
The arms carrying the balls, or the balls themselves, are pinned to rods,
MMt, which are connected to a piece, MM', sliding loosely on the spindle.
A score, 7, cut in this piece engages a lever, V, and, as the balls rise
and fall, a rod, IV, is moved, closing and opening the throttlevalve,
and thus adjusting the supply of steam in such a way as to preserve a nearly
fixed speed of engine. The connection with the throttlevalve and with
the cutoff valvegear is seen not only in the engraving of the doubleacting
Watt engine, but also in those of the Greene and the Corliss engines. This
contrivance had previously been used in regulating waterwheels and windmills.
Watt's invention consisted in its application to the regulation of the
steamengine.
Still another useful invention of Watt's was his " mercury steamgauge
"a barometer in which the height of the mercury was determined
by the pressure of the steam instead of that of the atmosphere. This simple
instrument consisted merely of a bent tube containing a portion of mercury.
One leg, B D, of this tube was connected with the steampipe, or with the
boiler by a small steampipe; the other end, C, was open to the atmosphere.
The pressure of the steam on the mercury in B D caused it to rise in the
other " leg " to a height exactly proportioned to the pressure,
and causing very nearly two inches difference of level to the pound, or
one inch to the pound actual rise in the outer leg. The rude sketch from
Farey, here given (Fig. 30), indicates sufficiently well the form of this
gauge. It is still considered by engineers the most reliable of all forms
of steamgauge. Unfortunately, it is not conveniently applicable at high
pressure. The scale, A, is marked with numbers indicating the pressure,
which numbers are indicated by the head of a rod floating up with the mercury.
A similar gauge was used to determine the degree of perfection of vacuum
attained in the condenser, the mercury falling in the outer leg as the
vacuum became more complete. A perfect vacuum would cause a depression
of level in that leg to 30 inches below the level of the mercury in the
leg connected with the condenser. In a more usual form, it consisted of
a simple glass tube having its lower end immersed in a cistern of mercury,
as in the ordinary barometer, the top of the tube being connected with
a pipe leading to the condenser. With a perfect vacuum in the condenser,
the mercury would rise in the tube very nearly 30 inches. Ordinarily, the
vacuum is not nearly perfect, and, a back pressure remaining in the condenser
of one or two pounds per square inch, the atmospheric pressure remaining
unbalanced is only sufficient to raise the mercury 26 or 28 inches above
the level of the liquid metal in the cistern,

Fig. 30 Mercury SteamGauge. Glass WaterGauge.
To determine the height of water in his boiler, Watt added to the gaugecocks already long in use the "glass watergauge," which is still seen in nearly every wellarranged boiler. This was a glass tube, a a' (Fig. 30), mounted on a standard attached to the front of the boiler, and at such a height that its middle point was very little below the proposed waterlevel. It was connected by a small pipe, r, at the top to the steamspace, and another little pipe, r', led into the boiler from its lower end below the waterline. As the water rose and fell within the boiler, its level changed correspondingly in the glass. This little instrument is especially liked, because the position of the water is at all times shown to the eye of the attendant. If carefully protected against sudden changes of temperature, it answers perfectly well with even very high pressures.
The engines built by Boulton & Watt were finally fitted with the crank
and flywheel for application to the driving of mills and machinery. The
accompanying engraving (Fig. 31) shows the engine as thus made, combining
all of the essential improvements designed by its inventor.
In the engraving, C is the steamcylinder, P the piston, connected to the
beam by the link, g, and guided by the parallelmotion, ydc. At the opposite
end of the beam a connectingrod, O, connects with the crank and flywheel
shaft. R is the rod of the airpump, by means of which the condenser is
kept from being flooded by the water used for condensation, which watersupply
is regulated by an "injectionhandle," E. A pumprod, 1W, leads
down from the beam to the coldwater pump, hy which water is raised from
the well or other source to supply the needed injection water. The airpump
rod also serves as a "plugrod," to work the valves, the pins
at nz and R striking the lever, n, at either end of the stroke.
When the piston reaches the top of the cylinder, the lever, ne, is raised,
opening the steamvalve, B, at the top, and the exhaustvalve, X, at the
bottom, and at the same time closing the exhaust at the top and the steam
at the bottom. When the entrance of steam at the top and the removal of
steampressure below the piston has driven the piston to the bottom, the
pin, R, strikes the lever, m, opening the steam and closing the exhaust
valve at the bottom, and similarly reversing the position of the valves
at the top. The position of the valves is changed in this manner with every
reversal of the motion of the piston as the crank "turns over the
centre."

FIG. 31.Boulton N; Watt's Double-Acting Engine, 1754.
The earliest engines of the doubleacting kind, and of any considerable
size, which were built to turn a shaft, were those which were set up in
the Albion Mills, near Blackfriars' Bridge, London, in 178G, and destroyed
when the mills burned down in 1791. There were a pair of these engines
(shown in Fig. 27), of 50 horsepower each, and geared to drive 20 pairs
of stones, making fine flour and meal. Previous to the erection of this
mill the power in all such establishments had been derived from windmills
and waterwheels. This mill was erected by Boulton & Watt, and capitalists
working with them, not only to secure the profit anticipated from locating
a flourmil in the city of London, but also with a view to exhibiting
the capacity of the new doubleacting " rotating " engine. The
plan was proposed in 1783, and work was commenced in 1784; but the mill
was not set in operation until the spring of 1786. The capacity of the
mill was, in ordinary work, 16,000 bushels of wheat ground into fine flour
per week. On one occasion, the mill turned out 3,000 bushels in 24 hours.
In the construction of the machinery of the mill, many improvements upon
the then standard practice were introduced, including castiron gearing
with carefullyformed teeth and iron framing. It was here that John Rennie
commenced his work, after passing through his apprenticeship in Scotland,
sending his chief assistant, Ewart, to superintend the erection of the
milling machinery. The mill was a success as a piece of engineering, but
a serious loss was incurred by the capitalists engaged in the enterprise,
as it was set on fire a few years afterward and entirely destroyed. Boulton
and Watt w ere the principal losers, the former losing £6,000, and
the latter $3,000. The valvegear of this engine, a view of which is given
in Fig. 27, was quite similar to that used on the Watt pumpingengine The
accompanying illustration (Fig. 32) represents this salvemotion as attached
to the Albion Mills engine.
The steampipe, a b d d e, leads the steam from the boiler to the chambers,
b and e. The exhaustpipe, g g, leads from A and i to the condenser. In
the sketch, the upper steam and the lower exhaust vales, b and f, are opened,
and the steamvalve, e, and exhaustvalve, c, are closed, the piston being
near the upper end of the cylinder and descending. L represents the plugframe,
which carries tappets, 2 and 3, which engage the lever, .s, at either
end of its throw, and turn the shaft, thus opening and closing simultaneously
by means of the connectinglinks, 13 and 14. A similar pair of tappets
on the opposite side of the plugrod move the valves, b and f, by means
of the rods, 10 and 11, the arm, aa, when struck by those tappets, turning
the shaft, t, and thus moving the arms to which those rods are attached.
Counterbalance weights, carried on the ends of the arms, 4 and 15, retain
the valves on their seats when closed by the action of the tappets. When
the piston nearly reaches the lower end of the cylinder, the tappet, 1,

Fig. 32.ValveGear of the Albion Mills Engine.
engages the arm, a, closing the steamvalve, b and the next instant shutting the exhaustvalve, g. At the same time, the tappet, 3, by moving the arm, s, downward, opens the steamvalve, e, and the exhaustvalve, c. Steam now no longer issues from the steampipe into the space, c, and thence into the enginecylinder (not shown in the sketch); but it now enters the engine through the valve, e, forcing the piston G upwards. The exhaust is simultaneously made to occur at the upper end, the rejected steam passing from the engine into the space, c, and thence through c and the pipe, g, into the condenser.
This kind of valvegear was subsequently greatly improved by Murdoch, Watt's
ingenious and efficient foreman, but it is now entirely superseded on engines
of this class by the eccentric, and the various forms of valvegear driven
by it. The " trunkengine " was still another of the almost innumerable
inventions of Watt. A halftrunk engine is described in his patent of 1784,
as shown in the accompanying sketch (Fig. 33), in which A is the cylinder,
B the

Fig. 33.Watt's HalfTrunk Engine, 1784.
piston, and C its rod, encased in the halftrunk, D. The plugrod, G,
moves the single pair of valves by striking the catches, X and t as was
usual with Watt's earlier engines. Watt's steamhammer was patented at
the same time. It is seen in Fig. 34, in which A is the steamcylinder
and B its rod, the engine being evidently of the form just described. It
works a beam, C C, which in turn, by the rod,

FIG. 34.The Watt Hammer, 1784.
M, works the hammervalve, L J, and the hammer, L. The beam, X G, is
a spring, and the block, X the anvil.
Watt found it impossible to determine the duty of his engines at all times by measurement of the work itself, and endeavored to find a way of ascertaining the power produced, by ascertaining the pressure of steam within the cylinder. This pressure was so variable, and subject to such rapid as well as extreme fluctuations, that he found it impossible to make use of the steamgauge constructed for use on the boiler. He was thus driven to invent a special instrument for this work, which he called the "steamengine indicator." This consisted of a little steamcylinder containing a nicelyfitting piston, which moved without noticeable friction through a range which was limited by the compression of a helical spring, by means of which the piston was secured to the top of its cylinder. The distance through which the piston rose was proportional to the pressure exerted upon it, and a pointer attached to its rod traversed a scale upon which the pressure per square inch could be read. The lower end of the instrument being connected with the steamcylinder of the engine by a small pipe fitted with a cock, the opening of the latter permitted steam from the enginecylinder to fill the indicatorcylinder, and the pressure of steam was always the same in both cylinders. The indicatorpointer therefore traversed the pressurescale, always exhibiting the pressure existing at the instant in the cylinder of the engine.
When the engine was at rest and steam off, the indicator piston stood at the same level as when detached from the engine, and the pointer stood at 0 on the scale. When steam entered, the piston rose and fell with the fluctuations of pressure; and when the exhaustvalve opened, discharging the steam and producing a vacuum in the steamcylinder, the pointer of the indicator dropped below 0, showing the degree of exhaustion. Mr. Southern, one of Watt's assistants, fitted the instrument with a sliding board, moved horizontally backward and forward by a cord or linkwork connecting directly or indirectly with the enginebeam, and thus going it a motion coincident with that of the piston. This board carried a piece of paper, upon which a pencil attached to the indicator pistonrod drew a curve. The vertical height of any point on this curve above the base line measured the pressure in the cylinder at the moment when it was made, and the horizontal distance of the point from either end of the diagram determined the position, at the same moment, of the enginepiston. The curve thus inscribed, called the " indicator card," or indicator diagram, exhibiting every minute change in the pressure of steam in the engine, not only enabled the mean pressure and the power of the engine to be determined by its measurement, but, to the eye of the expert engineer, it was a perfectly legible statement of the position of the valves of the engine and revealed almost every defect in the action of the engine which could not readily be detected by external examination. It has justly been called the " engineers (1) stethoscope," opening the otherwise inaccessible parts of the steamengine to the inspection of the engineer even more satisfactorily than the stethoscope of the physician gives him a knowledge of the condition and working of organs contained within the human body. This indispensable and now familiar engineers' instrument has since been modified and greatly improved in detail.
The Watt engine had, by the construction of the improvements described
in the patents of 1782'8S, been given its distinctive form, and the great
inventor subsequently did little more than improve it by altering the forms
and proportions of its details. As thus practically completed, it embodied
nearly all the essential features of the modern engine; and, as we have
seen, the marked features of our latest practicethe use of the double
cylinder for expansion, the cutoff valvegear, and surfacecondensationhad
all been proposed, and to a limited extent introduced. The growth of the
steamengine has here ceased to be rapid, and the changes which followed
the completion of the work of James Watt have been minor improvements,
and rarely, if ever, real developments.
Watt's mind lost none of its activity, however, for many years. He devised
and patented a " smoke-consuming furnace," in which he led the
gases produced on the introduction of fresh fuel over the already incandescent
coal, and thus burned them completely. He used two fires, which were coaled
alternately. Even when busiest, also, he found time to pursue more purely
scientific studies. With Boulton, he induced a number of wellknown scientific
men living near Birmingham to join in the formation of a " Lunar Society,"
to meet monthly at the houses of its members, " at the full of the
moon." The time was thus fixed in order that those members who came
from a distance should be able to drive home, after the meetings, by moonlight.
Many such societies were then in existence in England; but that at Birmingham
was one of the largest and most distinguished of them all. Boulton, Watt,
Drs. Small, Darwin, and Priestley, were the leaders, and among their occasional
visitors were Herschel, Smeaton, and Banks. Watt called these meetings
"Philosophers' meetings." It was during the period of most active
discussion at the " philosophers' meetings " that Cavendish and
Priestley were experimenting with mixtures of oxygen and hydrogen, to determine
the nature of their combustion. Watt took much interest in the subject,
and, when informed by Priestley that he and Cavendish had both noticed
a deposit of moisture invariably succeeding the explosion of the mixed
gases, when contained in a cold vessel, and that the weight of this water
was approximately equal to the weight of the mixed gases, he at once came
to the conclusion that the union of hydrogen with oxygen produced water,
the latter being a chemical compound, of which the former were constituents.
He communicated this reasoning, and the conclusions to which it had led
him, to Boulton, in a letter written in December, 1782, and addressed a
letter some time afterward to Priestley, which was to have been read before
the Royal Society in April, 1783. The letter was not read, however, until
a year later, and, three months after, a paper by Cavendish, making the
same announcement, had been laid before the Society. Watt stated that both
Cavendish and Lavoisier, to whom also the discovery is ascribed, received
the idea from him.
The action of chlorine in bleaching organic coloring matters, by (as since
shown) decomposing them and combining with their hydrogen, was made known
to Watt by M. Berthollet, the distinguished French chemist, and the former
immediately introduced its use into Great Britain, by inducing his fatherinlaw,
Mr. MacGregor, to make a trial of it.
The copartnership of Boulton & Watt terminated by limitation, and with
the expiration of the patents under which they had been working, in the
first year of the present century; and both partners, now old and feeble,
withdrew from active business, leaving their sons to renew the agreement
and to carry on the business under the same firmstyle Boulton, however,
still interested himself in some branches of manufacture, especially in
his mint, where he had coined many years and for several nations
Watt retired, a little later, to Heathfield, where he passed the remainder
of his life in peaceful enjoyment of the society of his friends, in studies
of all current matters of interest in science, as well as in engineering
One by one his old friends diedBlack in 1799, Priestley, an exile
to America, in 1803, and Robinson a little later Boulton died, at the age
of eightyone, August 17, 1809, and even the loss of this nearest and dearest
of his friends outside the family was a less severe blow than that of his
son Gregory, who died in 1804
Yet the great engineer and inventor was not depressed by the loneliness
which was gradually coming upon him He wrote "I know that all men
must die, and I submit to the decrees of Nature, I hope, with due reverence
to the Disposer of events ;" and neglected no opportunity to secure
amusement or instruction, and kept body and mind constantly occupied He
still attended the weekly meetings of the club, meeting Rennie and Telford,
and other distinguished men of his own and the succeeding generation He
lost nothing of his fondness for invention, and spent many months in devising
a machine for copying statuary, which he had not perfected to his own satisfaction
at the time of his death, ten years later This machine was a kind of pentagraph,
which could be worked in any plane, and in which the markingpencil gave
place to a cuttingtool The tracingpoint followed the surface of the pattern,
while the cuttingpoint, following its motion precisely, formed a facsimile
in the material operated upon
In the year 1800 he invented the watermain which was laid down by the
Glasgow WaterWorks Company across the Clyde. The joints were spherical
and articulated, like those of the lobster's tail. His workshop, of which
a sketch is hereafter given, as drawn by the artist Skelton, was in the
garret of his house, and was well supplied with tools and all kinds of
laboratory material. His lathe and his copyingmachine were placed before
the window, and his writingdesk in the corner. Here he spent the greater
part of his leisure time, often even taking his meals in the little shop,
rather than go to the table for them. Even when very old, he occasionally
made a journey to London or Glasgow, calling on his old friends and studying
the latest engineering devices and inspecting public works, and was everywhere
welcomed by young and old as the greatest living engineer, or as the kind
and wise friend of earlier days. He died August 19, 1819, in the eightythird
year of his age, and was buried in Handsworth Church. The sculptor Chantrey
was employed to place a fitting monument above his grave, and the nation
erected a statue of the great man in Westminster Abbey.
This sketch of the greatest of all the inventors of the steamengine has
been given no greater length than its subject justifies. Whether we consider
Watt as the inventor of the standard steamengine of the nineteenth century,
as the scientific investigator of the physical principles upon which the
invention is based, or as the builder and introducer of the most powerful
known instrument by which the "great sources of power in Nature are
converted, adapted, and applied for the use and convenience of man>"
he is fully entitled to preeminence. His character as a man was no less
admirable than as an engineer. Smiles, Watt's most conscientious and indefatigable
biographer, writes: "Some months since, we visited the little garret
at Heathfield in which Watt pursued the investigations of his later years.
The room had been carefully locked

Fig. 35.-James Watt's Workshop. (From Smiles's "Lives
of Boulton and Watt.")
up since his death, and had only once been swept out. Everything lay very much as he left it. The piece of iron which he was last employed in turning, lay on the lathe. The ashes of the last fire were in the grate; the last bit of coal was in the scuttle. The Dutch oven was in its place over the stove, and the fryingpan in which he cooked his meals was hanging on its accustomed nail. Many objects lay about or in the drawers, indicating the pursuits which had been interrupted by deathbusts, medallions, and figures, waiting to be copied by the copyingmachine many medallionmoulds, a store of plasterofParis, and a box of plaster casts from London, the contents of which do not seem to have been disturbed. Here are Watt's ladles for melting lead, his footrule, his gluepot, his hammer. Reflecting mirrors, an extemporized camera with the lenses mounted on pasteboard, and many cameraglasses laid about, indicate interrupted experiments in optics. There are quadrantglasses, compasses, scales, weights, and sundry boxes of mathematical instruments, once doubtless highly prized.
In one place a model of the governor, in another of the parallelmotion, and in a little box, fitted with wooden cylinders mounted with paper and covered with figures, is what we suppose to be a model of his calculatingmachine. On the shelves are minerals and chemicals in pots and jars, on which the dust of nearly half a century has settled. The moist substances have long since dried up; the putty has been turned to stone, and the paste to dust. On one shelf we come upon a dish in which lies a withered bunch of grapes. On the floor, in a corner, near to where Watt sat and worked, is a hairtrunka touching memorial of a longpast love and a longdead sorrow. It contains all poor Gregory's schoolbooks, his first attempts at writing, his boy's drawings of battles, his first schoolexercises down to his collegethemes, his delectuses, his grammars, his dictionaries, and his classbooksbrought into this retired room, where the father's eye could rest upon them. Near at hand is the sculpturemachine, on which he continued working to the last. Its wooden frame is wormeaten, and dropping into dust, like the hands that made it. But though the great workman is gone to rest, with all his griefs and cares, and his handiwork is fast crumbling to decay, the spirit of his work, the thought which he put into his inventions, still survives, and will probably continue to influence the destinies of his race for all time to come."
The visitor to Westminster Abbey will find neither monarch, nor warrior,
nor statesman, nor poet, honored with a nobler epitaph than that which
is inscribed on the pedestal of Chantrey's monument to Watt:
NOT TO PERPETUATE A NAME,
WHICH MUST ENDURE WHILE THE PEACEFUL ARTS FLOURISH,
BUT TO SHOW
THAT MANKIND HAVE LEARNT TO HONOR TH0SE WHO BEST
DESERVE THEIR
GRATITUDE,
THE KING
HIS MINISTERS, AND MANY OF THE NOBLES AND COMMONERS
OF THE REALM,
RAISED THIS MONUMENT TO
JAMES WATT,
WHO, DIRECTING THIE FORCE OF AN ORIGINAL GENIUS,
EARLY EXERCISED IN PHILOSOPHIC RESEARCH,
TO THE IMPROVEMENT OF
THE STEAMENGINE,
ENLARGED THE RESOURCES OF HlS COUNTRY, INCREASED
THE POWER OF MAN,
AND ROSE TO AN EMINENT PLACE
AMONG TRE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS FOLLOWERS OF SCIENCE AND THE REAL
BENEFACTORS OF THE WORLD.
BORN AT GREENOCE, IUDCCXXXVI.
DIED AT BEATRFIELD, IN STAFFORDSHIRE, MDCCCXIX.

Tomb of James Watt.
SECTION II.THE CONTEMPORARIES OF JAMES WATT.
In the chronology of the steamengine, the contemporaries of Watt have been so completely overshadowed by the greater and more successful inventor, as to have been almost forgotten by the biographer and by the student of history. Yet, among the engineers and enginebuilders, as well as among the inventors of his day, Watt found many enterprising rivals and keen competitors. Some of these men, had they not been so completely fettered by Watt's patents, would have probably done work which would have entitled them to far higher honor than has been accorded them.
WILLIAM MURDOCH was one of the men to whom Watt, no less than the world,
+sas greatly indebted. For many years he was the assistant, friend, and
coadjutor of Watt; and it is to his ingenuity that we are to give credit
for not only many independent inventions, but also for the suggestions
and improvements which were often indispensable to the formation and perfection
of some of Watt's own inventions.
Murdoch was employed by Boulton & Watt in 1776, and was made superintendent
of construction in the engine department, and given general charge of the
erection of engines. He was sent into Cornwall, and spent in that district
much of the time during which he served the firm, erecting pumpingengines,
the construction of which for so many years constituted a large part of
the business of the Soho establishment. He was looked upon by both Boulton
and Watt as a sincere friend, as well as a loyal adherent, and from 1810
to 1830 was given a partner's share of the income of the firm, and a salary
of £1,000. He retired from business at the last of the two dates
named, and, dying in 1839, was buried near the two partners in Handsworth
Church.
Murdoch made a model, in 1784, of the locomotive patented by Watt in that
year. He devised the arrangement of "sunandplanet wheels,"
adopted for a time in all of Watt's " rotative " engines, and
invented the oscillating steamengine (Fig. 3G) in 1785, using the "
Dslide valves," G, moved by the gear, E, which was driven by an eccentric
on the shaft, without regard to the oscillation of the cylinder, A. He
was the inventor of a rotary engine and of many minor machines for special
purposes, and of many machinetools used at Soho in building engines and
machines. He seems, like Watt, to have had special fondness for the wormgear,
and introduced it wherever it could properly take the place of ordinary
gearing.
Some of the machines designed by Watt and Murdoch, who always worked
well together, were found still in use and in good working condition by
the author when visiting the works at Soho in 1873. The old mint in which,
from 1797 to 1805, Boulton had coined 4,000 tons of copper, had then been
pulled down, and a new mint had been erected in 1860. Many old machines
still remained about the establishment as souvenirs of the three great
mechanics.

Fig. 36.Murdoch s Oscillating Engine, 1785.
Outside of Soho, Murdoch also found ample employment for his inventive talent. In 1792, which at Redruth, his residence before finally returning to Soho, he was led to speculate upon the possibility of utilizing the illuminating qualities of coalgas, and, convinced of its practicability, he laid the subject before the Royal Society in 1808, and was awarded the Rumford gold medal. He had, ten years earlier, lighted a part of the Soho works with coalgas, and in 1803 Watt authorized him to extend his pipes throughout all the buildings. Several manufacturers promptly introduced the new light, and its use extended very rapidly.
Still another of Murdoch's favorite schemes was the transmission of power
by the use of compressed air. He drove the patternshop engine at Soho
by means of air from the blowingengine in the foundery, and erected a
pneumatic lift to elevate castings from the foundery-floor to the canal
bank. He made a steamgun, introduced the heating of buildings by the circulation
of hot water, and invented the method of transmitting packages through
tubes by the impulse of compressed air, as now practiced by the "pneumatic
dispatch " companies. He died at the age of eighty-five years.
Among the most active and formidable of Watt's business rivals was JONATHAN
HORNBLOWER, the patentee of the " compound " or doublecylinder
engine. A sketch of this engine, as patented by Hornblower in 1781 is here
given (Fig. 37). It was first described by the inventor in the " Encyclop
edia Britannica." It consists, as is seen by reference to the engraving,
of two steamcylinders, A and BA being the low and B the high pressure
cylinderthe steam leaving the latter being exhausted into the former,
and, after doing its work there, passing into the condenser, as already
described. The pistonrods, C and 1), are both connected to the same part
of the beam by chains, as in the other early engines. These rods pass through
stuffingboxes in the cylinderheads, which are fitted up like those seen
on the Watt engine. Steam is led to the engine through the pipe, S Y, and
cocks, a, b, c, and d, are adjustable, as required, to lead steam into
and from the cylinders, and are moved by the plugrod, W, which actuates
handles not shown. K is the exhaustpipe leading to the condenser. V is
the engine feedpump rod, and X the great rod carrying the pumpbuckets
at the bottom of the shaft.
The cocks c and a being open and b and d shut, the steam passes from the
boiler into the upper part of the steamcylinder, B; and the communication
between the lower part of B and the top of A is also open. Before starting,
steam being shut off from the engine, the great weight of the pumprod,
X, causes that end of the beam to preponderate, the pistons standing, as
shown, at the top of their respeetive steamcylinders.
The engine being freed from all air by opening all the valves and permitting
the steam to drive it through the engine and out of the condenser through
the " sniftingvalve," O, the valves b and d are closed, and
the cock in the exhaustpipe opened.
The steam beneath the piston of the large cylinder is immediately condensed,
and the pressure on the upper side

Fig. 37.Hornblower's Compound Engine, 1781.
of that piston causes it to descend, carrying that end of the beam with it, and raising the opposite end with the pumprods and their attachments. At the same time, the steam from the lower end of the small highpressure cylinder being let into the upper end of the larger cylinder, the completion of the stroke finds a cylinder full of steam transferred from the one to the other with corresponding increase of volume and decrease of pressure. While expanding and diminishing in pressure as it passes from the smaller into the larger cylinder, this charge of steam gradually resists less and less the pressure of the steam from the boiler on the upper side of the piston of the small cylinder, B, and the net result is the movement of the engine by pressures exerted on the upper sides of both pistons and against pressures of less intensity on the under sides of both. The pressures in the lower part of the small cylinder, in the upper part of the large cylinder, and in the communicating passage, are evidently all equal at any given time.
When the pistons have reached the bottoms of their respective cylinders,
the valves at the top of the small cylinder, B, and at the bottom of the
large cylinder, A, arc closed, and the valves c and cl are opened. Steam
from the boiler now enters beneath the piston of the small cylinder; the
steam in the larger cylinder is exhausted into the condenser, and the steam
already in the small cylinder passes over into the large cylinder, following
up the piston as it rises.
Thus, at each stroke a small cylinder full of steam is taken from the boiler,
and the same weight, occupying the volume of the larger cylinder, is exhausted
into the condenser from the latter cylinder.
Referring to the method of operation of this engine, Prof. Robinson demonstrated
that the effect produced was the same as in Watt's singlecylinder enginea
fact which is comprehended in the law enunciated many years later by Rankine,
that, " so far as the theoretical action of the steam on the piston
is concerned, it is immaterial whether the expansion takes place in one.
cylinder, or in two or more cylinders." It was found, in practice,
that the Hornblower engine was no more economical than the Watt engine;
and that erected at the Tin Croft Mine, Cornwall, in 1799, did even less
work with the same fuel than the Watt engines.
Hornblower was prosecuted by Boulton & Watt for infringement. The suit
was decided against him, and he was imprisoned in default of payment of
the royalty, and fine demanded. He died a disappointed and impoverished
man. The plan thus unsuccessfully introduced by Hornblower was subsequently
modified and adopted by others among the contemporaries of Watt; and, with
higher steam and the use of the Watt condenser, the " compound "
gradually became a standard type of steamengine.
Arthur Woolf, in 1804, reintroduced the Hornblower or Falck engine, with
its two steamcylinders, using steam of higher tension. His first engine
was built for a brewery in London, and a considerable number were subsequently
made. Woolf expanded his steam from six to nine times, and the pumpingengines
built from his plans were said to have raised about 40,000,000 pounds one
foot high per bushel of coals, when the Watt engine was raising but little
more than 30,000,000. In one case, a duty of 57,000,000 was claimed.
The most successful of those competitors of Watt who endeavored to devise
a peculiar form of pumping engine, which should have the efficiency of
that of Boulton & Watt, and the necessary advantage in first cost,
were WILLIAM BULL and RICHARD TREVITHICK. The accompanying illustration
shows the design, which was then known as the "Bull Cornish Engine."
The steamcylinder, a, is carried on wooden beams, b, extending across
the enginehouse directly over the pumpwell. The pistonrod, c, is secured
to the pumprods, d d, the cylinder being inverted, and the pumps, e, in
the shaft, f, are thus operated without the intervention of the beam invariably
seen in Watt's engines. A connectingrod, g, attached to the pumprod and
to the end of a balancebeam, A, operates the letter, and is counterbalanced
by a weight, z. The rod, .j, serves both as a plugrod and as an airpump
connectingrod. A sniftingvalve, k, opens
l For an exceedingly interesting and very faithful account
of their work, see " Life of Richard Trevithick," by F. Trevithick,
London, 1872.
when the engine is blown through, and relieves the condenser and airpump,
I, of all air. The rod, m, operates a

Fig. 38.-Bull's Pumping Engine, 1798.
solid airpump piston, the valves of the pump being placed on either side at the base, instead of in the pumpbucket, as in Watt's engincs. The condensingwater cistern was a wooden tank, 91. A jet " pipecondenser," o, was used instead of a jet condenser of the form adopted by other makers, and was supplied with water through the cock, p. The plugrod, 'l, as it rises and falls with the pumprods and balancebeam, operates the " gearhandles," 99; and opens and closes the valves, s s, at the required points in the stroke. The attendant works these valves by hand, in starting, from the floor, t. The operation of the engine is similar to that of a W att engine. It is still in use, with a few modifications and improvements, and is a very economical and durable machine. It has not been as generally adopted, however, as it would probably have been had not the legal proscription of Watt's patents so seriously interfered with its introduction. Its simplicity and lightness are decided advantages, and its desig,tners are entitled to great credit for their boldness and ingenuity, as displayed in their application of the minor devices which distinguish the engine. The design is probably to be credited to Bull originally; but Trevithick built some of these engines, and is supposed to have greatly improved them while working with Edward Bull, the son of the inventor, William Bull. One of these engines was erected by them at the Herland Mine, Cornwall, in 1798, which had a steamcylinder 60 inches in diameter, and was built on the plan just described.
Another of the contemporaries of James Watt was a clergyman, EDWARD CARTWRIGHT,
the distinguished inventor of the powerloom, and of the first machine
ever used in combing wool, who revived Watt's plan of surfacecondensation
in a somewhat modified form. Watt had made a " pipecondenser,"
similar in plan to those now often used, but had simply immersed it in
a tank of water, instead of in a constantlyflowing stream. Cartwright
proposed to use two concentric cylinders or spheres, between which the
steam entered when exhausted from the cylinder of the engine, and was condensed
by contact with the metal surfaces. Cold water within the smaller and surrounding
the exterior vessel kept the metal cold, and absorbed the heat discharged
by the condensing vapor.
Cartwright's engine is best described in the Philosophical lMagazineof
June, 1798, from which the accompanying sketch is copied.

Fig. 89.Cartwright's Engine, 1793.
The object of the inventor is stated to have been to remedy the defects of the Watt engineimperfect vacuum, friction, and complication.
In the figure, the steamcylinder takes steam through the pipe, B. The
piston, R, has a rod extending downward to the smaller pumppiston, G,
and upward to the crosshead, which, in turn, drives the cranks above,
by means of connectingrods. The shafts thus turned are connected by a
pair of gears, ML, of which one drives a pinion on the shaft of the flywheel.
19 is the exhaust pipe leading to the condenser, F; and the pump, G, removes
the air and water of condensation, forcing it into the hotwell, EL, whence
it is returned to the boiler through the pipe, (1): A float in ff adjusts
an airvalve, so as to keep a supply of air in the chamber, to serve as
a cushion and to make an airchamber of the reservoir, and permits the
excess to escape. The large tank contains the water supplied for condensing
the steam. The piston, R, is made of metal, and is packed with two sets
of cut metal rings, forced out against the sides of the cylinder by steel
springs, the rings being cut at three points in the circumference, and
kept in place by the springs. The arrangement of the two cranks, with their
shafts and gears, is intended to supersede Watt's plan for securing a perfectly
rectilinear movement of the head of the piston-rod, without friction.
In the accounts given of this engine, great stress is laid upon the supposed important advantage here offered, by the introduction of the surfacecondenser, of permitting the employment of a workingfluid other than steamas, for example, alcohol, which is too valuable to be lost. It was proposed to use the engine in connection with a still, and thus to effect great economy by making the fuel do double duty. The only part of the plan which proved both novel and valuable was the metallic packing and piston, which has not yet been superseded. The engine itself never came into use.
At this point, the history of the steamengine becomes the story of its
applications in several different directions, the most important of which
are the raising of waterwhich had hitherto been its only applicationthe
locomotiveengine, the driving of millmachinery, and steamnavigation.
Here we take leave of James Watt and of his contemporaries, of tlle former
of whom a French author (1) says: "The part whiell he played in the
mechanical applications of the power of steam can only be compared to that
of Newton in astronomy and of Shakespeare in poetry." Since the time
of Watt, improvements have bcen made principally in matters of mere detail,
and in the extension of the range of application of the steamengine.
1 Bataille, " Traite des Machines a Vapeur," Paris, 1847.