Exploding Steamboats, Senate Debates, and Technical Reports: The Convergence of Technology, Politics, and Rhetoric in the Steamboat Bill of 1838

Exploding Steamboats, Senate Debates, and Technical Reports: The Convergence of Technology, Politics, and Rhetoric in the Steamboat Bill of 1838

by R. John Brockmann
Exploding Steamboats, Senate Debates, and Technical Reports: The Convergence of Technology, Politics, and Rhetoric in the Steamboat Bill of 1838

Exploding Steamboats, Senate Debates, and Technical Reports: The Convergence of Technology, Politics, and Rhetoric in the Steamboat Bill of 1838

by R. John Brockmann

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Overview

By 1838, over two thousand Americans had been killed and many hundreds injured by exploding steam engines on steamboats. After calls for a solution in two State of the Union addresses, a Senate Select Committee met to consider an investigative report from the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, the first federally funded investigation into a technical.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780895032669
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 06/15/2002
Series: Baywood's Technical Communications
Pages: 147
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

CHAPTER 1. Steamboat Politics and Steamboat Society
New York Harbor, May 15, 1824, 7:00 PM
Four Days Later—Washington City, May 19, 1824

CHAPTER 2. Steamboat Technology
High-Pressure Steam Engines and Hulls that Ride On the Water
What Could Go Wrong with the Boiler Technology
Problems Operating a Problem-Prone Technology
February 24, 1830, Memphis Tennessee, Early Morning
Washington City, May 4, 1830—Two and a Half Months Later

CHAPTER 3. Steamboats, The Presidency, and Public Opinion
Red River, May 19, 1833, Early on a Spring Sunday Morning
December 3, 1833—President Jackson’s State of the Union Message to Congress
But What About the Public Pressure for Steamboat Safety?
The Franklin Institute Reports—A Reasoned Technical Response to Catastrophe
Traditional Technical Writing of the Era—Communications Received by the Committee of
the Franklin Institute on the Explosion of Steam Boilers (1832)
Report of the Committee of the Franklin Institute of the State of Pennsylvania for the
Promotion of the Mechanic Arts, on the Explosions of Steam-Boilers, Part I, Containing
the First Report of Experiments Made by the Committee for the Treasury Department of
the U. States (1836)
General Report on the Explosions of Steam-Boilers by a Committee of the Franklin Institute
of the State of Pennsylvania for the Promotion of the Mechanic Arts (1837)
Report of the Committee of the Franklin Institute of the State of Pennsylvania for the
Promotion of the Mechanic Arts, on the Explosions of Steam-Boilers Made at the
Request of the Treasury Department of the United States, Part II, Containing the Report
of the Sub-Committee to Whom Was Referred the Examination of the Strength of
Materials Employed in the Construction of Steam Boilers (1837)
Contemporaneous Reactions to the Institute Reports in the Scientific Community: Hales’s
Open Letter to Grundy, Locke’s Cincinnati Report, and Steam Textbooks by Renwick
and Ward
Contemporaneous Reactions to Institute’s Reports by Those Most Directly Involved:
Steamboat Inspectors, Engineers, and Firemen

The Gold Dust Fire
Chapter 37. The End of the “Gold Dust”
Chapter 20. A Catastrophe

CHAPTER 4. Steamboat Politics and Rhetoric
May 11, 1837, Thirty Miles South of Natchez
A Brief Coincidence of Political Interests
The Select Committee
The Initial Proposed Bill in December 1837
The Bill Reported Out of Committee

CHAPTER 5. The Law Didn’t Work

GLOSSARY
APPENDIX 1. Comparing the Four Legislative Attempts
INDEX

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