Evolution of Urban Transportation: Public Transportation Before The Nineteenth Century
Evolution of Urban Transportation: Public Transportation Before The Nineteenth Century
Evolution of Urban Transportation: Public Transportation Before The Nineteenth Century
The first civilian conveyance started with the exchange of goods. This
happened either when a surplus in produce was generated which allowed
them to trade this for other commodities or when there was a deficiency of
any resource, but they were available at other places. As this exchange
intensified, trade routes and markets started to form. Along these routes,
other facilities and services for goods transportation started to develop.
The steam engine invented by James Watt in 1765 is marked as the start of the
industrial era. Earlier people mostly lived in rural areas and employment was
mostly in agriculture, but the industrial revolution came by a new labor
division was introduced in industries. As industrial production increased, a
larger surplus for trade was now available and wide distribution of these goods
started. By the conclusion of the eighteenth century, international trade
centers such as London, New York, Berlin, Paris, etc grew rapidly. New
employment opportunities offered by these cities attracted the rural
population. This caused the shifting of the focus of the economy from
agriculture to manufacturing industries and administrative sectors. Along with
this shift, a large part of the population moved from rural to urban areas, this is
known as urbanization.
The invention of the railway by George Stephenson in England in 1825 was a
major event. This increased the growth rate of cities and industrial processes.
Thus the limit on the size of the city due to the transport service capacity was
mostly waived off. As the cities grew, it became increasingly important to
invent new urban transport modes for internal travel.
Public Transportation before the Nineteenth Century
Ferries were used considerably in late medieval (1300 to 1500 AD) commercial
centers such as Venice and London. During the sixteenth century, many
organized forms of inter-urban public transportation were developed, such as
The Posting System. The posting system provided horse-drawn vehicles to
travel along highways between two posting points. Stage wagons were in use,
mainly for the movement of commodities on fixed routes in the sixteenth
century. Another such example is Stagecoach services which were relatively
faster but carried mail and passengers only.
During the seventeenth century, these organized forms were adopted for
intra-urban transportation. Three examples of the intra-urban transport modes
were Coaches, Sedan Chair, and public coach service.
1. Coaches are the ancestor of the modern taxicabs. They were first used in
London around the 1600s for movement within urban areas and were
introduced in Paris in 1612 as a Fiacre.
2. The sedan chair consisted of a windowed cabin. They were moved
through the streets by porters, known as chair-men in London. This was
a significant mode of intra-urban transport during the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries in larger European cities. These could be seen in
Paris around 1617 and in London in 1634 and existed till 1821.
3. The public coach system was the ancestor of modern forms of urban
transit systems. These operated on fixed routes. These were first
introduced by Blaise Pascal in Paris in 1662 and they were operational
for almost 20 years.
Though these services were called common transport, but only the wealthy
could afford them. The public transport systems that would favor the larger
sections of the public developed during the nineteenth century.
Horse-Drawn Omnibuses
The horse-drawn omnibus was the immediate predecessor of the
stagecoaches, though omnibuses had higher passenger capacity. Though
stagecoaches used to operate in London around 1798, it was in France, where
these were first used for intracity transport became known as “omnibus”.
Stanislaus Baudry was the first to introduce these in Nantes in 1826, in
Bordeaux in 1827, and Paris in 1828 on 10 fixed routes. George shillibeer
introduced the omnibus service in London in 1829. Initially, He was not
allowed to stop and wait for passengers where most of the hackney coaches
operated, but after the London hackney-coach monopoly was lifted in 1832 the
omnibuses were allowed to operate as a mode of transit.
By the middle third of the nineteenth century, omnibus had a commanding
position in urban transit because of their operating flexibility.
Horse-drawn Tramways
Horse-tram or horsecar was an omnibus running on rails. As the horsecar ran
over smooth rail instead of irregular cobblestones, it had low rolling resistance,
and the size of the wheel didn’t affect the vehicular attributes. As the wheel
size was small, the car could be built of lower height and wider body. Hence,
horsecar made more effective use of horsepower, had a high capacity, and was
more comfortable.
The first horse-drawn tramway started in New York in 1832, but they started to
be seen in the 1850s in other cities of America. The horse tramway
development was severely restricted in European cities. Britain had tramway
legislation that prohibited the private construction of the tramways.
In any case, the horse tramway development was more profound in the united
states instead of Europe. The street characteristics of cities in America put
tramway in advantage, but the European medieval streets which were narrow
and winding put omnibus at an advantage.