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・ North River (North Carolina)
・ North River (Ontario)
・ North River (Slate River)
・ North River (South Fork Shenandoah River)
・ North River (St. Marys River)
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North River Steamboat
・ North River Terminal
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・ North River, Nova Scotia
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North River Steamboat : ウィキペディア英語版
North River Steamboat

The ''North River Steamboat'' or ''North River'' (often erroneously referred to as ''Clermont'') is widely regarded as the world's first commercially successful steamboat. Built in 1807, the ''North River Steamboat'' operated on the Hudson River (at that time often known as the North River) between New York and Albany. She was the first vessel to demonstrate the viability of using steam propulsion for commercial river transportation. She was built by the wealthy investor and politician Robert Livingston and inventor and entrepreneur Robert Fulton (1765–1815).
==Background==
Livingston had obtained from the New York legislature the exclusive right to steam navigation on the Hudson River. In 1803, while Livingston was Minister to France, Fulton built a small steamboat and tested it on the Seine. With this success, Livingston then contracted with Fulton to take advantage of his Hudson River monopoly and build a larger version for commercial service.
Their larger steamer was built at the Charles Browne shipyard in New York and was fitted with Fulton's innovative steam engine design, manufactured for Livingston and Fulton by Boulton and Watt in Birmingham, England. Before she was later widened, the vessel's original dimensions were long x wide x deep; she drew a little more than of water when launched. The steamer was equipped with two paddle wheels, one each to a side, each paddle wheel assembly was equipped with two sets of eight spokes. She also carried two masts with spars, rigging, and sails, likely a foremast with square sail and a mizzen mast with fore-and-aft sail (spanker), with the steam engine placed amidships, directly behind the paddle wheel's drive gear machinery.
Skeptics at the time ridiculed the venture, often referring to the steamboat as "Fulton's Folly" before she was launched. Livingston and Fulton quickly silenced their critics: "She moves! She moves!" people exclaimed in awe when they saw the boat moving against the river current; no mention of "Fulton's Folly" was made thereafter.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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