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A 19th Century engraving of the Blücher | |
| Power type | Steam |
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| Builder | George Stephenson |
| Build date | 1814 |
| Gauge | 4 ft 8 in |
| Locomotive weight | 6 tons |
| Boiler | 863 mm dia × 2.43 m long |
| Cylinder size | 203 mm dia × 609 mm stroke |
| Career | Killingworth Colliery |
Blücher was an early railway locomotive built in 1814 by George Stephenson for Killingworth Colliery.
Blücher was the first successful locomotive incorporating the following design features:
Blücher had the ability to pull a train of 30 tons at a speed of 4 mph. It was named after the Prussian general Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, who, after a speedy march, arrived in time to the battle of Waterloo and helped defeat Napoleon.
Stephenson was not satisfied with the Blücher’s performance, but the lessons learned from its design allowed him to develop the steam blast, which allowed exhaust steam to go up the chimney, pulling air behind it and increasing draught. This greatly improved performance on subsequent models.
Blücher did not survive: Stephenson recycled its parts as he developed more advanced models.
| Pre-1830 steam locomotives |
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| "Pen-y-darren" (1804) • Catch Me Who Can (1808) • The Salamanca (1812) • Puffing Billy, Wylam Dilly (1813) • Blücher (1814) • Locomotion No. 1 (1825) • Stourbridge Lion (1828) • Novelty, Sans Pareil, Rocket, Perseverance (1829) |
| See also: Rainhill Trials • History of rail transport in Great Britain to 1830 |
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