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Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891 by Various
page 46 of 147 (31%)
[Footnote 1: Abstract from the History of the Camden and Amboy
Railroad. By J. Elfreth Watkins, of the National Museum,
Washington, D.C.]


Early in October, 1830, and shortly after the surveys of the Camden
and Amboy Railroad were completed, Robert L. Stevens (born 1787)
sailed for England, with instructions to order a locomotive and rails
for that road.

At that time no rolling mill in America was able to take a contract
for rolling T rails.

Robert Stevens advocated the use of an all-iron rail in preference to
the wooden rail or stone stringer plated with strap iron, then in use
on one or two short American railroads. At his suggestion, at the last
meeting held before he sailed, after due discussion, the Board of
Directors of the Camden and Amboy Railroad passed a special resolution
authorizing him to obtain the rails he advocated.


ROBERT L. STEVENS INVENTS THE AMERICAN RAIL AND SPIKE.

During the voyage to Liverpool he whiled away the hours on shipboard
by whittling thin wood into shapes of imaginary cross sections until
he finally decided which one was best suited to the needs of the new
road.

He was familiar with the Berkenshaw rail, with which the best English
roads were then being laid, but he saw that, as it required an
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