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When was the first railroad built in Europe?

Salomon Mayer von Rothschild funded the first major steam railway to be built in continental Europe, the Kaiser Ferdinands Nordbahn, which opened in 1839. The Nordbahn was Austria's first steam railway company. The first track was built between Floridsdorf and Deutsch Wagram in 1837.



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1828 – Railway (horse-drawn carriage) Ceské Budejovice – Linz, first public railway in continental Europe, with length 120 km and rail gauge 1,106 mm (3 ft 7 1/2 in), section Ceské Budejovice – Kerschbaum put into operation on 30 September 1828.

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In 1804, the first steam locomotive railway, the Penydarren, was built by the British engineer Richard Trevithick and was used to haul iron from Merthyr Tydfil to Abercynon in Wales.

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The railroad was first developed in Great Britain. A man named George Stephenson successfully applied the steam technology of the day and created the world's first successful locomotive.

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The Middleton Railway in Leeds, which was built in 1758, later became the world's oldest operational railway (other than funiculars), albeit now in an upgraded form. In 1764, the first railway in America was built in Lewiston, New York.

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The Middleton Railway is the world's oldest continuously working railway, situated in the English city of Leeds. It was founded in 1758 and is now a heritage railway, run by volunteers from The Middleton Railway Trust Ltd. since 1960. Main station building on Moor Road.

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The U.S.'s first transcontinental railroad was built between 1863 and 1869 to join the eastern and western halves of the United States. Begun just before the American Civil War, its construction was considered to be one of the greatest American technological feats of the 19th century.

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The first railroad built in Great Britain to use steam locomotives was the Stockton and Darlington, opened in 1825. It used a steam locomotive built by George Stephenson and was practical only for hauling minerals. The Liverpool and Manchester Railway, which opened in 1830, was the first modern railroad.

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The first steam locomotives originated in Great Britain at the dawn of the 19th century. Though the earliest steam-powered locomotives first pulled wagons full of coal, they would soon be engineered to accommodate their first passengers.

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London Underground In 1890, it became the world's first metro system when electric trains began operating on one of its deep-level tube lines. It is the world's third longest metro system, spanning 402km with 270 stations across its 11 lines.

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The first railway line in the world dates back to 1825, when George Stephenson connected the towns of Stockton and Darlington in England by rail. The line was intended to transport coal. The wagons were pulled by steam engines.

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On February 21, 1804, Richard Trevithick's unnamed steam locomotive hauled a train with five loaded cars along the tramway of the Penydarren Ironworks, in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales. Richard Trevithick (1771 – 1833) was a British inventor and mining engineer from Cornwall, England.

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When Britain declared war on Germany in 1914, trains efficiently moved huge numbers of troops and equipment between the Home Front and France. Trains also transported rations, water and coal across Britain and continental Europe in a way not previously possible during conflict.

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1841. Leipzig Bayerischer Bahnhof (Leipzig Bavarian station), designed by the architect Plötsch is Germany's oldest preserved railway station.

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Americans have been using railroads since the 1820s! Most of the early locomotives in America were imported from Great Britain, although the United States was quick to form a locomotive manufacturing industry of its own. American production of locomotives got off the ground in the early 1830s.

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Soon joining the B & O as operating lines were the Mohawk and Hudson, opened in September 1830, the Saratoga, opened in July 1832, and the South Carolina Canal and Rail Road Company, whose 136 miles of track, completed to Hamburg, constituted, in 1833, the longest steam railroad in the world.

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