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weekend break sidmouth devon
Meadowlands
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Thomas Newcomen Inventor 1663-1729

Born in Dartmouth in 1663, Thomas Newcomen made a significant contribution to the industrial revolution with his invention of the atmospheric engine.

By 1685 Newcomen had established himself as an ironmonger in his hometown.Some of his biggest customers were the mine owners in Cornwall, who faced considerable difficulties with flooding, as the mines became progressively deeper.

The standard methods to remove the water - manual pumping, or teams of horses hauling buckets on a rope - were slow and expensive, and they were looking for an alternative. In 1712 Newcomen invented the world's first successful atmospheric steam engine. The engine pumped water using a vacuum created by condensed steam.

It became an important method of draining water from deep mines and was therefore a vital component in the Industrial Revolution in Britain.

Newcomen's invention enabled mines to be drained to greater depths than had previously been economically possible and so helped provide the coal, iron and other metals that were vital to the expansion of industry.

The atmospheric engine can, with some justification, claim to be the single most important invention of the Industrial Revolution. While it had an efficiency of only one per cent, it was cheaper than using horses to power a pump.

Newcomen's first working engine was installed at a coal mine at Dudley Castle in Staffordshire in 1712. It had a cylinder 21 inches in diameter and nearly eight feet long, and it worked at twelve strokes a minute, raising ten gallons of water from a depth of 156 feet.

The engines were rugged and reliable and worked day and night - a factor which made them phenomenally successful.By the time Thomas Newcomen died in 1729 there were at least 100 of his engines working in Britain and across Europe. They were used throughout the eighteenth century and were still influential into the twentieth.

One engine in Pentich was still operating 127 years after it was first installed.However, Newcomen didn't die a wealthy man. He received little credit for his invention, most of the limelight falling onto James Watt who refined Newcomen's idea.

The principle was used in the following century to create the 'Atmospheric Railway' where a train ran along lines, being propelled by the pressure difference created in a tube connected to steam engine houses along the route.

Sir Walter Ralegh Seafarer/Explorer 1554 - 1618

East Budleigh's most famous son, Sir Walter Ralegh (also spelt Raleigh), lived a very full life.Born in 1554, he was destined for fame and fortune and, ultimately...the chop.His main occupation was as a seafarer and explorer, but he wasn't averse to the odd bit of piracy.

He managed to wangle his way into Queen Elizabeth I's favoured circle. The Queen saw use of him as a politician and sent him to Ireland to suppress an uprising.He once, famously - according to legend - laid down his cloak so the Queen did not have to step into a muddy puddle. But it was his trip to the New World in 1585 which really endeared him to the Queen. His ship landed on the east coast of America, and Ralegh named the area Virginia, after the Virgin Queen.

Following his expeditions, he returned with tobacco and potatoes - which he took great delight in presenting to the Queen, who knighted him.

Ralegh apparently believed that smoking tobacco was a cure for coughing!

weekend break sidmouth devon