HALL OF FAME / inventor profile

Robert Fulton
Born Nov 14 1765 - Died Feb 24 1815

Steamboat
Patented February 11 1809

Inducted 2006

Robert Fulton designed and operated the world’s first commercially successful steamboat. Fulton’s Clermont made its historic first run in August 1807 on the Hudson River.

Invention Impact

One of many would-be steamboat inventors of his day, Fulton spent months assessing existing ideas and finding the ideal combination that would set his steamboat apart. His first prototype broke in half and sank in 1803. Numerous design changes and additional months’ work brought success in 1807.

The Clermont carried sixty passengers who each paid five cents per mile. It had a long and narrow hull, two paddle wheels twelve feet in diameter, a twenty-four-horse power steam engine designed and built by James Watt, and a twenty-foot copper boiler. Targeting customers willing to pay a premium for speed, Fulton’s steamboat earned a handsome profit in its first year and won public acceptance for steamboat travel.

Inventor Bio

Born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Fulton was apprenticed to a jeweler at age fifteen, and worked in England as a portraitist before turning to inventing. In 1802, after a submarine he designed for France’s Napoleon failed, Fulton met Robert R. Livingston, a wealthy American statesman fascinated with steamboats. Fulton agreed to build a steamboat that Livingston would finance.


© 2002 National Inventors Hall of Fame