I still need to figure out a way to incorporate the Charvolant into a story...
It’s amazing what you can find when you clean out a bookcase.
Recently my mother was doing just that, and found an old issue of Heritage, the British history magazine, from February/March 1990. Naturally she saved it for me so that I could put it in my
overburdened bookshelves...and while flipping through it, I ran across
an article entitled “Pocock’s Flying Carriage”. The story was wonderful,
and the name was familiar. Hmm, yes, we have met a Mr. Pocock before, haven't we...however, it seems to have been a different Mr. P.
That
Mr. Pocock (William) was, it seems, a London furniture-maker and known
for his interest in patent furniture—designs that involved clever,
ingenious mechanizations as we saw with his Reclining Patent Chair.
Perhaps there’s something to the name that dooms its bearers to be
inveterate tinkerers, because another Mr. Pocock, this time a George,
was inventing at the same time...and went far beyond furniture. You see,
that Mr. Pocock was the proud inventor, in the 1820s, of the Charvolant, or Flying Car.
George
P. (1774-1843) was a schoolmaster in Bristol who liked to invent things
on the side. One of his inventions, a spanking machine (the “Royal
Patent Self-acting Ferule”) which could punish several misbehaving
schoolboys at once, had something to do with his teaching vocation (I
wish I could find a picture of it!)...but evidently, Mr. Pocock was also
fascinated by kites. He spent his youth experimenting with the power of
kites, and induced a trusting friend to squat on a makeshift sled
attached to kites. The friend ended up dragged away faster than George
could follow on foot and was eventually tumbled into a quarry
(uninjured, fortunately) but young George was even more hooked by kite
power.
More experimentation followed, fortunately with
no fatalities—that included launching his own daughter 300 feet into the
air in a kite-drawn chair. Of course, you knew what would come next:
kite-powered carriages. He spent several years working on his
Charvolants, and finally in 1826 registered a patent. In 1828 he
demonstrated a Charvolant at Ascot to King George IV, and was soon
running demonstration races, beating the London coach in a race from
Bristol to Marlborough by twenty-five minutes (after giving the coach a
15 minute head-start.) His Charvolant could travel as fast as twenty
miles per hour, and the ride was much smoother and quieter than a
horse-drawn vehicle—in fact, a Charvolant driver blew a bugle to warn
vehicles it was overtaking, because of its quietness.
Charvolant
travel was also much cheaper than travel utilizing horses: wind was
free, after all, while horses were expensive to maintain and had to be
changed on journeys of more than fifteen to twenty miles. And,
amusingly, Charvolants could travel the turnpikes free. Tolls were
charged at toll-gates based on the number of animals drawing any given
vehicle...and Charvolants were notably draft-animal free. Though critics
scoffed that a Charvolant would be grounded on a windless day, Mr.
Pocock remained unruffled and replied, “Ships might be objected to on
this principle—that there were sometimes calms, or contrary winds.”
Alas
for Mr. Pocock, though, his timing was bad. Despite the interest his
Charvolants generated, another new mode of transportation generated even
more interest and would soon doom the Charvolant to a sidenote in
transportation history: the railway.
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