Page:The New International Encyclopædia 1st ed. v. 19.djvu/483

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TRANSPORTATION.
421
TRANSPORTATION.

Journal de la Société de Statistique de Paris (1901-02):

Growth of Railway Mileage Since 1830


YEAR United
States
 Great Britain 
and Ireland
 France   Germany   Russia  The
world







1830  23  57  24  ........ ........ 121 
1840 2,818  838  303  360  17  4,792 
1850 9,021  6,624  1,870  3,761  311  23,980 
1860 30,626  10,437  6,865  7,285  989  67,055 
1870 52,922  15,151  11,019  12,253  6,982  128,407 
1880 93,262  17,929  16,109  21,057  14,617  230,515 
1890 166,654  20,334  24,030  26,638  19,225  377,746 
1900  194,334  21,932  26,611  31,933  29,892   491,236 

The railway equipment, traffic, etc., of certain principal countries is shown in this table:


 United States, 
1891
 United States, 
1901
 United Kingdom, 
1901
Germany,
1900
France,
1900






 
EQUIPMENT
Number of locomotives 32,139  39,584  20,461  19,069  10,775 
Number of locomotives, per 100 miles of line 20  20.2  94  60  41 
Number of passenger cars 27,949  35.969  45,948  38,434  29,049 
Number of passenger cars, per 100 miles 17  18.4  211  123  112 
Number of freight cars [1]947,300  1,439,328  706,982  412,744  284,601 
Number of freight cars, per 100 miles 587  749  3260  1310  1100 
 
PASSENGERS
Number carried during year 531,183,998  [2]607,278,121  1,172,395,900  842,092,000  453,193 
Number carried one mile, in millions 12,844  17,354  .................. 12,427  7,802 
Number carried, per mile of line 79,642  89,721  .................. 400,960  297,400 
 
FREIGHT
Tons carried during year 675,608,323  1,089,226,440  413,623,025  367,180,000   (1899) 138,600,000 
Tons carried one mile, in millions 81,074  147,077  .................. 23,463  (1899) 10,819 
Tons carried per mile of line 502,705  760,414  .................. 757,040  (1899) 412,722 
 
REVENUE
Gross earnings from operation, million dols. 1,096.7  1,588.5  518.9  483  295.4 
Gross earnings from operation per mile of line, dollars  6,800  8,123  23,457  15,580  12,442 
Revenue per passenger per mile, cents 2.142  2.013  ..................
1st Cl. 1.83
2d  Cl. 1.10
3d  Cl. 0.638 
4th Cl. 0.464 
(1899) .709 
Revenue per ton of freight per mile, cents 0.895  0.750  .................. [3]1.318  1.49 
 
TRAFFIC DISTANCES
Average journey per passenger, miles 24.18  28.58  .................. (1899) 14.3  (1899) 18.1 
Average haul per ton of freight, miles ........ 251.98  .................. (1899) 63.5  (1899) 77.7 
Train miles, passenger trains, in millions 307.9  385.1  (1899) 216.4  (1899) 140.9  (1899) 106.1 
Train miles, all other trains, in millions 446.2  491.9  (1899) 179.6  (1899) 146.6  (1899) 106.5 
 

(Compiled for the United States from Interstate Commerce Commission Reports. For foreign countries, from various sources, chiefly the Archiv für Eisenbahnwesen, 1902.)

For further statistics and general discussion of this subject, see Railways and Steam Navigation.

Bibliography. Van der Borght, Das Verkehrswesen (Leipzig, 1894); Lindsay, History of Merchant Shipping (4 vols., London, 1874-76); Hadley, Railroad Transportation (New York, 1886); Picard, Traité des chemins de fer (4 vols., Paris, 1887); Gotz, Die Verkehrswege im Dienste des Welthandels (Stuttgart, 1888); Van Oss, American Railroads as Investments (New York, 1893); Davis, The Union Pacific Railway (Chicago, 1894); Fry, History of North Atlantic Steam Navigation (London, 1890); Bibliographies in Borght, op. cit., and Publications of Stanford University, 1895 (Hopkins Railroad Library); Interstate Commerce Commission Reports (annual); Poor's Manual of Railroads (annual); Reports of the Commissioner of Navigation (annual); Archiv für Eisenbahnwesen; Statistical Abstract of the United Kingdom; Statistisches Jahrbuch des Deutschen Reichs (annual); etc.

TRANSPORTATION, Penal. Banishment from society in the form of exile, ostracism, or outlawry. The practice is well known among uncivilized peoples, and existed among the ancient nations and in mediæval Europe. In England, under a statute of Elizabeth (1597), ‘dangerous rogues’ might be banished by justices in quarter sessions, but no system of transportation can be said to have arisen till the time of Charles II., when justices were empowered to send certain offenders to America instead of inflicting the death penalty. In 1717 transportation was authorized as a substitute for other punishments than hanging, and the contract system, by which individuals agreed to transport convicts in return for their labor during the period of sentence, was established. The business was profitable at first, but became less and less so, until a payment had to be made for each criminal transported. Protests from America were frequent, but were unavailing. After 1776 a twofold system was developed. To meet the immediate need, hulks stationed in the Thames (later at Portsmouth and other places) were arranged to receive convicts; and though this was begun merely as a temporary expedient, it endured as a legalized

  1. Excluding 51,987 fast freight line cars.
  2. Excluding season-ticket holders.
  3. Excluding express goods.