1 00:00:06,645 --> 00:00:08,984 It was the dawn of 1863, 2 00:00:08,984 --> 00:00:11,935 and London’s not-yet-opened subway system, 3 00:00:11,935 --> 00:00:16,184 the first of its kind in the world, had the city in an uproar. 4 00:00:16,184 --> 00:00:20,094 Digging a hole under the city and putting a railroad in it 5 00:00:20,094 --> 00:00:22,557 seemed the stuff of dreams. 6 00:00:22,557 --> 00:00:24,755 Pub drinkers scoffed at the idea 7 00:00:24,755 --> 00:00:29,625 and a local minister accused the railway company of trying to break into hell. 8 00:00:29,625 --> 00:00:31,923 Most people simply thought the project, 9 00:00:31,923 --> 00:00:35,425 which cost more than 100 million dollars in today’s money, 10 00:00:35,425 --> 00:00:36,994 would never work. 11 00:00:36,994 --> 00:00:38,732 But it did. 12 00:00:38,732 --> 00:00:41,107 On January 10, 1863, 13 00:00:41,107 --> 00:00:46,254 30,000 people ventured underground to travel on the world’s first subway 14 00:00:46,254 --> 00:00:49,654 on a four-mile stretch of line in London. 15 00:00:49,654 --> 00:00:52,676 After three years of construction and a few setbacks, 16 00:00:52,676 --> 00:00:56,197 the Metropolitan Railway was ready for business. 17 00:00:56,197 --> 00:00:58,605 The city’s officials were much relieved. 18 00:00:58,605 --> 00:01:00,545 They’d been desperate to find a way 19 00:01:00,545 --> 00:01:03,853 to reduce the terrible congestion on the roads. 20 00:01:03,853 --> 00:01:08,345 London, at the time the world’s largest and most prosperous city, 21 00:01:08,345 --> 00:01:10,826 was in a permanent state of gridlock, 22 00:01:10,826 --> 00:01:11,685 with carts, 23 00:01:11,685 --> 00:01:12,703 costermongers, 24 00:01:12,703 --> 00:01:13,471 cows, 25 00:01:13,471 --> 00:01:16,143 and commuters jamming the roads. 26 00:01:16,143 --> 00:01:20,163 It’d been a Victorian visionary, Charles Pearson, 27 00:01:20,163 --> 00:01:23,335 who first thought of putting railways under the ground. 28 00:01:23,335 --> 00:01:26,932 He’d lobbied for underground trains throughout the 1840s, 29 00:01:26,932 --> 00:01:29,907 but opponents thought the idea was impractical 30 00:01:29,907 --> 00:01:34,444 since the railroads at the time only had short tunnels under hills. 31 00:01:34,444 --> 00:01:37,754 How could you get a railway through the center of a city? 32 00:01:37,754 --> 00:01:42,033 The answer was a simple system called "cut and cover." 33 00:01:42,033 --> 00:01:44,625 Workers had to dig a huge trench, 34 00:01:44,625 --> 00:01:47,354 construct a tunnel out of brick archways, 35 00:01:47,354 --> 00:01:51,065 and then refill the hole over the newly built tunnel. 36 00:01:51,065 --> 00:01:52,584 Because this was disruptive 37 00:01:52,584 --> 00:01:55,505 and required the demolition of buildings above the tunnels, 38 00:01:55,505 --> 00:01:58,473 most of the line went under existing roads. 39 00:01:58,473 --> 00:02:00,866 Of course, there were accidents. 40 00:02:00,866 --> 00:02:04,840 On one occasion, a heavy rainstorm flooded the nearby sewers 41 00:02:04,840 --> 00:02:07,363 and burst through the excavation, 42 00:02:07,363 --> 00:02:09,973 delaying the project by several months. 43 00:02:09,973 --> 00:02:13,036 But as soon as the Metropolitan Railway opened, 44 00:02:13,036 --> 00:02:16,207 Londoners rushed in to ride the new trains. 45 00:02:16,207 --> 00:02:20,211 The Metropolitan quickly became a vital part of London’s transport system. 46 00:02:20,211 --> 00:02:22,424 Additional lines were soon built, 47 00:02:22,424 --> 00:02:25,626 and new suburbs grew around the stations. 48 00:02:25,626 --> 00:02:28,312 Big department stores opened next to the railroad, 49 00:02:28,312 --> 00:02:31,184 and the railway company even created attractions, 50 00:02:31,184 --> 00:02:37,275 like a 30-story Ferris wheel in Earls Court to bring in tourists by train. 51 00:02:37,275 --> 00:02:38,624 Within 30 years, 52 00:02:38,624 --> 00:02:41,415 London’s subway system covered 80 kilometers, 53 00:02:41,415 --> 00:02:44,463 with lines in the center of town running in tunnels, 54 00:02:44,463 --> 00:02:48,984 and suburban trains operating on the surface, often on embankments. 55 00:02:48,984 --> 00:02:50,840 But London was still growing, 56 00:02:50,840 --> 00:02:53,814 and everyone wanted to be connected to the system. 57 00:02:53,814 --> 00:02:55,255 By the late 1880s, 58 00:02:55,255 --> 00:02:59,736 the city had become too dense with buildings, sewers, and electric cables 59 00:02:59,736 --> 00:03:01,905 for the "cut and cover" technique, 60 00:03:01,905 --> 00:03:04,375 so a new system had to be devised. 61 00:03:04,375 --> 00:03:07,324 Using a machine called the Greathead Shield, 62 00:03:07,324 --> 00:03:11,164 a team of just 12 workers could bore through the earth, 63 00:03:11,164 --> 00:03:15,075 carving deep underground tunnels through the London clay. 64 00:03:15,075 --> 00:03:19,156 These new lines, called tubes, were at varying depths, 65 00:03:19,156 --> 00:03:23,326 but usually about 25 meters deeper than the "cut and cover" lines. 66 00:03:23,326 --> 00:03:26,436 This meant their construction didn’t disturb the surface, 67 00:03:26,436 --> 00:03:29,335 and it was possible to dig under buildings. 68 00:03:29,335 --> 00:03:32,494 The first tube line, the City and South London, 69 00:03:32,494 --> 00:03:36,054 opened in 1890 and proved so successful 70 00:03:36,054 --> 00:03:40,033 that half a dozen more lines were built in the next 20 years. 71 00:03:40,033 --> 00:03:44,755 This clever new technology was even used to burrow several lines 72 00:03:44,755 --> 00:03:47,393 under London’s river, the Thames. 73 00:03:47,393 --> 00:03:49,824 By the early 20th century, 74 00:03:49,824 --> 00:03:50,536 Budapest, 75 00:03:50,536 --> 00:03:51,257 Berlin, 76 00:03:51,257 --> 00:03:51,995 Paris, 77 00:03:51,995 --> 00:03:52,865 and New York 78 00:03:52,865 --> 00:03:55,535 had all built subways of their own. 79 00:03:55,535 --> 00:03:59,955 And today, with more than 160 cities in 55 countries 80 00:03:59,955 --> 00:04:02,995 using underground rails to combat congestion, 81 00:04:02,995 --> 00:04:06,805 we can thank Charles Pearson and the Metropolitan Railway 82 00:04:06,805 --> 00:04:09,094 for getting us started on the right track.