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It was the dawn of 1863,
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and London’s
not-yet-opened subway system,
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the first of its kind in the world,
had the city in an uproar.
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Digging a hole under the city
and putting a railroad in it
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seemed the stuff of dreams.
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Pub drinkers scoffed at the idea
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and a local minister accused the railway
company of trying to break into hell.
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Most people simply thought the project,
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which cost more than
100 million dollars in today’s money,
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would never work.
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But it did.
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On January 10, 1863,
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30,000 people ventured underground
to travel on the world’s first subway
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on a four-mile stretch of line in London.
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After three years of construction
and a few setbacks,
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the Metropolitan Railway
was ready for business.
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The city’s officials were much relieved.
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They’d been desperate to find a way
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to reduce the terrible
congestion on the roads.
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London, at the time the world’s largest
and most prosperous city,
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was in a permanent state of gridlock,
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with carts,
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costermongers,
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cows,
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and commuters jamming the roads.
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It’d been a Victorian visionary,
Charles Pearson,
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who first thought of putting railways
under the ground.
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He’d lobbied for underground trains
throughout the 1840s,
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but opponents thought the idea
was impractical
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since the railroads at the time
only had short tunnels under hills.
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How could you get a railway
through the center of a city?
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The answer was a simple system
called "cut and cover."
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Workers had to dig a huge trench,
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construct a tunnel out of brick archways,
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and then refill the hole
over the newly built tunnel.
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Because this was disruptive
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and required the demolition
of buildings above the tunnels,
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most of the line went
under existing roads.
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Of course, there were accidents.
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On one occasion, a heavy rainstorm
flooded the nearby sewers
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and burst through the excavation,
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delaying the project by several months.
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But as soon as
the Metropolitan Railway opened,
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Londoners rushed in
to ride the new trains.
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The Metropolitan quickly became
a vital part of London’s transport system.
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Additional lines were soon built,
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and new suburbs grew around the stations.
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Big department stores opened
next to the railroad,
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and the railway company
even created attractions,
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like a 30-story Ferris wheel in Earls
Court to bring in tourists by train.
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Within 30 years,
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London’s subway system covered
80 kilometers,
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with lines in the center of town
running in tunnels,
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and suburban trains operating
on the surface, often on embankments.
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But London was still growing,
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and everyone wanted
to be connected to the system.
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By the late 1880s,
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the city had become too dense with
buildings, sewers, and electric cables
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for the "cut and cover" technique,
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so a new system had to be devised.
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Using a machine
called the Greathead Shield,
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a team of just 12 workers could
bore through the earth,
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carving deep underground tunnels
through the London clay.
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These new lines, called tubes,
were at varying depths,
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but usually about 25 meters deeper than
the "cut and cover" lines.
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This meant their construction
didn’t disturb the surface,
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and it was possible
to dig under buildings.
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The first tube line,
the City and South London,
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opened in 1890 and proved so successful
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that half a dozen more lines
were built in the next 20 years.
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This clever new technology was even used
to burrow several lines
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under London’s river, the Thames.
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By the early 20th century,
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Budapest,
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Berlin,
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Paris,
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and New York
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had all built subways of their own.
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And today, with more than 160 cities
in 55 countries
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using underground rails
to combat congestion,
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we can thank Charles Pearson
and the Metropolitan Railway
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for getting us started on the right track.