Iron horse is a pervasive term (considered by the early 21st century to be transitioning into an archaic reference) for a steam locomotive and the railway on which it travels, originating in the early 1800s, when horses still powered most machinery.[1][2]
The term was common and popular in both British and North American literary articles.
Use of the term
Iron horse was used admiringly when comparing early road and railway traction engine performance to slower, less powerful horse-powered tramways. The usage of the word 'Iron' reflecting the material required for functioning railways is found as early as 1825.[3][4]
The iron horse term became widely popularized and found frequent use in the century-and-a-half following the competition won by Stephenson's Rocket, in innumerable newspaper articles as well as in various novels.
In understanding the role of railways in political terms, the idea of the railway and locomotives as extending countries power over others is found in historical studies, [5][6] and colonialism studies.[7]
In academic and popular renditions of railway history, the term was used frequently.[8][9][10][11]
The term's historical context, and its use in films and other media, is extensive.[12]
The understanding of the development of railways was not confined to America or Australia, the term was across cultural boundaries such as the Huenemann book about railways in China 'The Dragon and the Iron Horse'.[13]
In Australia the film Iron Horse was well noted as an indicator of the usage of the term to do with expansion of railways across the continent.[14][15]
In the United States the 'Iron Horse' was a component of national,[16] state histories,[17] of the Civil War,[18] even as a component of Constitutional history.[19]
It began to decline in use, at least in North American colloquial expression, with the decline in rail transport as the primary mode of transport.
^Edwards, Peter; Edwards, Peter (Peter Roger); Enenkel, K. A. E; Graham, Elspeth, 1953-; Ebook Library (2012), The horse as cultural icon : the real and symbolic horse in the early modern world, Brill, ISBN978-90-04-22242-7{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Lewis, Daniel (2007), Iron horse imperialism : the Southern Pacific of Mexico, 1880-1951, University of Arizona Press, ISBN978-0-8165-2604-8
^"IRON-HORSE IMPERIALISM. (7 February 1934)", The Bulletin, 55 (2817), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald: 8, 1934-02-07, ISSN0007-4039
^Corpuz, Arturo G (1999), The colonial iron horse : railroads and regional development in the Philippines, 1875-1935, University of the Philippines Press, ISBN978-971-542-220-8
^Walter, John (2016), The iron horse : the history and development of steam locomotive, History Press, ISBN978-0-7509-6716-7
^Burke, David; New South Wales Rail Transport Museum; Australian Railway Historical Society. New South Wales Division (1986), Man of steam : E.E. Lucy - a gentleman engineer in the great days of the iron horse, Iron Horse Press in association with Australian Railway Historical Society (N.S.W. Division), N.S.W. Rail Transport Museum, ISBN978-0-9588340-0-1
^Westwood, John (2001), World railways : an illustrated history of the iron horse, PRC Publishing, ISBN978-1-85648-599-9
^Horsfield, Brenda.Steam horse, iron road; edited by Brenda Horsfield.
London, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1972.
^Huenemann, Ralph William (1984), The Dragon and the Iron Horse, Harvard University Asia Center, ISBN978-1-68417-243-6
^"The Iron Horse". Warwick Daily News. No. 2545. Queensland, Australia. 17 August 1927. p. 8. Retrieved 5 September 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^Iron horse in the pinelands : building west Florida's railroad, 1881-1883 : a centennial history / by Jesse Earle Bowden ... [et al.] ; edited by Virginia Parks.Pensacola, Fla. : Pensacola Historical Society, 1982
^Lash, Jeffrey N. (Jeffrey Norman) (1991), Destroyer of the iron horse : general Joseph E. Johnston and confederate rail transport, 1861-1865, Kent State University Press, ISBN978-0-87338-423-0
^Richard C. Cortner (1993), The iron horse and the Constitution the railroads and the transformation of the fourteenth amendment, Westport, Conn Greenwood Press, ISBN978-0-313-28578-3