On August 28, 1830 Peter Cooper's locomotive called the Tom Thumb, was challenged to a race with a stagecoach out side of Baltimore. The locomotive was in the lead until a belt broke bringing the machine to a stand still allowing the stagecoach to complete the race before them.
A new rival appeared to give the highway and waterway "a run for their money." Another way to fulfill the transportation needs of the expanding nation was the railway. A little iron horse raced a real horse, turning attention to a different kind of road ¾ the railroad. Peter Cooper's Tom Thumb locomotive, hauling a Baltimore & Ohio railroad car filled with directors and officers, broke a belt and officially lost the race with a horse-drawn car. However, the engine was in the lead for a good portion of the race, rounding curves at 15 miles (24 kilometers) per hour, and it covered the 13 miles (21 kilometers) between Ellicott's Mills and Baltimore in 57 minutes. This proved the superiority of the locomotive and thus started the first rail venture in the nation.Taken from http://www.tfhrc.gov/pubrds/janfeb02/exhibition.htm Hope This Helps.
stagecoach mary feilds
The stagecoach is a form of the automobile in the 1800s pulled by 4 horses. i don't exactly know what was the most famous stagecoach but i hope this answer was more of help to you. Stagecoaches were vehicles and as individuals were not famous. Some companies had their names on the sides of them, Wells Fargo, for instance but this was advertising the company not the stagecoach itself. Others have become famous through songs and the cinema. The Deadwood Stage being one example.
You have to be a real famous actor and go to stagecoach a acting or singing school to get a promotion .
yea
Crab cakes.
yes. He was famous for the steam locomotive trails heild at rainhill
John Waynes' "breakthrough" role was as the "Ringo Kid" in the 1939 movie Stagecoach
There was the Baltimore Colts, but they went to Indianapolis. Now we have the Baltimore Ravens.
on baltimore
Australia's famous coach company, which began during the goldrushes in the 1850s and continued for many decades, was Cobb & Co.
No, Robert Fulton developed the first steamboat.