Hackney carriages Horse-drawn for-hire
hackney carriage services began operating in both
Paris and
London in the early 17th century. The first documented public hackney coach service for hire was in London in 1605. In 1625 carriages were made available for hire from
innkeepers in London and the first
taxi rank appeared on
the Strand outside the Maypole Inn in 1636. In 1635 the Hackney Carriage Act was passed by
Parliament to legalise horse-drawn carriages for hire. Coaches were hired out by innkeepers to merchants and visitors. A further "Ordinance for the Regulation of Hackney-Coachmen in London and the places adjacent" was approved by Parliament in 1654 and the first hackney-carriage licences were issued in 1662. A similar service was started by Nicolas Sauvage in Paris in 1637. His vehicles were known as
fiacres, as the main vehicle depot apparently was opposite a shrine to
Saint Fiacre. (The term
fiacre is still used in French to describe a horse-drawn vehicle for hire, while the German term
Fiaker is used, especially in Austria, to refer to the same thing.)
Hansoms The
hansom cab was designed and patented in 1834 by
Joseph Hansom, an
architect from
York as a substantial improvement on the old hackney carriages. These two-wheel vehicles were fast, light enough to be pulled by a single horse (making the journey cheaper than travelling in a larger four-wheel coach) were agile enough to steer around
horse-drawn vehicles in the notorious traffic jams of nineteenth-century London and had a low centre of gravity for safe cornering. Hansom's original design was modified by
John Chapman and several others to improve its practicability, but retained Hansom's name. These soon replaced the
hackney carriage as a
vehicle for hire. They quickly spread to other cities in the United Kingdom, as well as continental European cities, particularly
Paris,
Berlin, and
St Petersburg. The cab was introduced to other British Empire cities and to the United States during the late 19th century, being most commonly used in
New York City. The first cab service in
Toronto, "The City", was established in 1837 by
Thornton Blackburn, an ex-slave whose escape when captured in Detroit was the impetus for the
Blackburn Riots.
Modern taxicabs Victoria was the first motorized-powered taxicab. The modern
taximeter was invented and perfected by a trio of German inventors; Wilhelm Friedrich Nedler, Ferdinand Dencker and
Friedrich Wilhelm Gustav Bruhn. The
Daimler Victoria—the world's first motorized-powered taximeter-cab—was built by
Gottlieb Daimler in 1897 and began operating in
Stuttgart in June 1897. Gasoline-powered taxicabs began operating in Paris in 1899, in London in 1903, and in
New York in 1907. The New York taxicabs were initially imported from France by Harry N. Allen, owner of the Allen-Kingston Motor Car Company. Their manufacturing took place at Bristol Engineering in Bristol, Connecticut where the first domestically produced Taxicabs were built in 1908, designed by Fred E. Moskovics who had worked at Daimler in the late 1890s. Albert F. Rockwell was the owner of Bristol and his wife suggested he paint his taxicabs yellow to maximise his vehicles' visibility. Moskovics was one of the organizers of the first Yellow Taxicab Company in New York.
Electric battery-powered taxis became available at the end of the 19th century. In London,
Walter Bersey designed a fleet of such cabs and
introduced them to the streets of London on 19 August 1897. They were soon nicknamed 'Hummingbirds' due to the idiosyncratic humming noise they made. The company ran until 1898 with up to 62 cabs operating until it was reformed by its financiers to form the
Electric Vehicle Company. Taxicabs proliferated around the world in the early 20th century. The first major innovation after the invention of the
taximeter occurred in the late 1940s, when
two-way radios first appeared in taxicabs.
Radios enabled taxicabs and
dispatch offices to communicate and serve customers more efficiently than previous methods, such as using
callboxes. The next major innovation occurred in the 1980s when
computer assisted dispatching was first introduced.
As military and emergency transport . Paris taxis played a memorable part in the French victory at
First Battle of the Marne in the
First World War. On 7 September 1914, the Military Governor of Paris,
Joseph Gallieni, gathered about six hundred taxicabs at
Les Invalides in central Paris to carry soldiers to the front at Nanteuil-le Haudouin, fifty kilometers away. Within twenty-four hours about six thousand soldiers and officers were moved to the front. Each taxi carried five soldiers, four in the back and one next to the driver. Only the back lights of the taxis were lit; the drivers were instructed to follow the lights of the taxi ahead. The Germans, caught off guard, were pushed back by the French and British forces. Most of the taxis were demobilized on 8 September but some remained longer to carry the wounded and refugees. The taxis, following city regulations, dutifully ran their meters. The French treasury reimbursed the total fare of 70,012 francs. The military impact of the soldiers moved by taxi was small in the huge scale of the Battle of the Marne, but the effect on French morale was enormous; it became the symbol of the solidarity between the French army and citizens. It was also the first recorded large-scale use of motorized infantry in battle. The
Birmingham pub bombings on 21 November 1974, which killed 21 people and injured 182, presented emergency services with unprecedented peacetime demands. According to eyewitness accounts, the fire officer in charge, knowing the 40 ambulances he requested were unlikely to be available, requested the Taxi Owners Association to transport the injured to the nearby
Birmingham Accident Hospital and
Birmingham General Hospital. ==Vehicles==