Think electric πŸš—πŸš˜πŸš™ are of groundbreaking 21st century technologies, a thing of the future, born of the new millennium? Think again.

Think electric πŸš—πŸš˜πŸš™ are of groundbreaking 21st century technologies like Tesla, a thing of the future, born of the new millennium? Think again. According to the U.S Departnent of Energy, the first small scaleβš‘οΈπŸš—πŸš˜πŸš™ were introduced between 1828-1835. During this era, 🐎 and buggies were the primary mode of transportation, but innovators in HungaryπŸ‡­πŸ‡Ί, the NetherlandsπŸ‡³πŸ‡±and the πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡ΈU.S. thought of a horseless age, creating some of the first small-scale electric cars. Around 1832, Robert Anderson develops the first crude electric vehicle, but practicality only came around 1870. Pictured here is an electric vehicle built by Thomas Parker, an English inventor in 1884 featured in the light suit. In 1889, William Morrison, from Des Moines, Iowa, creates the first successful 6 passenger electric vehicle in the U.S. His car is little more than an electrified wagon, but it sparks an interest in electric vehicles. The vehicle was capable of reaching a speed of 23 kilometers per hour (14 mph). This 1896 advertisement shows how many early electric vehicles were not much different than carriages.

Muslims 4 the Environment