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In 1897, Charles Algernon Parsons did something unprecedented at Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee Naval Review. Without authorization, he sailed his experimental vessel Turbinia through the assembled British Royal Navy at speeds that shocked the world. His boat moved at thirty-four knots, faster than any warship in existence, leaving patrol boats helpless in its wake. This dramatic demonstration would change naval warfare and power generation forever. Parsons had invented the multi-stage steam turbine in 1884, revolutionizing how electricity was generated. But when he proposed using turbines for marine propulsion, naval architects dismissed him. They said it was impossible, that the physics wouldn't work, that propellers couldn't handle turbine speeds. Parsons spent years refining his design, solving the cavitation problem that plagued early attempts, and building Turbinia as proof of concept. That unauthorized appearance at Spithead forced the Royal Navy to confront the obsolescence of their entire fleet. Within months, the Admiralty ordered turbine-powered destroyers. By 1906, HMS Dreadnought became the first turbine-powered battleship, making every other battleship in the world obsolete. Commercial shipping quickly followed, with great ocean liners like Mauretania and Lusitania adopting turbine propulsion. But Parsons's greatest legacy wasn't in ships. His steam turbines transformed electricity generation. By the early twentieth century, Parsons turbines were producing the majority of the world's electric power. Today, approximately sixty percent of global electricity still comes from steam turbines operating on principles he established over 140 years ago. Coal plants, nuclear reactors, natural gas facilities, and geothermal stations all use turbine technology descended from his innovations. This is the story of an aristocrat who became a hands-on engineer, who refused to accept conventional wisdom, and who literally embarrassed an empire into adopting revolutionary technology. From his early apprenticeships to his systematic solution of the cavitation problem, from the spectacular Spithead demonstration to the global transformation of power generation, Charles Parsons changed the industrial world through obsessive determination and engineering brilliance. Discover how one boat traveling at impossible speeds forced the greatest navy on Earth to abandon proven technology, how the multi-stage turbine solved problems that stumped other inventors, and why Parsons's innovations remain fundamental to modern civilization. This is engineering history at its most dramatic, technological revolution at its most decisive. #CharlesParsons #Turbinia #SteamTurbine #VictorianEngineering #NavalHistory #IndustrialRevolution #EngineeringHistory #MarinePropulsion #NavalArchitecture #EngineeringInnovation #MechanicalEngineering #QueenVictoria #DiamondJubilee #Spithead #RoyalNavy #BritishNavy #HMS #Dreadnought #NavalWarfare #SteamPower #TurbinePower #PowerGeneration #ElectricalEngineering #EngineeringDocumentary #HistoryDocumentary #HistoricalEngineering #Inventors #EngineeringMarvels #HistoryBuff #BritishHistory Disclaimer: Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for 'fair use' for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. I do not own some or all of the video materials used in this video. In the case of copyright issues, please contact me at historymediachannel1@gmail.com for credit or removal.