Adam Wybe, also known as Adam Wiebe (born July 12, 1584
in
Harlingen, Friesland
Harlingen (; fy, Harns ) is a municipality and a city in the northern Netherlands, in the province of Friesland on the coast of Wadden Sea. Harlingen is a town with a long history of fishing and shipping that received city rights in 1234.
Ov ...
, died in 1653 in
Danzig (Gdańsk)), was an engineer and
inventor
An invention is a unique or novel device, method, composition, idea or process. An invention may be an improvement upon a machine, product, or process for increasing efficiency or lowering cost. It may also be an entirely new concept. If an ...
of Dutch origin, active mainly in Danzig. His work includes the world's first
cable car on multiple supports in 1644. It was the biggest built until the end of the 19th century.
Outside of his village of origin- Harlingen, Friesland- no details are known of his youth and there is no record on his parents. His wife's name was Margarethe.
Wybe lived in Danzig after ca. 1616. He became famous for many inventions and constructions: a horse-driven dredger, river ice cutter, and an aqueduct taking Radunia River waters over the moat in the Hucisko crossroads area. The construction in 1644 of a rope railway was his most famous creation. During previous centuries there were already ropeways which resembled cable cars in existence, but Wybe changed and improved it as follows: It is the first to use a cable industrially (instead of a rope) in loop and continuous motion, and the first to multiply the 'vehicles'. He also improved it by supporting the cable with pylons equipped with pulleys, and unloaded of the basket 'vehicles' by means of a swing. The machine was longer than 200 meters. It includes 7 wooden pylons, and seems to carry a score of about 120 'vehicles'.
[http://www.skistory.com/F/transports/C24.html Le transporteur d'Adam Wybe à Dantzig]
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wybe, Adam
16th-century births
1653 deaths
Emigrants from the Dutch Republic to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Dutch engineers
Dutch Mennonites
Sustainable transport pioneers