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The Mysterious Death Of Dr. Diesel

 

By Joshua Tickell

 

When Rudolph Diesel unveiled the diesel engine at the 1900 World's Fair in

Paris, France, he shocked reputable scientists by pouring peanut oil into

the engine. It is not surprising that Diesel designed the diesel engine to

run on vegetable oil considering that this brilliant inventor spent his

childhood in the agricultural provinces of France and Germany. He grew up

around farmers, and knew of their troubles and needs.

 

Diesel promoted the benefits of using agricultural fuel throughout his

career. In 1913, Diesel was on a trip across the English Channel when he

disappeared.

 

A few days later his body was found afloat. The British newspapers

suggested that Dr. Rudolph Diesel was assassinated by foreign agents.

 

After Deisel's death, the idea of fueling engines with vegetable oil was

quickly and quietly swept under the rug. His original designs were

modified, and diesel engines were made to run on the cheapest most

abundant fuel available: petroleum.

 

Joshua Tickell is the author of From the Fryer to the Fuel Tank.

 

Earth First! March-April 2003

 

Terry T. Pascher The University of Akron History Department World

Civilizations: Latin America

 

 

 

" ...what a world, what a wicked world... I'm melting... "

--Margaret Hamilton as The Wicked Witch of the West

in THE WIZARD OF OZ

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