Building the transcontinental railroad was an unprecedented
feat of engineering, extraordinary vision, and raw courage. The railroad was
the hope and dream of Abraham Lincoln, but he would not live to see its
completion. Investors risked their businesses and money; a few politicians
understood its importance; engineers and surveyors risked and some lost their
lives; Irish and Chinese immigrants, many of the defeated Confederate soldiers,
and other laborers did the backbreaking and dangerous work of laying track. The
transcontinental railroad was a huge expenditure of brainpower, muscle, and
sweat. Upon its completion, there was nothing else like it in the world.
Two companies were pitted against one another to create a
railroad that is still used routinely today. The Union Pacific and the Central
Pacific Railroads competed with one another for funding. Speed was tantamount and
caution was thrown to the wind. Most of the building of this railroad line was
done by hand—from excavating dirt, cutting through ridges, fillings gorges, and
blasting tunnels through the mountains.
The workforce approached the size of the Civil War armies at
its peak. As many as fifteen thousand workers toiled on each line. For the
Union Pacific, most of those workers were Irish. On the Central Pacific,
Chinese immigrants filled the ranks.
Work began in 1863 and as the tracks were set, tent cities
rose. Some of those “towns” faded into oblivion as the rails continued away
across the landscape. Others became cities in their own right—places like
Cheyenne, Laramie, Rawlins Springs, Green River…and in 1869, at Promontory
Summit, Utah, the last spike was driven, completing the ribbons of iron that
would join a nation from one coast to another.
1 comment:
That's so interesting! I can see by that map if you drove the I-80 from Omaha to San Francisco, you pretty much drove the route of that rail line. I always wanted to take the train cross-country. Maybe one day...
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