The day the railroad united two coasts.
I’d like to thank the people who laid those tracks mile by mile. Their backbreaking work made modern freedom possible.
Before train travel, people either road horses, went by stagecoach,
or joined a wagon train.
In the movies,
there’ something romantic about canvas-topped wagons rolling toward the
horizon, oxen plodding forward, dust rising like a promise.
But this was no scenic road trip.
Pioneers traveled ten to fifteen miles a day. The
journey from the East Coast to California could take four to six months. Families
bounced across rutted trails in covered wagons. They crossed rivers and plains
and deserts. They cooked over open fires. Storms rolled in without warning.
Wheels broke. Illness spread. And still they kept moving west, one slow,
stubborn stretch at a time. They faced danger,
exhaustion, and uncertainty. All for the chance for a better life.
Then Came the Iron Horse
The laborers who
built the railroad blasted through mountains and set track across unforgiving
terrain. Thousands of workers put in long hours and dealt with dangerous
dynamite to get the job done. On May 10, 1869, two
rail lines, the Union Pacific Railroad building westward and the Central Pacific Railroad building eastward, met at Promontory Summit. The Golden Spike was driven
into the track, linking the nation from coast to coast.
The journey that once took months
could be done in about a week. Plush seats and wide windows framed the
landscape. Instead of risking disease, weather, and
wagon breakdowns, passengers could ride a train across mountains, plains, and
deserts. It was faster, safer, and far more predictable.
Because of the
railroad, towns sprang up along the tracks. Ranchers had the ability to ship
cattle and goods to distant markets. Mail traveled faster. Supplies arrived
more easily. People who once lived in isolated settlements suddenly had a
connection to the rest of the country. Railroads brought cowboys, settlers,
gamblers, and dreamers. They created boomtowns, sparked rivalries, and fueled
the growth of places that might never have existed otherwise.
Why is this history
important?
Westward travel
was an act of faith into a life with no guarantees. We need to respect these
pioneers determination and tenacity. People today still long to see what’s over
the next ridge, beyond the next mountain, across the next stretch of sky. It
just moves a little quicker these days.
I am thankful I can drive my air-conditioned car with cruise control and hop on the freeway in excess of 60 mph. I also appreciate the fact that a flight across the country can be done in a matter of several hours. But I still like to travel by train on occasion and think about the hard work it took for our ancestors to make that come to fruition.
Niki J. Mitchell
As a side note, I used
old locomotives as a catalyst for my western
time travel romance books.



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