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P.O. Box 19423
Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
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Linking the
Oceans By Railroad |
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As
a matter of fact, the line through to the coast was finished earlier than
had been predicted. One fact which increased the rapidity of construction
was the growing financial difficulty of the company. It was absolutely
imperative that the through line be completed in order that the resulting
business might make the operation of trains pay. But aside from this,
another influence was at work to encourage rapid construction. The Act of
1862 provided that the Central Pacific might also build across
Nevada
to meet the Union Pacific, on condition that it completed its own allotted
section first. As the Central Pacific also was receiving a heavy
government subsidy per mile, and as there was great profit in construction
undertaken with this government subsidy, there was naturally a strong
incentive for both companies to build all the mileage possible and as
rapidly as possible.
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Depot at Elko,
Nevada
in 1869.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE!
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The Central Pacific
enterprise was backed by a group of men who were awake to the
possibilities of the situation and who had made large fortunes in the
gold-mining boom of previous years, such as Leland Stanford, Collis P.
Huntington, Mark Hopkins, and the Crockers. The rivalry between them
and the Union Pacific interests woke the whole continent and formed a
chapter in American railroad history as startling and romantic as
anything in the stories of the Vanderbilts and Goulds with their
financial gymnastics.
As the contest
proceeded, public interest increased and the entire country watched to
see which company would win the big government subsidies through the
mountains. Through the winter of 1868 the work continued on the Union
Pacific with unabated energy, and freezing weather caught the builders
at the base of the Wasatch Mountains; but blizzards could not stop
them. The workmen laid tracks across the Wasatch on a bed of snow and
ice, and one of the track-laying trains slid bodily, track and all,
off the ice into a stream. The two companies had over twenty thousand
men at work that winter. Suddenly the Central Pacific surprised the
Eastern builders by filing a map and plans for building as far as
Echo, some distance east of Ogden. The Union Pacific forces, however,
were equal to the occasion. At first, one mile a day had been
considered rapid construction, but now, even with the limited daylight
of the winter months, they were laying over two miles a day, and they
finally crowned their efforts by laying in one day between sunrise and
sunset nearly eight miles of track.
In the meantime the
Central Pacific also had stopped at nothing. The company had a dozen
tunnels to build but did not wait to finish them. Supplies were hauled
over the Sierras, and the work was pushed ahead regardless of expense.
On May 10, 1869, the junction was formed, the opposing track layers
meeting at Promontory Point, five miles west of Ogden,
Utah
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Spikes of gold and silver were driven into the joining tracks, and the
through line from the
Missouri
River to the Pacific Ocean had been completed; the first engine from
the Pacific coast faced the first engine from the Atlantic. The whole
country, from President
Grant in the White
House to the newsboy who sold extras, celebrated this achievement.
Chicago
held a parade several miles long; in New York City the chimes of
Trinity were rung; and in Philadelphia the old Liberty Bell in
Independence Hall was tolled again. |
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Central Pacific Railroad at Ogden,
Utah
in 1869.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE!
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The
cost of the Union Pacific Railroad from Omaha to its junction with the
Central Pacific formed a subject of controversy for a generation. The
saving of six months of the allotted time for completing the road no doubt
increased its cost to the builders, for at times they borrowed money in
the East at rates as high as 18 and 19 per cent. Besides, in pushing the
line far beyond the bounds of civilization without waiting for the slower
pace of the settler and the security which his protection afforded, it
often became necessary for half the total number of workmen to stand guard
and thus reduce the working capacity of the construction force. Even so,
hundreds were killed by the
Indians.
Governmental restrictions of various kinds also increased the cost of the
road. For example, the stipulation that only American iron should be used
increased the cost by at least ten dollars for every ton of rail laid. The
requirement that a cut should be made through each rise in the Laramie
plains, thus giving the track a dead level instead of conforming to the
natural roll of the country, ultimately resulted in a waste of from five
to ten million dollars.
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Extraordinary costs such
as these, combined with the extravagant methods of construction and
financing, brought the total cost of the property up to what was in those
days a fabulous sum of money. The records indicate that the profits which
accrued through the Credit Mobilier and in other ways in the construction
up to the time of the opening in 1869 exceeded fifty millions of dollars.
While the Union Pacific
was being built, from 1862 to 1869, other railroads were not idle, and
many were rapidly reaching out into the Central West. Not only had the
Chicago and
North Western reached Omaha and made connection with the Union Pacific,
but the Kansas Pacific had penetrated as far west as Denver and had joined
the Union Pacific at Cheyenne.
Continued
Next Page
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Night Train.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE!
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Building the railroad.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE!
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Native
American Photo Prints -
Vintage photographs of famous chiefs, heroes, and
Indian
life in the 19th century.
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