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A Century
of Railroad Building |
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If the American of today could transport
himself to one of the first railroad lines built in the United States it
is not unlikely that he would side with the canal enthusiast in his
argument. The rough pictures which accompany most accounts of early
railroad days, showing a train of omnibus-like carriages pulled by a
locomotive with upright boiler, really represent a somewhat advanced stage
of development. Though Stephenson had demonstrated the practicability of
the locomotive in 1814 and although the American, John Stevens, had
constructed one in 1826 which had demonstrated its ability to take a
curve, local prejudice against this innovation continued strong. The
farmers asserted that the sparks set fire to their hayricks and barns and
that the noise frightened their hens so that they would not lay and their
cows so that they could not give milk. |

Steam Locomotive.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE! |
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On the earliest railroads, therefore,
almost any other method of propulsion was preferred. Horses and dogs
were used, winches turned by men were occasionally installed, and in
some cases cars were even fitted with sails. Of all these methods, the
horse was the most popular: he sent out no sparks, he carried his own
fuel, he made little noise, and he would not explode. His only failing
was that he would leave the track; and to remedy this defect the early
railroad builders hit upon a happy device. Sometimes they would fix a
treadmill inside the car; two horses would patiently propel the
caravan, the seats for passengers being arranged on either side. So
unformed was the prevalent conception of the ultimate function of the
railroad, and so pronounced was the fear of monopoly that, on certain
lines, the roadbed was laid as a state enterprise and the users
furnished their own cars, just as the individual owners of towboats
did on the canals. The drivers, however, were an exceedingly rough
lot; no schedules were observed and as the first lines had only single
tracks and infrequent turnouts, when the opposing sides would meet
each other coming and going, precedence was usually awarded to the
side which had the stronger arm. The roadbed showed little improvement
over the mine tramways of the eighteenth century, and the rails were
only long wooden stringers with strap iron nailed on top. So
undeveloped were the resources of the country that the builders of the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in 1828 petitioned Congress to remit the
duty on the iron which it was compelled to import from England. The
trains consisted of a string of little cars, with the baggage piled on
the roof, and when they reached a hill they sometimes had to be pulled
up the inclined plane by a rope. Yet the traveling in these earliest
days was probably more comfortable than in those which immediately
followed the general adoption of locomotives. When, five or ten years
later, the advantages of mechanical as opposed to animal traction
caused engines to be introduced extensively, the passengers behind
them rode through constant smoke and hot cinders that made railway
travel an incessant torture.
Yet the railroad speedily demonstrated its
practical value; many of the first lines were extremely profitable,
and the hostility with which they had been first received soon changed
to an enthusiasm which was just as unreasoning. The speculative craze
which invariably follows a new discovery swept over the country in the
thirties and the forties and manifested itself most unfortunately in
the new Western States--Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan. Here,
bonfires and public meetings whipped up the zeal; people believed that
railroads would not only immediately open the wilderness and pay the
interest on the bonds issued to construct them, but that they would
become a source Of revenue to sadly depleted state treasuries. |
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Building the railroad.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE!
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Much has been heard of government ownership in recent years; yet it is
nothing particularly new, for many of the early railroads in these new
Western States were built as government enterprises, with results which
were frequently disastrous. This mania, with the land speculation
accompanying it, was largely responsible for the panic of 1837 and led to
that repudiation of debts in certain States which for so many years gave
American investments an evil reputation abroad.
In
the more settled parts of the country, however, railroad building had
comparatively a more solid foundation. Yet the railroad map of the forties
indicates that railroad building in this early period was incoherent and
haphazard.
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Practically everywhere
the railroad was an individual enterprise; the builders had no further
conception of it than as a line connecting two given points usually a
short distance apart. The roads of those days began anywhere and ended
almost anywhere. A few miles of iron rail connected Albany and
Schenectady. There was a road from Hartford to New Haven, but there was
none from New Haven to New York. A line connected Philadelphia with
Columbia; Baltimore had a road to Washington; Charleston, South Carolina,
had a similar contact with Hamburg in the same State. By 1842, New York
State, from Albany to Buffalo, possessed several disconnected stretches of
railroad. It was not until 1836, when work was begun on the Erie Railroad,
that a plan was adopted for a single line reaching several hundred miles
from an obvious point, such as New York, to an obvious destination, such
as Lake Erie. Even then a few farsighted men could foresee the day when
the railroad train would cross the plains and the Rockies and link the
Atlantic and the Pacific. Yet, in 1850nearly all the railroads in the
United States lay east of the Mississippi River, and all of them, even
when they were physically mere extensions of one another, were separately
owned and separately managed.
Successful as many of the
railroads were, they had hardly yet established themselves as the one
preeminent means of transportation. The canal had lost in the struggle for
supremacy, but certain of these constructed waterways, particularly the
Erie, were flourishing with little diminished vigor. The river steamboat
had enjoyed a development in the first few decades of the nineteenth
century almost as great as that of the railroad itself. The Mississippi
River was the great natural highway for the products and the passenger
traffic of the South Central States; it had made New Orleans one of the
largest and most flourishing cities in the country; and certainly the rich
cotton planter of the fifties would have smiled at any suggestion that the
"floating palaces" which plied this mighty stream would ever surrender
their preeminence to the rusty and struggling railroads which wound along
its banks.
This period, which may be taken as the first
in American railroad development, ended about the middle of the century.
It was an age of great progress but not of absolutely assured success. A
few lines earned handsome profits, but in the main the railroad business
was not favorably regarded and railroad investments everywhere were held
in suspicion. The condition that prevailed in many railroads is
illustrated by the fact that the directors of the Michigan and Southern,
when they held their annual meeting in 1853, had to borrow chairs from an
adjoining office as the sheriff had walked away with their own for debt.
Even a railroad with such a territory as the Hudson River Valley, and
extending from New York to Albany existed in a state of chronic
dilapidation; and the New York and Harlem, which had an entrance into New
York City as an asset of incalculable value, was looked upon merely as a
vehicle for Wall Street speculation.
Continued
Next Page
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Santa Fe Railroad, 1900.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE!
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Locomotive in Elk Canyon of the
Black Hills,
1890.
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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