- This article refers to a railroad built in the United
States between Omaha and Sacramento, completed in 1869.
For other transcontinental railroads see transcontinental
railroad.
The
First Transcontinental Railroad (known originally
as the Pacific Railroad and later as the Overland
Route), built in the United States
between 1863 and 1869 by the Central Pacific Railroad of
California and Union Pacific
Railroad, connected Council Bluffs, Iowa
/Omaha,
Nebraska
(via
Ogden,
Utah
and Sacramento, California
) to Alameda, California
. By linking with the existing railway network
of the Eastern United
States
, the road thus connected the Atlantic
and Pacific
coasts of
the United States by rail for the first time. Opened for through
traffic on May 10, 1869, with the driving of the "Last Spike" at Promontory
Summit, Utah
, the road established a mechanized transcontinental
transportation network that revolutionized the population and
economy of the American
West.
Authorized by the
Pacific Railroad
Acts of 1862 and 1864 during the
American Civil War and supported by
30-year U.S.
government bonds and
extensive land grants of government owned land, it was the
culmination of a decades-long movement to build such a line and was
one of the crowning achievements
labor in the crossing of plains and high
mountains westward by the Union Pacific and eastward by the Central
Pacific.
The
transcontinental railroad is considered one of the greatest
American technological feats of the 19th century—surpassing the
building of the Erie Canal in the 1820s
and the crossing of the Isthmus of
Panama by the Panama
Railroad
in
1855. It served as a vital link for trade, commerce
and travel that joined the eastern and western halves of late 19th
century United
States
. The transcontinental railroad quickly ended
most of the far slower and more hazardous
stagecoach lines and wagon trains that had
preceded it. The railroads led to the decline of traffic on the
Oregon and
California Trail which had populated much
of the west as they provided much faster, safer and cheaper (7 days
and about $65 economy) transport east and west for people and goods
across half a continent. The sale of the railroad land grant lands
and the transport provided for timber and crops lead to the rapid
settling of the supposed "Great American Desert". The main workers
on the Union Pacific were many ex-army veterans and Irish emigrants
while most of the engineers etc. were ex-army men who had learned
their trade keeping the trains running during the Civil War.
The
Central Pacific, facing a labor shortage in the labor short West,
relied on Chinese laborers who did prodigious work building the
line over and through the Sierra
Nevada mountains and then across Nevada
to a meeting
in Utah
.

Pacific Railroad Bond, City and County
of San Francisco, 1865
The building of the railroad was motivated in part to bind the
eastern and western states of the United States together. The
Central Pacific faced with the prodigious feat of building a road
over the Sierra Nevada mountains started work in 1863. The Union
Pacific company faced with the competition for workers, rails,
ties, railroad engines and supplies by the needs of the
American Civil War didn't start
construction till July 1865. Completion of the railroad
substantially accelerated the populating of the West while
contributing to the decline of territory controlled by the
Native American in
these regions.
In 1879, the Supreme Court
of the United States
formally established, in its decision regarding
Union Pacific Railroad vs. United States (99 U.S.
402), the official "date of completion" of the Transcontinental
Railroad as November 6, 1869.
The Central Pacific and the
Southern Pacific Railroad combined
operations in 1870 and formally merged in 1885. Union Pacific
originally bought the Southern Pacific in 1901 but in 1913 was
forced to divest it; the company once again acquired the Southern
Pacific in 1996. Much of the original
right-of-way is still in use today
and owned by the Union Pacific.
Needing rapid communication, as the railroad was built they built
telegraph lines along side the railroad rights of way. Since these
lines were much easier to protect and maintain than the original
First Transcontinental
Telegraph lines which went over much of the original routes of
the
Mormon Trail and the
Central Nevada Route though central
Utah and Nevada, they soon became the main telegraph lines and the
earlier lines were mostly abandoned.
Route

Route of the first American
transcontinental railroad from Sacramento, California, to Council
Bluffs, Iowa.
Profile of the Pacific Railroad from Omaha to San
Francisco
Union Pacific laid of track, starting in Council Bluffs, and
continuing across the
Missouri River
and through Nebraska (
Elkhorn
, now Omaha,
Grand Island
,
North Platte
,
Ogallala
,
Sidney,
Nebraska
), the
Colorado Territory (
Julesburg
), the
Wyoming
Territory (
Cheyenne
,
Laramie
,
Green
River
,
Evanston
), the
Utah Territory
(
Ogden
,
Brigham
City
,
Corinne
), and
connecting with the Central Pacific at Promontory Summit.
The route
did not pass through the two biggest cities in the Great American Desert -- Denver,
Colorado
and Salt Lake
City, Utah
. Feeder lines were built to service the two
cities.
The Central Pacific laid 690 miles (1,110 km) of track,
starting in Sacramento, California, and continuing over the Sierra
Nevada mountains into Nevada.
Some of the towns it passed through were:
Newcastle,
California
and Truckee, California
, Reno,
Nevada
, Wadsworth
, Winnemucca
, Battle Mountain
, Elko
, and
Wells,
Nevada
, before connecting with the Union Pacific line at
Promontory Summit in the Utah Territory. Later, the western
part of the route was extended to the Alameda Terminal
in Alameda, California
, and shortly thereafter, to the Oakland Long Wharf
at Oakland Point in
Oakland,
California
. The eastern part of the line was extended to
Ogden ending the short lifetime of the Railroad boom town of
Promontory
. Even before it was completed, they were
building other railroads in Nevada and California to connect to
it.
At first, the Union Pacific was not directly connected to the
Eastern U.S. rail network. Instead, trains had to be ferried across
the Missouri River.
In 1872, the Union
Pacific Missouri River Bridge
opened and directly connected the East and
West.
Modern-day
Interstate 80 closely
follows the path of the railroad, with one exception.
Between Echo, Utah
and Wells, Nevada, Interstate 80 passes through the
larger Salt Lake City and passes along the south shore of the
Great Salt
Lake
. The Railroad instead, with Mormon workers,
blasted and tunneled its way down the
Weber
River canyon to Ogden and around the north shore of the Great
Salt Lake (roughly paralleling modern
Interstate 84 and
State Route 30). While routing the
railroad along the Weber River, workers planted the thousand-mile
tree, where a marker still stands, to commemorate the milestone.
The portion of the railroad around the north shore of the lake is
no longer intact.
In 1904, the Lucin Cutoff
, a causeway across the center of the Great Salt
Lake, shortened the route by approximately , traversing Promontory Point instead of
Promontory Summit.
History
The official poster announcing the Pacific Railroad's grand
opening.
California Developments
Asa Whitney
Talk of a
transcontinental railroad started in 1830, shortly after steam powered railroads were invented in
Great
Britain
and began to be introduced into the United
States. This talk intensified as railroad technology
advanced and the Oregon
Territory
and California
were added to United States Territory in
1846. Much of the early debates was not so much
over whether it would be built, but how it would be paid for and
what route it should follow: a "central" route, avoiding the worst
of the Rocky Mountains via the
Platte River in Nebraska
and the South Pass
in Wyoming
by following much of the path of the Oregon Trail, or a southern route, avoiding the
Rockies by going across Texas
, New Mexico Territory, across the
Sonora
desert
and on to Los Angeles, California
. A "northern" route roughly following the
route followed by Lewis and Clark
along the Missouri River through what is now northern Montana
to Oregon Territory
was initially considered impractical because of
snow.
One of the most prominent champions of the central route railroad
at this time was
Asa Whitney (a distant
cousin to
cotton gin inventor
Eli Whitney). Whitney envisioned a route from
Chicago and the Great Lakes to northern California, paid for by the
sale of land to settlers along the route.
In June 1845 Whitney led a team along part of the proposed route to
assess its feasibility. Whitney traveled widely to solicit support
from businessmen and politicians, printed maps and pamphlets, and
submitted several proposals to
Congress, all at his own expense.
Legislation to begin construction of the
Pacific Railroad
(called the
Memorial of Asa Whitney) was first introduced
to Congress by Representative
Zadock
Pratt. Congress did not act on Whitney's proposal.
The
Oregon Question was settled in
1846 when the United States and Great Britain agreed to a Canadian
U.S. boundary at the 49th parallel. California was easily taken
over in 1846 and came under formal United States control in 1848
with the
Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo at the conclusion of the
Mexican-American War. Gold was
discovered in California in January 1848 setting off the
California Gold Rush and settlers
coming into California skyrocketed. By 1850 California had enough
settlers arriving by the
California
Trail and by sea to become the 31st state.
Whitney was to see a version of the central route completed
although he was not formally involved.
The southern route and the Gadsden Purchase
Concerns lingered that snow would make the central route to
California impractical. A survey after 1848 indicated that the best
route for a southern route had been overlooked in the boundary
accepted by the treaty ending the war with Mexico.
Fortunately, Santa Anna was back into power in Mexico and in
1853 the United States made the Gadsden
Purchase, acquiring the southern portions of what is now
New
Mexico
and Arizona
for $5,000,000. The southern route could now
be built entirely within U.S. territory. However, Congress was
divided between slave and non-slave state members and did not then
agree to support construction of a southern route (or any route),
as the decision became embroiled in the divisive sectional dispute
that eventually turned into the
American Civil War. The southern railroad
was not built until 1880 when the
Southern Pacific Railroad crossed
Arizona territory.
Theodore Judah

Theodore Judah, architect of the
Transcontinental Railroad and first chief engineer of the Central
Pacific.
The next big champion of the central route was
Theodore Judah. Judah undertook what was one
of the chief obstacles of a central route to California—a way over
the high and rugged Sierra Nevada mountains.
Judah was chief engineer for the newly formed
Sacramento Valley
Railroad in 1852.
Although the railroad was to go bankrupt he
was convinced that a properly financed railroad could pass from
Sacramento
through the Sierra Nevada mountains to reach the
Great Basin and hook up with rail lines
coming from the East.
In 1856 he wrote a 13,000-word proposal in support of a Pacific
railroad and distributed it to Cabinet secretaries, congressmen,
and other influential people.
In September 1859, Judah was chosen to be the accredited lobbyist
for the Pacific Railroad Convention. The convention approved his
plan to survey, finance, and engineer the road.
Judah returned to
Washington in December 1859, where he was given an office in the
United
States Capitol
, an audience with President James Buchanan, and he represented the
Convention before Congress.
In
February 1860 Iowa
Representative Samuel Curtis
introduced a bill to build the railroad. It passed the
House but
died when it could not be reconciled with the Senate version.
Judah returned to California in 1860. He continued to search for a
more practical route through the Sierras suitable for a railroad.
In the summer of 1860, a local miner, Daniel Strong, had surveyed a
route over the Sierras for a wagon toll road, a route he realized
would also suit a railroad. He described his discovery in a letter
to Judah, and together they formed an association to solicit
subscriptions from local merchants and businessmen to support their
proposed railroad.
From
January or February 1861 until July, the party of ten led by Judah
and Strong surveyed the route for the railroad over the Sierra
Nevada, through Clipper Gap, Emigrant Gap
, Donner
Pass
, and south to Truckee
. They had discovered a way across the
Sierras that was gradual enough that with a lot of work it could be
made suitable for a railroad.
Before major construction could begin, Judah traveled back to New
York City to raise funds to buy out The Big Four.
Shortly after he
arrived in New York, however, Judah died on November 2, 1863, of
Yellow Fever which he had contracted
while traveling over the Panama Railroad
's transit of the Isthmus of Panama. The CPRR
Engineering Department was taken over by Samuel S.
Montegue as his
successor as Chief Engineer, and Chief Assistant Engineer (later
Acing Chief Engineer) Lewis Metzler Clement
who also became Superintendent of
Track.
The Big Four and Central Pacific Railroad
- Main articles: The Big Four
and Central Pacific
Railroad

Leland Stanford's official
gubernatorial portrait
Collis Huntington, a hardware
merchant, heard Theodore Judah lecture at the St. Charles Hotel in
Sacramento in November 1860, and he invited Judah to his office to
hear his proposal in detail.
Huntington was to change Judah's strategy of
finding several investors and instead sought to raise the money
from three partners who initially invested $1,500 each and form a
board of directors: Mark
Hopkins, his business partner; James Bailey, a jeweller;
Leland Stanford, a grocer, future
governor of California, and
founder of Stanford
University
; and Charles
Crocker, a dry-goods merchant and eventual owner of Crocker Banks. The investors became
known as the
The
Big Four and their railroad was called the
Central Pacific Railroad. Each were
eventually to make millions of dollars off their continuing
investments and active management and control of the Central
Pacific Railroad (CPRR).
Pacific Railroad Act
The
Pony Express from 1860 to 1861 was
to prove that the Central Nevada Route across Nevada and Utah and
the sections of the
Oregon Trail across
Wyoming and Nebraska was viable during the winter. With the
American Civil War raging and a secessionist movement in California
gaining steam, the apparent need for the railroad became more
urgent.
In 1861 Curtis again introduced a bill to establish the railroad,
but it did not pass. After the secession of the southern states,
the House of Representatives on May 6, 1862, and the Senate on June
20 finally approved it. Lincoln signed it into law on July 1. The
act established the two main lines—the
Central Pacific from the west and
the
Union Pacific from the mid-west.
Other rail lines were encouraged to build feeder lines.
Each was required to build only 50 miles (80 km) in the first
year; after that, only 50 miles (80 km) more were required
each year. Each railroad was subsidized $16,000 per mile
($9,940/km) built over an easy grade, $32,000 per mile ($19,880/km)
in the high plains, and $48,000 per mile ($29,830/km) in the
mountains. To allow the railroads to raise additional money
Congress provided additional assistance to the railroad companies
in the form of land grants of federal lands. They were granted
400-foot right-of-ways plus ten square miles of land (ten sections)
adjacent to the track for every mile of track built. To avoid a
railroad monopoly on good land, the land was not given away in a
continuous swath but in a "checkerboard" pattern leaving Federal
land in between that could be purchased from the government. The
land grant railroads, receiving millions of acres of public land,
sold bonds based on the value of the lands, sold the land to
settlers, used the money to build their railroads, and contributed
to a rapid settlement of the West. The race was on to see which
railroad company could build the longest section of track and
receive the most land and subsidy.
Eastern Developments
Eastern Terminus
Once it was decided that the railroad would follow the central
route rather than the southern route, there was little question
that the western terminus would be Sacramento. However, there was
considerable intrigue over the eastern terminus.
The three prime candidates for the eastern terminus on of Missouri
River between Kansas City and Omaha were:
The principal advantages of Council Bluffs/Omaha was that it was
well north of the Civil War fighting taking place in Missouri, was
the shortest route to South Pass break in the Rockies in Wyoming,
and would follow a fertile river that would encourage settlement.
Missouri's advantages included that it had
the only railroad to actually reach the Missouri River on its
western border (H&SJ), was more centrally located for lines
coming up from Texas and could offer a route servicing Denver,
Colorado
, the biggest city in the Great American Desert. In 1862
the closest rail lines to Omaha/Council Bluffs were away and would
take five years to reach Omaha.
Thomas Durant who was building the cross-Iowa railroad (the
M&M) was literally banking that the Omaha route would be chosen
and began buying up land in Nebraska.
In 1857,
Durant hired private citizen Abraham
Lincoln to represent the M&M in litigation brought by
steamboat operators to dismantle Government Bridge
, the first bridge across the Mississippi
River. The bridge prevented steamboats from passing above
the bridge and was an obstruction of a public waterway. In August
1859 Lincoln at the behest of M&M attorney Norman Judd traveled
to Council Bluffs to inspect M&M facilities that were to be
used to secure a $3,000 loan Lincoln was to hold. On the visit
Lincoln rode the SJ&H railroad and visited railroad locations
in Missouri and Kansas before going to Council Bluffs. During the
visit Lincoln was to spend 2 hours with M&M engineer
Grenville M. Dodge at the Pacific House Hotel
discussing the merits of starting the railroad in Council Bluffs
and was to visit Cemetery Hill there to look over the proposed
route.
Lincoln's
ties to Council Bluffs were furthered strengthened by the fact that
he had won the 1860 Republican nomination on the third ballot when
the Iowa
delegation
switched its vote to him. In contrast, Lincoln was to get
only 10 percent of the Missouri vote in the
1860 Presidential
Election.
While the Pacific Railroad Act was to award the eastern contract to
the newly formed Union Pacific, it was left up to then President
Lincoln to formally choose the location for the railroad to start
and Lincoln in 1862 was to follow the advice of his former
client.
The H&SJ and LP&W were not totally shut out of the contract
though.
The H&SJ was to be allowed to build a
feeder line from Atchison,
Kansas
while the LP&W could build a feeder line out of
Kansas City,
Kansas
. The feeder lines were supposed to meet
the Union Pacific main line somewhere around the
100th meridian in central Nebraska and the
feeder lines were to get the same land grant incentives as the
Union Pacific.
Thomas Durant and the Union Pacific

Thomas Clark Durant
- Main articles: Thomas
C. Durant and Union Pacific Railroad
In contrast to the relatively straight forward arrangements for the
Central Pacific, the Union Pacific which was to ultimately build
nearly 2/3 of the track was to be mired in controversy and scandals
while its controlling partner Thomas C. Durant got rich as he took
advantage of lax or non-existent government oversight during the
Civil War.
The enabling legislation for the Union Pacific required that no
partner was to own more than 10 percent of the stock. However, the
Union Pacific had problems selling its stock. Durant enticed
investors with a scheme where he would put up the money for the
stock if they would just put their names on it. Then Durant wound
up taking the stock from the investors and was to end up
controlling about half the stock of the railroad.
The initial construction of railroad went over land that Durant
owned around Omaha. Being paid by the mile, the railroad built
oxbows of extraneous track never venturing
further than from Omaha in the railroad's first 2 1/2 years.
Durant manipulated market prices on his stocks by spreading rumours
about which railroads were to be connected to the Union Pacific.
First he ran up the stock of his M&M Railroad while secretly
buying stock in the depressed
Cedar Rapids and Missouri
Railroad (CR&M), then running up CR&M stock with new
plans to connect the Union Pacific to it at which point he began
buying back the M&M stock at depressed prices. The gambit is
estimated to have raised $5 million for his cohorts and him.
Durant was to keep a low public profile in his mechanizations as he
was only a vice president. He was to install a series of respected
men such as
John Adams Dix as
president of the railroad.
On July 4, 1865, the Union Pacific had not gone further than from
Omaha—even as the Central Pacific had been working away for 2 1/2
years. With the end of the Civil War and increased government
supervision in the offing, Durant hired his former M&M engineer
Grenville M. Dodge to build the railroad and the Union
Pacific began a mad dash.
Construction

The
Jupiter, which carried
Leland Stanford (one of the "Big Four" owners of the Central
Pacific) and other railway officials to the Golden Spike
Ceremony.
Because of the nature of the way money was given to the companies
building the railroad, they were sometimes known to sabotage each
others railroads to claim that land as their own. When they first
came close to meeting, they changed paths to be nearly parallel, so
that each company could claim subsidies from the government over
the same plot of land. Fed up with the fighting , Congress
eventually declared where and when the railways should meet. Survey
teams closely followed by work crews from each railroad passed each
other, eager to lay as much track as possible. The leading Central
Pacific road crew set a record by laying 10 miles (16 km) of
track in a single day, commemorating the event with a signpost
beside the track for passing trains to see.
Laborers
The majority of the Union Pacific track was built by
Irish laborers, and veterans of
both the Union and
Confederate armies.
Brigham Young, President of The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, wished to see the railroad
support immigration and the population centers in Ogden
and Salt Lake City, Utah
. As the track approached Utah Territory, he
sought a labor contract with the Union Pacific. Under this
completed contract, workgangs made up almost entirely of
Mormons built much of the Union Pacific track in the
Utah territory including the difficult section requiring extensive
blasting and tunneling through the
Weber
River canyon. (Allen and Leonard, pp. 328–329)

Chinese railroad workers greet a train
on a snowy day.
The Central Pacific's grade was constructed primarily by many
thousands of
emigrant workers from
China who were commonly referred to at the time as "
Celestials" and China as the "Celestial
Kingdom." Even though at first they were thought to be too weak or
fragile to do this type of work, after the first few days on which
Chinese were on the line, the decision was made to hire as many as
could be found in California (where most were independent gold
miners or in service industries such as laundries and kitchens).
Many more were imported from China. Most of the men received
between one and three dollars per day, but the workers arriving
directly from China received much less. Eventually, they went on
strike and gained a small increase in salary.
In addition to track laying (which typically employed approximately
25% of the labor force), the operation also required the efforts of
hundreds of tunnelers, explosive experts, bridge builders,
blacksmiths, carpenters, engineers, masons, surveyors,
teamsters, telegraphers, and even cooks, to name
just a few of the trades involved in construction of the
railroad.
Central Pacific
Six months later, on January 8, 1863 Governor
Leland Stanford ceremoniously broke ground
in Sacramento, California, to begin construction of the Central
Pacific Railroad. The Central Pacific made great progress along the
Sacramento Valley. However construction was slowed, first by the
foothills of the Sierra Nevada, then by the mountains themselves
and most importantly by winter snowstorms. Consequently, the
Central Pacific expanded its efforts to hire immigrant laborers
(many of whom were
Chinese). The
immigrants seemed to be more willing to tolerate the horrible
conditions, and progress continued. The increasing necessity for
tunnelling then began to slow progress of the line yet again. To
combat this, Central Pacific began to use the newly invented and
very unstable
nitro-glycerine
explosives—which accelerated both the rate of construction and the
mortality of the laborers. Appalled by the losses, the Central
Pacific began to use less volatile explosives and developed a
method of placing the explosives in which the Chinese blasters
worked from large suspended baskets which were then rapidly pulled
to safety after the fuses were lit. Construction began again in
earnest.
Union Pacific
The major investor in the Union Pacific was
Thomas Clark Durant, who had made his
stake money by smuggling Confederate cotton with the aid of
Grenville M. Dodge. Durant chose routes that would
favour places where he held land, and he announced connections to
other lines at times that suited his share dealings. Durant paid an
associate to submit the construction bid who then handed it over to
another company controlled by Durant,
Crédit Mobilier.
Durant then manipulated the finances and government subsidies,
making himself another fortune. Durant hired Dodge as chief
engineer and
Jack Casement as
construction boss.
In the
east, the progress started in Omaha, Nebraska, by the Union Pacific
Railroad proceeded very quickly because of the open terrain of the
Great
Plains
. However, they soon became subject to
slowdowns as they entered Indian-held lands. The Native Americans
living there saw the addition of the railroad as a violation of
their treaties with the United States. War parties began to raid
the moving labor camps that followed the progress of the line.
Union Pacific responded by increasing security and by hiring
marksmen to kill
American Bison—which
were both a physical threat to trains and the primary food source
for many of the Plains Indians. The Native Americans then began
killing laborers when they realized that the so-called "Iron Horse"
threatened their existence. Security measures were further
strengthened, and progress on the railroad continued.
The Last Spike

Golden spike that was donated by the
governor of Arizona Territory.
It is one of four ceremonial spikes driven at the completion
(but is not the final golden spike).
The Last Spike by Thomas
Hill (1881)
years after the groundbreaking, laborers of the Central Pacific
Railroad from the west and the Union Pacific Railroad from the east
met at
Promontory
Summit
, Utah.
It was here on May 10, 1869 that Stanford
drove the The Last Spike (or golden spike) which is now on display at the
Cantor Arts
Center
at Stanford University
, that joined the rails of the transcontinental
railroad. In perhaps the world's first live
mass-media event, the hammers and spike were
wired to the
telegraph line so that each
hammer stroke would be heard as a click at telegraph stations
nationwide—the hammer strokes were missed, so the clicks were sent
by the telegraph operator. As soon as the ceremonial spike had been
replaced by an ordinary iron spike, a message was transmitted to
both the East Coast and West Coast that simply read, "DONE." The
country erupted in celebration upon receipt of this message. Travel
from coast to coast was reduced from six months or more to just one
week.
Aftermath
Railroad developments

Display ads for the CPRR and UPRR the
week the rails were joined on May 19, 1869
UPRR & CPRR "Great American Over-Land Route" Timetable
cover 1881
the golden spike was driven, the rail network was not yet connected
to the Atlantic or Pacific, but merely connected Omaha and
Sacramento.
In November 1869 the Central Pacific finally
connected Sacramento
to San Francisco Bay
at Oakland, California
.
The Central Pacific soon learned that it would have trouble
maintaining an open track in winter across the Sierras. At first
they tried plowing the road with special snowplows mounted on their
steam engines. When this was found only partially successful an
extensive process of building snow sheds over some of the track to
protect it from deep snows and avalanches was instituted. This
eventually kept the tracks free for all except a few days of the
year.
Both railroads soon instituted extensive upgrade projects to build
better bridges, viaducts, dugways, heavier duty rails, stronger
ties, better road beds etc. The original track had often been laid
as fast as possible with only secondary attention to maintenance
and longevity. Getting the subsidies was initially the primary
incentive, upgrades of all kinds were routinely required in the
coming years.
The Union
Pacific would not connect Omaha to Council Bluffs until completing
the Union Pacific Missouri River
Bridge
in 1872.
With the completion of the Civil War, the competing railroads
coming from Missouri took advantage of their initial strategic
advantage for a building boom. The
H&SJ finished the
Hannibal Bridge which was the first
bridge to cross the Missouri River in July 1869 in Kansas City.
This in turn connected to
Kansas
Pacific trains going from Kansas City to Denver which had built
the
Denver Pacific Railway
connecting to the Union Pacific.
In August 1870 the Kansas Pacific laid
the last spike connecting to the Denver Pacific line at Strasburg,
Colorado
and the first true Atlantic to Pacific United
States railroad was completed.
Kansas City's head start in connecting to a true transcontinental
railroad was to contribute to it rather than Omaha being the
dominant rail center west of Chicago.
The Kansas Pacific became part of the Union Pacific in 1880.
On June
4, 1876, an express train called the Transcontinental Express
arrived in San Francisco via the First Transcontinental Railroad
only 83 hours and 39 minutes after it left from New York City
. Only ten years before the same journey
would have taken months over land or weeks on ship.
The Central Pacific was absorbed by the
Southern Pacific in 1885.
The Union
Pacific initially took over the Southern Pacific in 1901 but was
forced by the U.S.
Supreme Court
to divest it because of monopoly concerns.
The Union Pacific completed the take-over of the Southern Pacific
in 1996.
Having
been bypassed with the completion of the Lucin Cutoff
in 1904, the Promontory Summit rails were pulled up
in 1942 to be recycled for the World War
II effort. This process began with a ceremonial
"undriving" at the golden spike location.
In 1957, Congress
authorized the Golden Spike National Historic
Site
. On May 10, 2006, on the anniversary of the
driving of the spike, Utah announced that its state quarter design
would be a representation of the driving of the spike.
Credit Mobilier

Oakes Ames
Despite the transcontinental success and millions in government
subsidies, the Union Pacific faced bankruptcy less than three years
after the golden spike as details surfaced about overcharges Credit
Mobilier had billed Union Pacific for the formal building of the
railroad. The scandal hit epic proportions in the
United States
presidential election, 1872 which saw the re-election of
Ulysses S. Grant and became the biggest scandal of the
Gilded Age. It would not be resolved
until the congressman who was supposed to have reined in its
excesses but instead wound up profiting from it was dead.
Durant had initially come up with the scheme to have Credit
Mobilier subcontract to do the actual track work. Durant gained
control of the company after buying out employee Herbert Hoxie for
$10,000. Under Durant's guidance the company was charging Union
Pacific often twice or more the customary cost for track work (thus
in effect paying himself to build the railroad). The process was to
mire down Union Pacific work.
Lincoln asked Massachusetts Congressman
Oakes
Ames, who was on the railroad committee, to clean things up and
get the railroad moving. Ames got his brother
Oliver Ames, Jr. named president of the
Union Pacific and Ames himself became president of Credit
Mobiler.
Ames in turn gave stock options to other politicians while at the
same time continuing the lucrative overcharges. The scandal was to
implicate Vice President
Schuyler
Colfax (who was cleared) and future President
James Garfield among others.
The scandal broke in 1872 when the
New York Sun published
correspondence between Henry S. McComb and Ames detailing the
scheme. In the ensuing Congressional investigation, it was
recommended that Ames be expelled from Congress but this was
reduced to a censure and Ames died within three months.
Durant was to leave the Union Pacific and a new rail baron
Jay Gould was to become the dominant
stockholder.
Visible remains
Visible remains of the historic line are still easily
located—hundreds of miles are still in service today, especially
through the Sierra Nevada Mountains and canyons in Utah and
Wyoming. While the original rail has long since been replaced
because of age and wear, and the roadbed upgraded and repaired, the
lines generally run on top of the original, handmade grade. Vista
points on
Interstate 80 through
California's Truckee Canyon provide a panoramic view of many miles
of the original Central Pacific line and of the
snow sheds which make winter train travel safe and
practical.
In areas
where the original line has been bypassed and abandoned, primarily
in Utah, the road grade is still obvious, as are numerous cuts and
fills, especially the Big
Fill
a few miles east of Promontory. The sweeping
curve which connected to the east end of the Big Fill now passes a
Thiokol rocket research and development
facility.
Current passenger service
Amtrak runs a daily service from Emeryville,
California
(San Francisco Bay Area
) to Chicago
, the California
Zephyr. The Zephyr consistently uses the original
First Transcontinental Railroad track from Sacramento to Winnemucca,
Nevada
. The Zephyr usually uses the original track
on the westbound runs from Winnemucca to Wells, Nevada
. The eastbound runs between these towns
usually use tracks built by the
Western Pacific Railroad. This is
because the Union Pacific Railroad now owns both tracks, and it
routes trains on either track.
Popular culture
The feat is depicted in various movies including the 1939 film
Union Pacific directed
by
Cecil B. DeMille which portrayed the fictional
Central Pacific investor Asa Barrows obstructing attempts by the
Union Pacific from reaching Ogden, Utah. The investigator, played
by
Joel McCrea, saves the railroad and
gets the engineer's girl, played by
Barbara Stanwyck.
John Ford's 1924 silent movie
The Iron Horse captures the
fervent nationalism that drove public support for the project.
Although not exactly historical, he did go to great pains to make
it a realistic looking reenactment, including in its cast some of
the Chinese laborers who actually worked on the Central Pacific
section of the railroad.
The 1962 film
How the
West Was Won has a whole segment devoted to the
construction; one of the movie's most famous scenes, filmed in
Cinerama, is of a buffalo stampede over the
railroad.
Kristiana Gregory wrote a book which is part of the Dear America
series called The Great Railroad Race in which the diary's writer,
Libby West chronicles the end of the building of the railroad and
the excitement which engulfed the country beforehand and
afterwards.
The building of the railway is portrayed by the BBC documentary
series
Seven
Wonders of the Industrial World (2004) in Episode 6
The Line, with a runtime of 49 minutes.
The series
American
Experience also documents the railway in episode
Transcontinental Railroad with a runtime of 60
minutes.
The main character in
The Claim
(2000) is a surveyor for the
Central Pacific Railroad, and the
film is partially about the efforts of a frontier town mayor to
have the railroad routed through his town.
See also
Notes
- PBS American Experience - Transcontinental Railroad
- Whitney Biography
- In Memoriam, Theodore D. Judah, Died November
2, 1863
- Map of Land Grants to Railroads [1] accessed Jan 29, 2009
- Abrahamlincolnclassroom.org - Abraham Lincoln and
Iowa
- PBS American Experience - Transcontinental Railroad
- Transcript
- PBS American Experience - Transcontinental Railroad
- Durant Biography
- Central Pacific snow sheds [2] accessed January 28, 2009
- People & Events: Oakes Ames (1804-1873) -
American Experience Transcontinental Railroad
References
External links