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ANDREW RUSSELL-UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD
THE FIRST TRANSCONTINENTAL HIGHWAY
In 1845, Asa Whitney presented to Congress a plan for the federal government to subsidize the building of a railroad from the Mississippi River to the Pacific. The settlement of the Oregon boundary in 1846, the acquisition of western
territories from Mexico in 1848, and the discovery of gold in California (1849) increased support for the project; in 1853, Congress appropriated funds to survey various proposed routes. Rivalry over the route was intense, however, and when Senator Stephen Douglas introduced (1854) his Kansas-Nebraska Act, intended to win approval
for a line from Chicago, the ensuing sectional controversy between North and South forced a delay in the plans. During the Civil War,
a Republican-controlled Congress enacted legislation (July 1, 1862) providing for construction of a transcontinental line. The law provided that the railroad be built by two companies; each received federal land grants of 10 alternate sections per mile on both sides
of the line (the amount was doubled in 1864) and a 30-year government loan for each mile of track constructed. In 1863 the Union Pacific RR began construction from Omaha, Nebr., while the Central Pacific broke ground at Sacramento, Calif. The two lines met at Promontory Point, Utah, and on May 10, 1869, a golden spike joined the two railways, thus completing the
first transcontinental railroad. Others followed. Three additional lines were finished in 1883: the Northern Pacific RR
stretched from Lake Superior to Portland, Oreg.; the Santa Fe extended from Atchison, Kans., to Los Angeles;
and the Southern Pacific connected Los Angeles with New Orleans. A fifth line, the Great Northern, was completed in 1893. Each of those companies received extensive grants of land, although none obtained government loans. The promise of land often resulted in shoddy construction that only later was repaired, and scandals, such as Crédit Mobilier see Crédit Mobilier of America ,
were not infrequent. The transcontinental railroads immeasurably aided the settling of the west and hastened the closing of the frontier. They also brought rapid economic growth as mining, farming, and cattle-raising developed along the main lines and their branches.This page is designed to document current photos of trains.If you have a photo that you have taken and would like to place on this page all consideration and credit will be given to you.
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MORE ABOUT THE FIRST TRANSCONTINENTAL HIGHWAY
CSX
RAILROAD GIANT CSX TRANSPORTATION SERVES THE EASTERN PART OF THE UNITED STATES WITH 23,000 MILES OF TRACK.
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