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  • Transcontinental Railroad
  • Preparation
  • Capitalization
  • Construction
  • Completion
  • Operation
  • Repercussions

Transcontinental Railroad

Capitalization

American History Museum

Building the Transcontinental Railroad presented both physical and monetary challenges. Even with huge government subsidies, the railroad companies had to raise millions of dollars to cover construction costs. They sold stocks and bonds, borrowed money, and received revenue from operations. Directors skimmed millions off the construction contracts and became rich. Operating the railroad once it was completed was often less profitable.

Stocks

Since the success of railroads was not guaranteed it was difficult to raise money through stock sales.

Title page of 'Report of the Organization and Proceedings of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, 1864.''

Title page of "Report of the Organization and Proceedings of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, 1864.

Bonds

Union Pacific Railroad booklet 'Omaha to the Mountains'

Union Pacific Railroad booklet 'Omaha to the Mountains', Bonds Page.

Union Pacific Railroad booklet on its construction, resources, earnings, and prospects, 1876

Union Pacific Railroad booklet on its construction, resources, earnings, and prospects, 1876

UPRR, It construction, resources, earnings, and prospects, 1876

UPRR, It construction, resources, earnings, and prospects, 1876

The cost of building the road from Sacramento to the eastern base of the Sierra Nevadas will be, in round numbers, fifteen million six hundred thousand dollars; or at the rate of one hundred thousand dollars per mile. Five millions more will have been expended by the 1st of July, which will cover a very liberal equipment for that length of road and iron enough for one hundred and fifty miles additional. This is a good sum of money, but the Company has been favored by abundant revenues, viz :—
Donation of San Francisco Gold bearing Bonds;$400,000;
U. S. Government Bonds

$7,336,000

First Mortgage Bonds Convertible Bonds$7,336,000
California State Aid Bonds;$1,500,000
Subscriptions to Capital stock (mostly in Gold)$3,000,000;
Public Land, 2,000,000 acres$3,000,000
Net earnings after interest payments (gold 1865 and 1866)$708,664.42
Net earnings to July, 1867$386,818.27
Total resources for 156 miles;$25,166,482 69

railroads to the pacific ocean. It will be seen that only two of these items bear interest for the payment of which the Company is chargeable. The whole interest liability upon this schedule will be, for the present year, but five hundred and forty-five thousand one hundred and sixty dollars in gold; while its net earnings by a moderate estimate will be three or four times that sum.

The Railroads of the United States, 1868, p 398-399

Loans

Portrait of Collis Potter Huntington View object record

Portrait of Collis Potter Huntington

View object record

Land Grants


T-138, Close-up of [railroad track construction?]

42 31, Concrete building

17, Street view of subway construction

C493, [Unidentified machine part?] with wooden plank

47 39, Gates Ball Mill with feeder attached

47 58, Combination mixer and hoist, with steam power, on trucks, showing pivoted side leader

26a, [Isuastavino Company, W. E. [Blodgett?], five men In Conical Mill?]

10, Class XIII Stirling boilers with superheaters in twin setting, fired with powdered fuel, Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company, Lake Shore Station, Cleveland, Ohio

42 29, Bush terminal, Hoboken, New Jersey

Three [Unidentified machines?] with [gravel?] ramps

5.3.3, Roman Groma

40 24, Stock bins and water-jacketed conveyor for feeding raw material into kiln from Meade's "Portland Cement"

47 62, Bulk cement mixing plant showing M-C rail-track mixer, manufactured by Marsh-Capron Manufacturing Company, Chicago

36 37, James Watt, inventor

C704, Landscape of railroad tracks and towers

11.1.3, Horatio Allen, Columbia, 1823 (1802-1889), American engineer

42 38, Manager's house, Pabst estate, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin

C-843, [Unidentified machine?] with vertical cylinder attachment

C862, Sketch of the river Susquehanna

42 39, Front view residence of [P. F.?] Travers, Mamaroneck, New York, solid reinforced concrete

T-244, Esterline Angus Graphic Time Recorder

45 29, Kingston Royal Mail Street Packet Company, concrete building

C477, Condition of eleven of the concrete test piers after submergence in Boston Harbor for about five years

Landscape view of elevated construction site

40 9, Diagram from book by Thaddeus Hyatt

6.1.1, Engineer's notebook of Wilars De Honecourt

47 33, Gates Tube Mill

40 33, N. E. Sand and Gravel Company plant, W. Peabody, Massachusetts, operative tower at top, bucket has just been dumped

T-143, [Hollow cylindrical machine parts?]

40 12, Results of experiments to ascertain the resistance to a gradually increased bending strain of composite beams, from book by Thaddeus Hyatt

9.3.3, Picard's Theodolite for Triangulation

T-141, Man with Unidentified roadside testing machine

11.1.3, John B. Jervis, miniature, (1795-1885), American civil engineer

9.1.3, J. R. Perronet (1708-1794) engraved by St. Aubin

C879, Map of principal ports served by coastwise and intercoastal carriers, 1940


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