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Explore

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

Transcontinental Railroad

Completion

American History Museum

Golden Spike

Union Pacific 119 train model with tender car View object record

Union Pacific 119 train model with tender car

View object recordJupiter train model with tender car. View object record

Jupiter train model with tender car.

View object recordReplica of the Ceremonial Last Spike at Promontory, Utah, May 10, 1869. View object record

Replica of the Ceremonial Last Spike at Promontory, Utah, May 10, 1869.

View object recordWooden chip cut from a railroad tie, Promontory, Utah, 1869. View object record

Wooden chip cut from a railroad tie, Promontory, Utah, 1869.

View object record

Traveling west with his mother in June 1869, eight-year-old Hart F. Farwell stopped at Promontory, Utah, to cut a chip from a railroad tie at the site of th.

In Popular Culture

Each line hired their own photographer to document the building of the line and celebrate the company’s efforts. The Union Pacific sent photographer Andrew J. Russell to capture the line from Omaha, while Alfred A. Hart documented the construction of the Central Pacific as it crossed the Sierra. Russel’s stereocards were published as “The Great West Illustrated in a Series of Photographic Views Across the Continent” while Hart’s "Scenes in the Sierra Nevada" depicted the CPRR crossing the mountains. Widely disseminated as stereograph cards, the images achieved a three-dimensional effect when viewed through a stereoscope. The stereoscope combined the left and right views on the stereograph card into one image, which gives the illusion of depth.

Stereograph, 1000 Mile Tree, from A.J. Russell's 'Scenery of the Union Pacific'

Stereograph, 1000 Mile Tree, from A.J. Russell's 'Scenery of the Union Pacific'

Wiggle view of Stereograph, 1000 Mile Tree, from A.J. Russell's 'Scenery of the Union Pacific'  

A process called 'wiggle stereoscopy' can mimic the stereoscope's 3-d effect.


Nathaniel Prentiss Banks

Benjamin F. Wade

George Peabody

Peter G. Van Winkle

Francis Marion Drake

Political Gymnasium

Edgar Varese

Thomas McKeak Thompson McKennan

The Statue Unveiled

Russell Sage

Nathaniel Prentice Banks

Lightning Conductors

Cyrus West Field

Edouard Henry Harriman

Louis McLane

John Stoughton Newberry

James Samuel Thomas Stranahan

John Corning

Solomon Etting

Colonel Burnside and the First Rhode Island Militia, near Washington, D.C., 1861

John Cabell Breckinridge

Prominent Candidates for the Democratic Nomination at Charleston, South Carolina

Ambrose Everett Burnside

William Carter Wickham

William Gibbs McAdoo

Charles Carroll of Carrollton

Leanor Fresnel Loree

George Solti

Solomon Etting

Theodore Dehone Judah

Ambrose Everett Burnside

Grenville Mellen Dodge

James Guthrie

Bruno Walter

Ambrose Everett Burnside


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