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

Transcontinental Railroad

Repercussions

American History Museum

The repercussions of the Transcontinental Railroad was vast and varied. The effects could not be characterized in reductive terms as either positive or negative. Rather, the completion of the railroad produced mixed results.

The building of the Transcontinental Railroad indelibly transformed the physical landscape of the American West. The steel and iron tracks that were laid across the country left a permanent imprint on vast stretches of territories, arid deserts, and mountain ranges. One of the clearest manifestations of this new infrastructure is exemplified by the tunnels that were carved through the Sierra Nevada mountains to create a passage for the railway. As construction moved across western territories, railroad companies sourced lumber from local forests and extracted natural resources for supplies, which further contributed to the exploitation—and degradation—of the natural environment. This newly built environment imposed a logic of industrialization and capitalist development that had a rippling effect across various ecosystems.

Group of Prisoners Including Chief Naiche, Geronimo, And Geronimo's Son in Native Dress, and Soldiers in Uniform With Guns Outside Southern Pacific Railroad Train 10 SEP 1886

Group of Prisoners Including Chief Naiche, Geronimo, And Geronimo's Son in Native Dress, and Soldiers in Uniform With Guns Outside Southern Pacific Railroad Train 10 SEP 1886

If the construction of the railroad altered the physical landscape, it had an even more detrimental impact on wildlife. The intricate network of railways, including the Transcontinental Railroad, facilitated the transportation of hunting parties across western territories. Referred to as “hunting by rail,” men brandished .50 caliber rifles and slaughtered hundreds of thousands of buffalo indiscriminately from open windows and atop the roofs of trains.

The decimation of buffalo herds not only impacted local ecologies. It also reverberated across Native American communities, some of whom relied on buffalo as a crucial source of food, as well as for ceremonies and everyday objects for survival. Where native peoples acted as stewards of the natural environment—for example, taking care not to overhunt buffalo—the devastation of buffalo herds accelerated the displacement of Native American communities and the destruction of their everyday ways of life.

Tunnel No. 12, Strong's Canyon

Tunnel No. 12, Strong's Canyon

West End Tunnel and workers

West End Tunnel and workers

With a new mode of faster transportation, the U.S. government encouraged migration and settlement into western territories that were once difficult to access via wagons and other forms of transport. The new settlements of European immigrants and native-born whites often encroached upon lands already inhabited and used by various Native American groups. These homesteads further eroded the already tenuous claims to lands of Native communities.

In terms of the economic repercussions, by the late 1860s railways did not achieve the degree of profitability that railroad magnates had predicted. In fact, after the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad, the “Big Four” railroad magnates sought to sell the Central Pacific Company, which was bogged down by its own troubled finances. In addition, the Big Four were also mired in debt to the U.S. government and reeling from economic depressions in the 1870s.

Union Pacific Railroad Advertisement for Land in Kansas, May 1867

Union Pacific Railroad Advertisement for Land in Kansas, May 1867

Union Pacific Railroad Company advertisement for transportation of immigrants to Nebraska 1879

Union Pacific Railroad Company advertisement for transportation of immigrants to Nebraska 1879


Lothar Baumgarten : carbon

Electric railway engineering. By Edward Trevert [pseud.] Embracing practical hints upon power house dynamo, motor and line construction for the use of students

alarm, low water

The Transcontinental Railroad Turns 150!

The cable cars of San Francisco. Photos. by Phil Palmer. Text by Mike Palmer

Pennsylvania Railroad rolling stock 1860-1968 / by the staff of PC railroader magazine

Walter Damrosch [painting] / (photographed by Peter A. Juley & Son)

locomotive builder's plate

The Pacific Railroad : a defense against its enemies, with report of the Supervisors of Placer County, and report of Mr. Montanya, made to the Supervisors of the city and county of San Francisco

The National Railway Museum

Royal Blue Line / Herbert H. Harwood, Jr

Edward Hines, millionaire lumber dealer and wife

Vina Ranch Panorama: Red Winery, Water Tower, Railroad Tracks, (painting)

Steel T-rail

Ride the big red cars; how trolleys helped build Southern California

NER CONVENTION PLAINVIEW, N.Y. OCT. 8-10, 1982

toy, train

Switchback, (sculpture)

Annual report / Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company

Automatic train control system

Right-of-way; a guide to abandoned railroads in the United States

bell

Everniastrum sorocheilum (Vain.) Hale ex Sipman

toy, engine and tender

Album of Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Scenery

Railway age gazette

Making freedom : the Underground Railroad and the politics of slavery / R.J.M. Blackett

Steel wheels rolling : a personal journey of railroad photography / J. Parker Lamb

The history of Baltimore's streetcars / Michael R. Farrell ; with additional material by Herbert H. Harwood, Jr. and Andrew S. Blumberg

Jesse James : last rebel of the Civil War / T.J. Stiles

A gazetteer of the state of New-York : comprising its topography, geology, mineralogical resources, civil divisions, canals, railroads and public institutions, together with general statistics, the whole alphabetically arranged : also, statistical tables, including the census of 1840, and tables of distances : with a new township map of the state, engraved on steel

Lines West : a brief history / Phillip C. Blakeslee

The challenge of the avant-garde / edited by Paul Wood

The street railway system of Philadelphia; its history and present condition, by Frederic W. Spiers ..

Forty-four tons of railroad motive power - the lightweight champion GEA-3958


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