In the late 19th century there was a spike in Railroad Construction in the United States. The growth began as a result of congress passing the Pacific Railroad Bill in 1862 which began the construction of the Transcontinental Railroads. In the near future the Transcontinental Railroads would connect both sides of the United States, therefore they would eventually lead up to the settling of the west. Railroads in the late 19th century would affect the settling of the west by allowing people to travel to find work in an efficient manner, by allowing faster and more efficient methods to transport goods to consumers, and improving the economy overall. Starting off Railroads greatly impacted travel time from one place to another.
In 1830 the Baltimore and Ohio railroad tested a steam powered train this lead to Americans developing their own railroads.(pg. 256) Railroads helped transport goods and people move across the country faster than ever before. Railroads were used for many other things including transporting mail from one place to another. This helped people communicate with one another faster. By 1810 and 1820’s the number of letters delivered sent out went up by five million annually and cut the time in half to reach between cities and states.
Transcontinental Railroad Tera Richardson, 4336787 History 102 B008 Sum 17 Professor Traci Sumner American Military University July 22, 2017 Abstract The transcontinental railroad was one of the biggest advocates for the industrial economy and westward expansion. The railroads could transfer goods and people across the country with ease, and quickly. While some bad came from this miraculous progression, such as the panic of 1873 and a yellow fever epidemic, the good outweighed the bad as it enabled the United States to fulfill its Manifest Destiny through westward expansion.
During the time of the civil war , the idea of creating a faster form of transportation arose. The amount of time, manufacturing, and hard work that went into the making of the railroad was extraordinary. The railroad invention did, however, have a big effect on the world today. The Transcontinental Railroad was an important invention and impacted the civil war.
It would be harder to get from place to place if there was never the Transcontinental Railroad, which surely would have influenced the ideas of other methods of transportation, like cars and planes. One of the most important points from Document F quotes: “Had it not been for these captains of industry, the free world might have lost the First World War and most certainly have lost the second.” They changed and protected the U.S. and the right of freedom with their work, and that’s
Transcontinental Railroad The first Transcontinental Railroad was a 1,907 mile contiguous railroad line constructed between 1863 and 1869. It linked the country together in more ways than people could have ever imagined. Trains offer an efficient way to move goods over long distances. It impacted many things including the economy, the environment, and the Native Americans.
One of the finest technology invented in the 1800’s were railroads and locomotives( Also known as trains). However, trains were first developed in Great Britain in the early 1800s. Until Peter Cooper built the first locomotive in the 1830s. The train was called the Tom Thumb. That is when locomotives became popular in United states.
The first way that the economy was impacted was that with the ease and efficiency of the railroads, they created a large demand for goods and labor because they needed a lot of people to help build the railroads and also needed a large quantity of steel for the rails and wood for the railroad ties. Secondly the railroads created a huge national market because of the simplicity of delivering goods from place to place. The railroads helped the people in even the most rural place prosper with the cost efficient transportation of the trains. From 1830 to 1861, the United States laid aproximately 30,000 miles of railroad track, which led to an increase in demand for coal which was used to produce iron for the
• Great railroad strike of 1877 which took place in West Virginia, against the Baltimore and Ohio for cutting wages third time in a year. It spread all over the railroad line leading to trains stoppage. Workers from all over the America supported the movement and had their sympathy for the workers of railroad. Federal troops were being called and strike ended eventually. According to me Protest wasn’t a bad idea, but the violence that took place is something unnecessary and wrong.
1. The railroads affected the American economy in all positive ways according to the U.S. Senate Report. The railroads increased the value of property, made materials like coal more valuable, and provided a route for coal to travel to New York. The railroads positively impacted the American economy because they increased the value of property. The U.S. Senate Report states, “Railroads in the United States exert a much greater influence upon the value of property than in other countries…
A clock hanged on a wall would go nowhere. But a single tic of a clock would tell a thousand tales. Like one note becoming a tune, 1876-1900 is a time course marked by rapid diversification. A period of emergence in plutocratic influences in the government, the Industrial America was entitled by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley as the Glided Age.
The Transcontinental Railroad The completion of the first Transcontinental Railroad was an important event in the United States history. There were many challenges in building it, but after it was finished, it connected the East Coast of the United States to the West Coast. The railroad took three whole years to build, with the help of two railroad companies and thousands of other hired workers.
The 180s were a time of westward expansion for the United States. The California Gold Rush and Nevada Silver Rush pushed U.S Americans further and further west with the promise of economic prosperity. Despite the benefits it brought to the U.S the transcontinental railroad had some negative consequences. Most, starkly they forced relocation of Native Americans from their lands resulted in widespread destruction of Native American culture.
The Tremendous Impact of Railroads on America In the late 19th century, railroads propelled America into an era of unprecedented growth, prosperity, and convenient transportation. Prior to the building of the railroads, America lacked the proper and rapid transportation to make traveling across the country economical or practical. Lengthy travel was often cumbersome, costly, and dangerous.
The transcontinental railroad was a railroad built by irish and chinese immigrants. They both started at different sides. This railroad was made to transport mail,goods and people.-Ducksters.com This makes me wonder if they carried livestock, because how else would they transport livestock. The Pony Express was the fastest mail system at the time.