Land grants The federal government operated a
land grant system between 1855 and 1871, through which new railway companies in the west were given millions of acres they could sell to prospective farmers or pledge to bondholders. A total of were granted to the railroads before the program ended, supplemented by a further granted by the states and by various government subsidies. This program enabled the opening of numerous western lines, especially the
Union Pacific-Central Pacific with fast service from
San Francisco to
Omaha and east to
Chicago. West of Chicago, many cities grew up as rail centers, with repair shops and a base of technically literate workers. In return for the land grants, the railroads were required to haul government personnel and cargo at significantly reduced rates (generally half of the normal rate). The land was granted in a checkerboard fashion, with the government retaining every other
section. The land that the government retained typically doubled in value as a result of the railroad being built. The government guaranteed loans to several Pacific railroads, which were all paid off by 1899 ($63 million in principal and $105 million in interest). After receiving rate discounts of approximately 50% on government personnel and cargo for 80 years (including during two world wars), Congress finally discontinued the rate reductions at the end of World War II. The land grants had been more than paid for (several times over).
Displacing water routes Railroads replaced many
canals and
turnpikes and by the 1870s had significantly displaced
steamboats as well. The railroads were superior to these alternative modes of transportation, particularly water routes because they lowered costs in two ways. Canals and rivers were unavailable in the winter season due to freezing, but the railroads ran year-round despite poor weather. And railroads were safer: the likelihood of a train crash was less than the likelihood of a boat sinking. The railroads provided cost-effective transportation because they allowed shippers to have a smaller inventory of goods, which reduced storage costs during winter, and to avoid insurance costs from the risk of losing goods during transit.
Changing style of travel Likewise, railroads changed the style of transportation. For the common person in the early 19th century, transportation was often by horse or stagecoach. The network of trails along which coaches navigated were riddled with ditches, potholes, and stones. This made travel fairly uncomfortable, and coaches were cramped with little leg room. Travel by train offered a new style. Locomotives proved themselves a smooth, headache free ride with plenty of room to move around. Some passenger trains offered meals in the spacious
dining car followed by a good night sleep in the private
sleeping quarters.
Networks Railroad companies in the North and Midwest constructed networks that linked nearly every major city by 1860. In the heavily settled Corn Belt (from Ohio to Iowa), over 80 percent of farms were within of a railway. A large number of short lines were built, but due to a fast-developing financial system based on Wall Street and oriented to railway securities, the majority were consolidated into 20
trunk lines by 1890. Most of these railroads made money, and ones that were unprofitable were bought up and incorporated in a larger system or "rationalized". Although the transcontinental railroads dominated the media, with the completion of the
First transcontinental railroad in 1869 dramatically symbolizing the nation's unification after the divisiveness of the Civil War, most construction actually took place in the industrial Northeast and agricultural Midwest, and was designed to minimize shipping times and costs. The railroads in the South were repaired and expanded and then, after a lot of preparation, changed from a 5-foot gauge to
standard gauge of 4 foot 8 ½ inches in two days in May 1886. With its extensive river system, the United States supported a large array of horse-drawn or mule-drawn barges on canals and
paddle wheel steamboats on rivers that competed with railroads after 1815 until the 1870s. The canals and steamboats lost out because of the dramatic increases in efficiency and speed of the railroads, which could go almost anywhere year-round. The railroads were faster and went to many places a canal would be impractical or too expensive to build or a natural river never went. Railroads also had better scheduling since they often could go year-round, more or less ignoring the weather. Canals and river traffic were cheaper if you lived on or near a canal or river that wasn't frozen over part of the year, but only a few did. Long-distance transport of goods by wagon to a canal or river was slow and expensive. A railroad to a city made it an inland "port" that often prospered or turned a town into a city.
Civil War and Reconstruction (1861–1877) Rail was strategic during the
American Civil War, and the
Union used its much larger system much more effectively. Practically all the mills and factories supplying rails and equipment were in the North, and the
Union blockade kept the South from getting new equipment or spare parts. The war was fought in the South, and Union raiders (and sometimes
Confederates too) systematically destroyed bridges and
rolling stock—and sometimes bent rails—to hinder the logistics of the enemy. In the South, most railroads in 1860 were local affairs connecting cotton regions with the nearest waterway. Most transports were by boat, not rail, and after the Union blockaded the ports in 1861 and seized the key rivers in 1862, long-distance travel was difficult. The outbreak of war had a depressing effect on the economic fortunes of the railroad companies, for the hoarding of the cotton crop in an attempt to force European intervention left railroads bereft of their main source of income. Many had to lay off employees, and in particular, let go skilled technicians and engineers. For the early years of the war, the
Confederate government had a hands-off approach to the railroads. Only in mid-1863 did the Confederate government initiate an overall policy, and it was confined solely to aiding the war effort. With the legislation of impressment the same year, railroads and their rolling stock came under the de facto control of the Confederate military. Conditions deteriorated rapidly in the Confederacy, as there was no new equipment, and raids on both sides systematically destroyed key bridges as well as locomotives and freight cars. Spare parts were cannibalized; feeder lines were torn up to get replacement rails for trunk lines, and the heavy use of rolling stock wore them out. In 1864–65 the Confederate railroad network collapsed; little traffic moved in 1865. ceremony for the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad, May 1869, at Promontory Summit, U.T. The Southern states had blocked westward rail expansion before 1860, but after secession the
Pacific Railroad Acts were passed in 1862 and 1863, which respectively established the central Pacific route and the
standard gauge to be used. With federal financing in the form of bonds and generous land grants and with the heroic help of the mainly Chinese and Irish laborers,
Central Pacific Railroad working eastward and
Union Pacific Railroad working westward combined in 1869 to complete the
First transcontinental railroad, which linked by rail the eastern states with the Pacific coast and made possible moving from
New York to
San Francisco Bay in only six days. In addition, other
transcontinentals were built in the South (
Southern Pacific,
Santa Fe) and in the North along the Canada–US border (
Northern Pacific,
Great Northern), accelerating the settlement of the West by offering inexpensive farms and ranches on credit, carrying pioneers and supplies westward, and cattle, wheat and minerals eastward. In 1860 before the transcontinentals, railroads carried less than half as much freight as inland waterways, whereas by 1890 railroads carried five times as much freight as waterways. During the
Reconstruction era, Northern money financed the rebuilding and dramatic expansion of railroads throughout the South; they were modernized in terms of
track gauge, equipment, and standards of service. The southern network expanded from 11,000 miles (17,700 km) in 1870 to 29,000 miles (46,700 km) in 1890. The lines were owned and directed overwhelmingly by Northerners. Railroads helped create a mechanically skilled group of craftsmen and broke the isolation of much of the region. Passengers were few, however, and apart from hauling the cotton crop when it was harvested, there was little freight traffic. The
Panic of 1873 ended rapid rail expansion in the United States. Many lines went bankrupt or were barely able to pay the interest on their bonds, and workers were laid off on a mass scale, with those still employed subject to large cuts in wages. This worsening situation for railroad workers led to strikes against many railroads, culminating in the
Great Railroad Strike of 1877, involving over 100,000 people in multiple cities. The strike began on July 14 in
Martinsburg, West Virginia, in response to the cutting of wages for the second time in a year by the B&O Railroad. The strike and related violence spread through the country, lasted for 45 days, and ended with the intervention of local and state militias as well as federal troops. Labor unrest continued into the 1880s, such as the
Great Southwest Railroad Strike of 1886, which involved over 200,000 workers. == Expansion and consolidation (1878–1916) ==