David Haward Bain
Autor(a) de Empire Express: Building the First Transcontinental Railroad
About the Author
David Haward Bain is a teacher at Middlebury College and the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Bain lives in Orwell, Vermont
Obras de David Haward Bain
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome de batismo
- Bain, David Haward
- Data de nascimento
- 1949-02-23
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- USA
- Ocupação
- historian
Membros
Resenhas
Prêmios
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Estatísticas
- Obras
- 8
- Membros
- 843
- Popularidade
- #30,327
- Avaliação
- 3.8
- Resenhas
- 5
- ISBNs
- 18
I've read quite a few accounts of the building of the transcontinental railroad, some of which focus on the physical and technical challenges of finding a route over the mountains and deserts, others on the shameless way the promoters of the line corrupted politicians and enriched themselves at the expense of taxpayers and small investors, or on the way that the construction projects forced the displacement of Native Americans and effectively ended their ability to live as free nomadic hunters.
Bain does all this (and more) in this detailed, 750-page monster, but he also adds a lot of new insights into what was really going on, through a mass of detailed original research into the business and private correspondence of some of the key players. In many cases official accounts and reports were doctored or mysteriously went missing in advance of court cases or congressional enquiries, but it's still possible to retrace something of the devious plots of the railway promoters from the letters people on the spot sent to friends and family members back home.
I was also interested by the summary of earlier schemes that opens the book: apparently the idea of a transcontinental connection is almost as old as railway technology itself, and significantly older than a formal US presence on the Pacific coast. The first really developed plan was put forward by Asa Whitney in 1845 — he knew nothing about railways and little about the country west of the Missouri River when he put his initial proposal before Congress, but he had sailed to China and back and knew all about the disadvantages of the sea route to Asia. He envisioned cheap Chinese goods (tea and silk, not sports shoes and smartphones) speeding across the continent at up to ten miles an hour, cutting weeks off the shipping time.
Squabbles between politicians from North and South about suitable routes and their start and end points, as well as doubts about the viability of the new technology, kept Whitney's scheme from getting anywhere. A new scheme developed by Theodore Judah (an actual engineer who knew something about building railways!) found more fertile ground in the new politics of the Civil War era — with the South out of the picture — and construction started in Sacramento and Omaha in 1863. Bain contrasts the different organisational styles of the Central Pacific — set up by a tightly-knit group of Sacramento tradesmen who had got rich selling shovels and jeans to gold miners — and the Union Pacific, a more typical Wall Street entity, whose directors were almost as happy to cut each others' throats as those of the competition. The UP vice-president, Dr T C Durant, in particular, was a notorious wild-card whose schemes for personal enrichment frequently slowed down the progress of the railway. He created the most famous business tool to come out of the project, the Crédit Mobilier, a limited liability company secretly owned by the UP directors, which contracted for the construction work at suitably inflated rates, and then sub-contracted it to other companies owned by relatives of the directors, keeping the vast construction profits (and the government subsidies that went with them) nicely off the books and within the family. Durant also did his best to introduce extra wiggles into the line, since they were being paid by the mile.
Both companies, of course, had to do a lot of lobbying in Washington to keep the legislature and executive on their side, and both kept full-time lobbyists at work there, making sure in advance of important votes that elected representatives were well-supplied with railroad stock, whether or not they had the cash to pay for it. Fatally, the UP's man in Washington also kept a little brown notebook, and this later gave Mark Twain some of the inspiration for his satire in The Gilded Age.
The actual construction is fascinating, too, especially on the Californian side, with the technically very difficult line over the Sierra Nevada to build, and the logistical nightmare of getting all their iron — especially rails, spikes, locomotive and cars — from East Coast manufacturers, shipped by sea round Cape Horn or in emergencies over the Isthmus. If you forgot to order something, it could be three months before new supplies arrived. And of course the CP dealt with labour shortages by importing Chinese workers, whilst the UP employed mostly Irishmen and the railhead was followed across the plains by a portable "Hell on wheels" town that kept them supplied with opportunities for drinking, gambling, whoring and shooting each other. Naturally, it all got even more interesting when both companies got to Utah and started to employ Mormon crews as well...
A fascinating story, altogether. Possibly more detail than really necessary, but engagingly written. A few more maps would have been nice, perhaps, but that's really all I could find to quibble with.… (mais)