The Story of the First Trans-Continental Railroad Part 6
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As early as 8:00 A.M. on the 10th, the spectators, mostly workmen of the respective companies, or other citizens of the railway camps commenced to arrive. At 8:45 a special over the Central Pacific Railroad came in with a large number of pa.s.sengers. At 9:00 the Union Pacific Railroad contingent arrived in two trains and at 11:00 the Central Pacific Railroad's second train, carrying President Stanford and other officers of that Company, and their guests completing the party. In all there were about eleven hundred persons present, including a detachment of the 21st United States Infantry, and its band from Fort Dougla.s.s, Utah.
The Chinese laborers of the Central Pacific Railroad soon leveled the gap preparatory to putting down the ties and all but one rail length was finished. Then Engines Number 119 of the Union Pacific Railroad and No. 60 the "Jupiter" of the Central Pacific Railroad were brought up to either side of the gap. These engines were gaily decorated with flags and evergreens in honor of the occasion. A suitable prayer was offered by Rev. Dr. Todd, of Pittsfield, Ma.s.s. The remaining ties were then laid, the last one being of California Laurel finely polished and ornamented with a silver plate bearing the inscription "The last tie laid on the Pacific Railroad, May 10th, 1869", with the names of the directors of the Central Pacific Railroad and that of the donor. This tie was put in position by Superintendents Reed of the Union Pacific Railroad and Strawbridge of the Central Pacific Railroad, and was taken up after the ceremonies and has since that time been on exhibition in the Superintendent's office of the Southern Pacific Company at Sacramento, (Cal.) Depot.
For the closing act, California presented a spike of gold; Nevada one of silver; Arizona one of combined iron, gold and silver; and the Pacific Union Express Company, a silver maul. At twelve noon at a given signal, Governor Stanford on the South side of the rail and Vice-President Durant on the north, struck the spikes driving them home.
The two engines were then moved up until they touched and a bottle of wine poured over the last rail as a libation. The trains of the respective roads were then run over the connecting link and back to their own lines. Speeches and a banquet closed the occasion.
In the Crocker Art Gallery in Sacramento hangs a large oil painting of the meeting of the two engines. The artist having inserted actual portraits of many of the more prominent officials of the two lines who partic.i.p.ated in the ceremonies.
By previous arrangement, the strokes on the final spikes were to be signaled over all the wires of the several telegraph companies through the United States, business being suspended for this purpose. First the message was sent over the wires "Almost ready. Hats off; prayer is being offered." Then "We have got done praying; the spike is about to be presented." Seven minutes later "All ready now; the spike will soon be driven." The signal will be three dots for the commencement of the blows. Connection being made between the hammers and the wires, the blows on the spikes were flashed over practically the whole telegraph system of the United States. At 2:47 P.M. Was.h.i.+ngton time, 12 M.
Promontory local time, came the signal "Done" and the bells of Was.h.i.+ngton, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and hundreds of other cities and towns announced that the American continent had been spanned, that through rail communication was established, never to be broken, that the Union Pacific Railroad was completed.
The formal announcement to President Grant and through the Press a.s.sociations to every inhabitant of the civilized world, was couched in the following language:
Promontory Summit, Utah, May 10th, 1869.
"The last rail is laid, the last spike driven. The Pacific Railroad is completed. The point of junction is ten hundred and eighty-six miles west of the Missouri River and six hundred and ninety miles east of Sacramento City."
Leland Stanford, Central Pacific Railroad.
T. C. Durant, Sidney Dillon, John Duff, Union Pacific Railroad.
No sooner were the ceremonies complete than there was a rush made to obtain souvenirs. In ignorance of the fact that the "Last Tie" had been taken up and an ordinary one subst.i.tuted, the relic hunters carried off the subst.i.tute piecemeal. In fact some half dozen "last ties" were so taken in the first six months after the roads were completed.
An odd coincidence occurred at the closing ceremonies. The rail on the east was brought forward by the Union Pacific laborers--Europeans, that on the west by Chinese, both gangs having Americans as bosses.
Consequently here were Europe, Asia, and America joining in the work, the Americans dominating.
Next morning the Union Pacific Railroad brought in from the East half a dozen pa.s.senger coaches for the Central Pacific Railroad, these being attached to the special train of Governor Stanford when he was returning to California, const.i.tuting the first through equipment.
All over the land the different cities vied with one another in celebrating the event--which it was truly felt marked the beginning of a new epoch in the history of the United States.
New York City celebrated with the "Te Deum" being sung in "Trinity,"
the chimes ringing out "Old Hundred" (Praise G.o.d from whom all blessings flow), and a salute of a hundred guns fired by order of the Mayor.
Philadelphia rang "Liberty Bell" and all fire alarm bells.
Chicago had a parade four miles long, the City being lavishly decorated, and Vice-President Colfax speaking in the evening.
Omaha had the biggest day in its history: a hundred guns when the news came. A procession embracing every able-bodied man in the town, in the afternoon. Speeches, pyrotechnics, and illuminations in the evening.
At Salt Lake the Mormons and Gentiles held a love feast in the Tabernacle and decided to build a few railroads for themselves.
San Francisco could not wait until the 10th. They started the evening of the 8th, when it was announced at the theaters the two roads had met, and it took two good solid days of celebrating to satisfy the people of that town.
It was rightly felt that the completion of the line was an event in the history of our country. It marked the progress of the West, united the Pacific Coast population with that of the East. It was the commencement of the end of the Indian troubles--a.s.sured the settlement of the West, and the development of its mines and other resources.
There has been but three general celebrations held in this country over works of public improvement viz: the Erie Ca.n.a.l, Atlantic Cable, and the Pacific Railroad. Of the three the latter was by far the more general.
The Poem by Bret Harte on this event is reproduced below:
What the Engines Said.
What was it the engines said, Pilots touching head to head.
Facing on the single track, Half a world behind each back.
This is what the engines said, Unreported and unread.
With a prefatory screech, In a florid Western speech, Said the engine from the West, "I am from Sierra's crest, And if Alt.i.tudes' a test, Why I reckon its confessed, That I've done my level best."
"Said the engine from the East, They who work best, talk the least, Suppose you whistle down your brakes, What you're done is no great shakes.
Pretty fair, but let our meeting, Be a different kind of greeting, Let these folks with champagne stuffing, Not the engines do the puffing.
"Listen where Atlanta beats, Sh.o.r.es of-snow and summer heats.
Where the Indian Autumn skies Paint the woods with wampum dyes.
I have chased the flying sun, Seeing all that he looked upon, Blessing all that he blest.
Nursing in my iron-breast; All his vivifying heat.
All his clouds about my crest And before my flying feet Every shadow must retreat."
Said the Western Engine, "phew!"
And a long whistle blew, "Come now, really that's the oddest Talk for one so modest.
You brag of your East, you do, Why, I bring the East to you.
All the Orient, all Cathay Find me through the shortest way And the sun you follow here Rises in my hemisphere.
Really if one must be rude, Length, my friend, ain't longitude."
Said the Union, "don't reflect, or I'll run over some director,"
Said the Central, "I'm Pacific But when riled, I'm quite terrific, Yet today we shall not quarrel Just to show these folks this moral How two engines In their vision Once have met without collision."
That is what the engines said; Unreported and unread, Spoken slightly through the nose With a whistle at the close.'
The first through train reached Omaha May 6th, arriving in two sections and bringing about five hundred pa.s.sengers.
Although through trains were on regular schedule commencing with May 11th, it was not until November 6th, 1869, that the road was actually completed (according to Judicial decision.) Congress to make sure of the fact, authorized the President by resolution pa.s.sed April 10th, 1869, to appoint a board of five "eminent" citizens to examine and report on the condition of the road and what would be required to bring it up to first cla.s.s condition. This board duly reported in October, 1869, that the line was all right, but that a million and a half could be spent to advantage in ballasting, terminal facilities, depots, equipment, etc. On the strength of which the wise-acres decided the road could not be considered complete and withheld a million dollars worth of bonds due under the charter act. It was October 1st, 1874, before the fact that the line was actually completed sifted through departmental red tape, and the Secretary of Interior on the further report of "three eminent citizens" discovered that the road had been completed November 6th, 1869 as reported by the previous board of five, and further that the total cost of the line had been one hundred and fifteen million, two hundred and fourteen thousand, five hundred and eighty-seven dollars and seventy-nine cents, as shown by the books of the Company.
For a while business was interchanged at Promontory, but it was but a short time until the two Companies got together and an agreement was reached by which Ogden should be the terminus, and that the Central Pacific Railroad Company should purchase at cost price two million, six hundred and ninety-eight thousand, six hundred and twenty dollars the line from a point five miles west of Ogden to the connection at Promontory. This five miles was subsequently sold to the Central Pacific Railroad. This arrangement was as the West puts it "clinched"
by a Resolution of Congress, making Ogden the terminus.
CHAPTER IX.
_The Kansas Division (Kansas Pacific Railway.)_
Conflicting Interest on Location--Leavenworth, p.a.w.nee and Western Chartered By Kansas--Plans to Connect With the Union Pacific at the Hundredth Meridian--Supplementary Charter 1864--San Diego Or Denver--Construction Work--Indian Troubles--Receivers.h.i.+ps--Consolidation With the Union Pacific.
At the time Congress pa.s.sed the Pacific Railroad Bill in 1862 there were three conflicting interests contending as to the location. First that in favor of the Northern (now the Northern Pacific) Route, second the Central, and third that in favor of the Missouri-Kansas location.
The Northern interest had not developed to a sufficient extent to cut much figure, only having the support of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. The Central Route was backed by Chicago and the railroad interests centering there. The Missouri-Kansas Route had the support of St. Louis and the territory tributary thereto. The last two were sufficiently persistent to have both of them recognized. Accordingly the Charter called for the one line commencing at the hundredth Meridian and running west with branches of feeders reaching that point, one from Omaha (Iowa Branch, Union Pacific Railroad), one from Sioux City (to be known as the Sioux City Branch, Union Pacific Railroad), one from St. Joseph or Atchison (to be built by the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad, later known as the Central Branch, Union Pacific Railway, Eastern Division and then the Kansas Pacific Railway); this latter in connection with the Pacific Railroad of Missouri from St. Louis to Kansas City to be the St. Louis line.
The Pacific Railroad Bill of 1862 read, "The Leavenworth, p.a.w.nee, and Western Railroad Company of Kansas are hereby authorized to construct a railroad from the Missouri River at the mouth at the Kansas River where it should connect with the Pacific Railroad of Missouri (now the Missouri Pacific Railroad) to the hundredth Meridian of longitude upon the same terms and conditions as applied to the construction of the Pacific Railroad which it was to meet and connect with at the meridian point named." Through Kansas it was to be located so as to make connections with the several railroads through Iowa and Missouri, provided it could be done without deviating from the general direction of the whole line to the Pacific Coast. It further specified that two hundred miles should be built within the first two years and one hundred miles a year thereafter, and after finis.h.i.+ng their own line they could unite on equal terms with the Union Pacific Railroad Company in the construction of the latter's line west of the hundredth-Meridian. This gave them the alternate sections of land within five miles on either side and United States Bonds to the amount of sixteen thousand dollars per mile,--similar to the aid extended the Union Pacific Railroad Company by the Government.
The Leavenworth, p.a.w.nee and Western Railroad Company had been incorporated by the legislature of the state of Kansas in 1855, and was organized in January, 1857, but nothing was done of any consequence under its state Charter. The Company was re-organized June, 1863, and changed its name to harmonize with the Act of Congress to "Union Pacific Railway, Eastern Division." Under its state Charter it was to have extended from Leavenworth, Kan., on the East to p.a.w.nee, Kan. (Fort Riley) on the West, with the privilege of building on west to the Kansas State line,--the state charter not permitting work outside of the Kansas boundaries.
The Story of the First Trans-Continental Railroad Part 6
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