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Building the West: Transportation and Manifest Destiny. Gilcrease Museum Dr. Rich Loosbrock Tulsa, Oklahoma. Why This Topic. My background: Grew up on Highway 20 in western Nebraska My research in western transportation
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Building the West:Transportation and Manifest Destiny Gilcrease Museum Dr. Rich Loosbrock Tulsa, Oklahoma
Why This Topic • My background: Grew up on Highway 20 in western Nebraska • My research in western transportation • Besides imparting the stories of how transportation transformed the West, I hope to convey how this history gets written
Arrival of the Horse and the Wheel • The Horse does not appear until 1541 with Coronado and his expedition • The wheel does not appear in many places until the 1830s; railroads come just a generation later, 1860s. • Much of the human landscape of the west is the product of the railroads
Native Americans and the horse • Expanded greatly the range of plains Indians and their pursuit os the buffalo • Also greatly increased the trading networks of the West • And conflict between tribes: Example of the Crow and Lakota
Animals Oxen were the most common. Mules were the second common.
Distance Traveled • People traveled about 12-15 miles in one day. • They traveled 2,000 miles in total. • The people traveled 6 months in total from their starting point to their destination. • Oxen traveled 2 miles an hour.
Ft. Kearny • Supplies and the • Trail • Role of army
Platte River Crossing • Dangers of river crossings
Ash Hollow, Nebraska • Importance of camping spots and watering holes
Chimney Rock • 90 meters high • Rises near Bayard, Nebraska • Nearly half a million emigrants saw Chimney Rock • Most commented on feature of the trail
Independence Rock • Many emigrants arrived here on the fourth of July. • Signature rock • 700 feet wide, 1900 feet long, maximum of 128 feet above the Sweetwater Valley floor
Devil’s Gate • Just past Independence Rock
Thousand Springs • Along Snake River • Travel easier in Idaho
On to Oregon To the Columbia at The Dalles, Oregon
Men and Women on the Oregon Trail • Heavy immigration started in 1843 • The peak year was 1852: about 50,000 made the journey • Overall, between 1840 and 1868 about 350,000 made the journey and about 68,000 on the Mormon trail • The transcontinental railroad finished the trail
Men and Women on the Trail • Gender dictated the experience • Work was segregated by sex • Men usually made the decision to go
Freighting and the Pony Express • A major industry; wherever settlement went, so followed freighting close behind • The Pony Express was the most colorful, but it was a financial failure. • It lasted from April, 1860 to October, 1861.
Railroads: The First Big Business • Railroads are both cause and effect of American industrialization: • The are the product of industrial advances, but they also drive industrial development • But they provide paradoxical developments: • They provide massive economic development but create monopolies and the concentration of economic power
Origins • Like most things of an industrial nature, they started in England. • Railroads had many advantages over canals and roads: • They didn’t freeze in the winter, were much more flexible and could go nearly anywhere. • The major advantage of railroads was (and is) that they are low-friction, thus requiring relatively little energy to run.
Technical Obstacles • Railroads had to figure out how to build reliable steam engines that were relatively light. • They also had to figure out a good method of laying track; development of the ‘T’ rail was crucial. • During the 1830s, these problems were largely overcome
Early Railroads • Financing: Financing was always the major obstacle. Most was private, but state assistance immediately became important. Early on, this was usually municipal. • On the Baltimore and Ohio, 3/4s came from private funds, while Baltimore and the state of Maryland kicked in. • The Fed. Government provided little direct assistance. Most was in surveys and technical information. Most engineers were military men, and many went from the military to railroad work.
Early Corporations • Railroads pioneered the corporate system: • They operated over long distances • They had to handle a number of functions such as building, track maintenance, rolling stock maintenance, accounting, passenger service, train operations. • Early railroads such as the Pennsylvania RR developed the “line and staff” structure common in later businesses.
Early Railroads • They pioneered financing schemes, especially in the use of stock. • They pioneered advertising. • They pioneered food service and passenger comfort.
Railroads and the Civil War • By the war, the railroad was the dominant form of transportation. The Union effectively used them during the war. • The war also brought about the victory of the Republicans and their program of business encouragement; laissez faire was never truly in effect.
Railroads and the West • Many of the debates about railroads in the 1850s surrounded federal involvement and placement of a transcontinental line. • With California entering in 1850, a line was needed and the Kansas-Nebraska Act became a huge spark for the Civil War. • A critical theme in the history of the West: the “twin pillars” of western development: Big business, big government
Types of Development • Railroad building decisions fell into two broad categories: • Opportunistic, which took advantage of existing markets and often meant quick profits. • Developmental, in which railroads built into undeveloped territories for potential, but distant, profits.