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How Did Theodore Hahi Build The Transcontinental Railroad

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The transcontinental railroad appeared like a golden route to a prosperous future, but the struggles of many peoples, cultures, and the downturn of the economy, show that the negative effects of the transcontinental railroad outweighed the benefits. Theodore Judah, and the Big Four, comprised of the Leland Stanford, Collis Huntington, Mark Hopkins, and Charles Crocker, decided to build the railroad by laying down the tracks. The founders did not realize the consequences of constructing this massive iron horse: the inhumane treatment of workers, the destruction of a culture, and the collapse of the economy in 1873. The people on the railroad faced the prejudices, inclement weather, and cruel actions because of the harshness shown by the Superintendent of Construction of the Central Pacific Railroad. Cruelty did not stop with the construction workers, but rather it spread to the innocent Native Americans. Armed forces killed Native Americans and food supplies off of ancestral land to build the transcontinental railroad. Although acts, such as the Pacific …show more content…

With close to 1,800 miles of ground to covered with railroad, building the transcontinental railroad proved itself as an ambitious ordeal. The work involved clearing tree stumps, blasting through mounts and chipping out railbeds. According a Sacramento Union article, during the summer of 1870, bones of workers, who were ill or died in accidents were often sent to Sacramento. Taking into account all the opportunities of death, the living conditions of the constructions were not hygienic and an outbreak of smallpox in Nevada killed a some construction workers. Only a small number of workers died due to construction, and a larger number of workers died due to natural phenomenons. The railroad caused many deaths of construction

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