Railroads Essay

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    seven hundred and fifty- six miles of railways. The creation of the transcontinental railroad began in 1863. It originated in the northern states and made its way to the west. Nobody knew that one day this new technology would lead to the future that we live today. During the time that the railroad was in the process of being created, many things were escalating in the US, all for the best. The Transcontinental Railroad transformed the United States more economically by creating new opportunities, improving

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    transportation that became all the rage in Europe, and so America decided to build the transcontinental railroad. From the East and West many hard-working men built the Trans Continental Railroad to meet in the middle at Promontory, Utah where the final spike was driven into the ground. Now America

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    The Transcontinental Railroad was a technological breakthrough that managed to make the USA feel smaller to travelers. Railroad systems had been in place decades before the transcontinental railroad had been constructed. However, these systems were not in synch as there were many different railroad companies and even more laws in place from state to state. This was in part due to the civil war, during this period both governments wanted better transportation of goods and troops. This caused many

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    The Transcontinental Railroad The Transcontinental Railroad, first known as the Pacific Railroad was an almost a 2000-mile railroad line. It was constructed over a span of six years between 1863 and 1869. It connected the eastern U.S. rail network in Iowa with the Pacific coast at San Francisco Bay. At the time they did not have cars, they had horses and trains. And trains would be faster and safer to transport dry goods and it could also get a lot of people around the United States

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    The Geographical Effect of the Transcontinental Railroad and the Panama Canal Thematic Essay The Transcontinental Railroad eliminated the need for a dangerous journey for anyone who wanted to travel from America’s East to West. Before its development, travelers would have to embark on a six month journey through the heart of America, passing through dangerous areas like mountains, rivers, and deserts. Another way to reach the other coast was to sail, but that posed a risk of exposure to diseases

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    The Transcontinental Railroad and Westward Expansion Thesis: The transcontinental railroad greatly increased Westward expansion in the United States of America during the latter half of the nineteenth century. The history of the United States has been influenced by England in many ways. In the second half of the 1800 's, the railroad, which was invented in England, had a major effect on Western expansion in the United States. "Railroads were born in England, a country with dense populations

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    building of the Transcontinental Railroad changed everything. It was started in 1860 and finished on May 10, 1869. The Transcontinental Railroad was a railroad that linked the eastern and western United States. There were many benefits that came with the Transcontinental Railroad, but where there are pros, there are also cons. The Transcontinental Railroad affected everyone from the Indians, to the Chinese, to the environment. The Transcontinental Railroad affected the Indians mostly, in my

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    Walking along the tracks of what once was the Marietta & Cincinnati Railroad today, the still-functioning railroad appears forgotten, left behind as American reliance on cars grew and the need for railroad tracks waned. Apartment complexes and commercial centers block any view of the railroad from the street, once again demonstrating how little commercial developers care about this railroad now. But this forgotten railroad was far from unimportant in the development of Oakley, a neighborhood in Cincinnati

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    Transcontinental railroad could be interpreted as the most memorable change in America in the 19th century. The railroad played an important role in the westward expansion and on the progression and development for the American economy. When America had acquired the West, the need for adequate transportation rose considerably. Suggestions dispersed about a railroad that would scope across the continent from East to West. Republican congresses ruled for the federal funding of railroad construction, however

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    Constructing the first transcontinental railroad in the United States of America was arguably our country's crowning achievement for engineering ingenuity and determination in the 19th century. The railroad was a herculean of a task that required extensive proper prior planning, muscle, blood and tears that has rarely ever been seen before or to this day. In addition to the brains behind the operation and the labor force that drove this project to completion, the railroad companies (Central Pacific and Union

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