The Central Pacific
Railroad was one of the most expensive to build in the world. Its engineers,
Montague and Gray, would have been famous all over the world had they
constructed a road this difficult in Europe. They had not only to build a road
through an almost inaccessible country, but when it was completed they had the additional
challenge of running trains over it at all seasons. You will see little of the
costly and solid snow sheds, through which you pass mostly by night, and, which
are now being roofed with iron; you will not see at all, perhaps, the ponderous
snow plows, of various patterns, some to push the snow off on one side, some on
the other, down a precipice; others made merely to fling it off the tracks on
the plains; and behind which, during the winter, and often ate heavy engines
were harnessed to “buck” the snow, and throw it from 2,260 feet away.
Charles
Nordhoffm, 1882
Following passage of the Pacific Railroad Act, the first shovel
full of earth was turned by the Central Pacific on January 8, 1863.
Construction
of the Central Pacific Railroad was financed primarily by 30-year, 6% U.S.
government bonds authorized by Sec. 5 of the Pacific Railroad Act of 1862. They
were issued at the rate of $16,000 ($265,000 in 2017 dollars) per mile of
tracked grade completed west of the designated base of the Sierra Nevada range
near Roseville, CA where California state geologist Josiah Whitney had
determined were the geologic start of the Sierras' foothills. Sec. 11 of the
Act also provided that the issuance of bonds "shall be treble the number
per mile" (to $48,000) for tracked grade completed over and within the two
mountain ranges (but limited to a total of 300 miles (480 km) at this
rate), and "doubled" (to $32,000) per mile of completed grade laid
between the two mountain ranges. The U.S. Government Bonds, which constituted a
lien upon the railroads and all their fixtures, were repaid in full (and with
interest) by the company as and when they became due.
The Central Pacific started with the first thirty-one miles
traveling east from Sacramento.
The first locomotive, Governor
Stanford, went into service on November 10. It cost $13,688 and was more
than ten feet tall and fifty feet long. With a full load of wood and water, it
weighed forty-six tons and was the biggest man-made thing in California. The
first thirty-one miles of railroad went into operation on June 10, 1864.
The cost of building the first thirty-one miles was nearly $3,000,000,
and the Central Pacific soon face serious financial difficulties. Under the
terms of the Railroad Act, forty miles of completed road were required before
federal bonds could be accessed, and the state of California had not paid what
it had pledge. Private funds were exhausted do to inflated prices for equipment
and the cost of transporting it to California during wartime. Shipping was
especially burdensome, as all of the supplies, ties, and rolling equipment had
to be shipped 15,000 miles around Cape Horn from the East Coast, of voyage of
eight to ten months. At times thirty ships at once were on the high seas filled
with railroad equipment for the Central Pacific.
Using their personal resources, the Big Four purchased and transported
enough iron and rolling stock around Cape Horn to build seventy miles of road. Not
only did the Big Four in California—Leland Stanford, C. P. Huntington, Charles
Walker and mark Hopkins—need to raise money for the railroad, they were
required to do so during wartime. Everything—the iron, the spikes, the tools to
dig, the powder to blast, the locomotives, the cars, the machinery—had to be
shipped from New York around Cape Horn, to make an expensive and hazardous eight
months voyage, before it could be landed in San Francisco, From there it needed
to be reshipped by river 120 miles to Sacramento.
Before the rails built to the San Francisco Bay, railroad supplies were shipped up river to Sacramento. |
From Charles Nordhoff again:
“And now came the severest test of the courage and endurance of
the men at 54 K Street [location of the first office for the CPRR]. Eleven
months passed over before they could get the Government bonds for the completed
and accepted part of the line; these bonds in the meantime had gone down from
one and a half percent, premium in gold, where they stood when the charter was
accepted, as low as thirty-nine cents for the dollar. Railroad iron in the
same token went up from $50 to $135 per ton. All other materials, locomotives, etc., rose in the same proportion; insurance for the eight or nine months’ voyage around
Cape Horn, which every pound of the material of the road bed and running stock
had to make, rose from two and a half to ten percent, by reason of the rebel cruisers;
freights from $18 to $45 per ton.
“Intent on keeping down the interest account, the five men at 54 K
Street asked the State to pay for twenty years the interest on a million and a
half of bonds, in exchange for which they gave a valuable granite quarry,
guaranteed free transportation of all stone from it for the public buildings of
the State, and also free transportation over their line of all state troops,
criminals, lunatics, and paupers. This was done. Then Sacramento and some of
the counties were asked to exchange their bonds for the stock of the company,
and this was done by a popular vote. But most of these contracts had to be
enforced afterwards in the courts.
“Meantime the money was used up. The business was from the first
kept rigidly under control; every contract was made terminable at the option of
the company; every hand employed was paid off monthly; and in reading over some
old contracts I came upon a clause specifically obliging the contractors to
keep liquor out of the camps. When Huntington, after long and trying labors in
New York, returned to Sacramento, he found the treasure-chest so low that it
was necessary to diminish the laboring force, or at once raised more means. “Huntington
and Hopkins,” said he, “can, out of their own means, pay five hundred men
during a year; how many can each of you keep on the line?” The five men (the
fifth was Crocker’s brother) agreed in council at 54 K Street that out of their
own private fortunes they would maintain and pay eight hundred men during a
year on the road.
“Governor Leland Stanford then persuaded the California
legislature to issue state bonds at the rate of $10,000 a mile after the
completion of specified amounts of track.”
Many expressed doubts that the financially strapped railroad would
never be completed by four inexperienced country merchants who were lacking money,
materials, and an adequate workforce. Work never came to a complete stop, but
there were days on end when there was not one cent in the company's treasury.
It was then that the Central Pacific made an appeal for local bonding. The
voters of three counties responded favorably, but it was well into 1865 before
bonding was approved. That spring the forty-mile mark was passed, federal bonds
were turned into cash, and the CP was ready to battle the Sierra. But the delay
in financing had prevented the company from taking advantage of the mild winter
of 1864-65.
Donner Summit comparison-difference between mild winter and one not so much |
During the winter of 1866-67, the fight to overcome the Sierra
began in earnest. All that was known of the region discouraged such a venture.
Mountain roads were so steep that covered wagons had to be lowered down by
ropes. The grading alone would cost more than $100,000 per mile, and they would
need to drill fifteen tunnels through the solid granite: five on the west
slope, one at the summit, and nine in the east.
Picks and shovels, wheelbarrows, black powder, and one horse dump
carts were what was available for grading at the time. Over one thousand men
were sent into the Sierra Nevada with hand axes and saws to harvest the 625,000
feet of lumber that were required daily, and several sawmills were built to process
the logs.
Compared with their Eastern counterpart, very different country
confronted the builders and operators of the Central Pacific. Even their
Terminus on the west coast offered challenges for the new railroad.
Another great shortage the Central Pacific Railroad faced was
labor. California, thinly populated, with wages very high at that time, could
not supply the force needed since most potential workman already had jobs. Like
materials, men had to be obtained from a great distance. Laborers were obtained
from New York, and from the lower country. Europe, the usual source of cheap
labor from its supply of unemployed Irish, German, and other immigrants, was almost
halfway around the world. Instead of turning east to look for their workforce,
Charles Crocker, the man in charge of construction, looked to the west. More on
that next blog post.
Although it does not involve the Transcontinental
Railroad directly, the nearest Transcontinental Railroad rail connection to the
locality in the series, The Widows of Wildcat Ridge, is in Evanston, Wyoming. Both
of my books in that series, Nissa and Diantha, are now
available on Amazon in both ebook format and print. Please CLICK HERE to access the book
description and purchase link for Nissa,
and CLICK HERE for Diantha.
Sources:
The Central Pacific Railroad, by Charles Nordhoff, 1882; (Silverthorne,
Colorado: Vista books, 2008), page 11, 29-30
Museum Memories, Volume 1
(Salt Lake City, Utah: International Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 2009), Pgs.
402-4.
Wikipedia
Wow, I had no idea, this is so very interesting! Thank you so very much for sharing this article Zinna! God Bless you for all your research. :)
ReplyDeleteI thought I knew a lot about the RR coming West but you have provided more info and insight into the costly, laborious struggle. Thank you!
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