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Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America

by Richard White

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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437756,627 (3.47)8
This work is a history of the transcontinental railroads and how they transformed America in the decades after the Civil War. The transcontinental railroads of the late nineteenth century were the first corporate behemoths. Their attempts to generate profits from proliferating debt sparked devastating panics in the U.S. economy. Their dependence on public largess drew them into the corridors of power, initiating new forms of corruption. Their operations rearranged space and time, and remade the landscape of the West. As wheel and rail, car and coal, they opened new worlds of work and ways of life. Their discriminatory rates sparked broad opposition and a new antimonopoly politics. With characteristic originality, range, and authority, Richard White shows the transcontinentals to be pivotal actors in the making of modern America. But the triumphal myths of the golden spike, robber barons larger than life, and an innovative capitalism all die here. Instead we have a new vision of the Gilded Age, often darkly funny, that shows history to be rooted in failure as well as success.… (more)
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    The Last Spike by Pierre Berton (charlie68)
    charlie68: A Similar account of the railroads but from a Canadian perspective.
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» See also 8 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
Richard White's expansive history documents the creation and (mis)management of the transcontinental railroads that spanned the Western United States, Canada, and Mexico from the 1860s to 1890s. White argues that the transcontinentals were largely a speculative endeavor that built railroad lines where they weren't needed and failed to build a demand for their use once constructed. While railroads are often credited with the creation of the modern corporation, White provides many examples of how the transcontinentals were disorganized, operating at cross purposes, and ultimately failed companies. What the railroad companies were good at was making money by building with other peoples' money, the root of modern finance. This of course was coupled with a lot of corruption and control over politicians who saw that the railroads were generously subsidized.

The protagonists (perhaps, the villains?) of this work are the capitalists who lead the railroad companies including Charles Francis Adams, Jay Cooke, Collis P. Huntington, Tom Scott, Leland Stafford, and Henry Villard. But the greatness of this book is that it looks at the transcontinental railroads from many perspectives including construction workers, railroad workers, anti-monopolists, local politicians, union organizers, and Native Americans. Some of the best parts of this book are the "A Railroad Life" mini-chapters that offer a case study of an individual's life experiences with the railroad. White also writes in a engaging, sometimes snarky, style that make reading about 19th century finance and corruption fun!

Favorite Passages:
“How, when powerful people can on close examination seem so ignorant and inept; how, when so much work is done stupidly, shoddily, haphazardly, and selfishly; how, then, does the modern world function at all? It is no wonder that religious people see the hand of God and economist invent the invisible hand.” – p. xxxii

“The transcontinentals were not so much about earning revenues from moving people and freight as about finance and politics. Finance and politics were in the late nineteenth century about networks, and networks, in turn, were functions of family, friendship, and information.” – p. 96

“Nineteenth-century Americans were not shocked by the corruption of the press; neither were they surprised that businessmen cheated, lied, and stole; what worried them was the corruption of the republic. In the Gilded Age, Americans feared the republic had become corrupted – diseased, decaying, and dying. They identified the source of this corruption as monopoly, and they made monopoly synonymous with the corporation.” – p. 98

“Both the Southern Pacific and the Texas and Pacific were so dependent on credit that they resembled two large and angry men trying to fight while on life-support. Both corporations carried immense debt, and both depended on steady infusions from existing subsidies, bond sales, and loans. Each flailed at the other, each trying to maintain its own lifelines while cutting off those of its opponent.” – p. 106

“The exclusive right to build a railroad was more valuable than an actual railroad in a newly settled agricultural region because an actual railroad in such a region would lose money until the population grew thick enough to provide the traffic necessary to turn a profit.” – p. 212

“Railroads remained largely speculative enterprises meant to make a profit through their financing” - p. 215

“What seemed a single corporation was the tool of four men – and eventually four families – who grew increasingly divided, bitter, and distrustful.” – p. 266

“The trouble with good accounting and transparent reporting was that it made visible, to railroad commissions and investors, what the railroad wished to be invisible. This was why the practices railroad men encouraged with one hand, they sometimes blocked with the other.” – p. 273

“There was little logical reason why a corporation was considered a single rights-bearing person while a union was merely a collection of rights-bearing individuals. The legal reason was that corporation had chosen to incorporate, but in organizational terms there was little difference between a union such as the American Railway Union and a corporation.” – p. 420

Railroaded is not a kind of Robber Baron redux. The railroad corporations that I have examined here were unsuccessful and powerful. My guys could be ruthless, but their corporations were failure constantly in need of subsidy and rescue. They fascinate me precisely because they do not fit into our usual way of seeing things. And, in part, this book has been a study of how the unsuccessful and the incompetent not only survived but prospered and became powerful.” – p. 509
( )
  Othemts | Nov 8, 2022 |
Transcontinental railroads got built before there was a real economic demand from them other than the speculators seeking to be rich and the already-rich seeking to be richer, which really is the story of America. ( )
  rivkat | Jan 18, 2021 |
Long ago I read an essay by Ayn Rand in Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal (1966) that argued that among the transcontinental railroads, only the Great Northern was a success because it did not accept any subsidies from the Federal government. The other railroads were corrupt, poorly managed boondoggles that survived only because the government propped them up. Rand was making a libertarian case against state interference in business. White likewise argues that the railroads were nothing more than a fraudulent scheme, although he comes at it from the left with a strong post-2008 perspective. Playing with house money and supported by public bailouts, White argues that the transcontinental railroad system was nothing more than a Ponzi scheme to route money from the public treasury into the pockets of select investors. And they were select investors who conned others (including their former pals) when it suited them. The amoral, apolitical railroads backed whatever best served the financial interests of their investors. As where previous generations of historians saw the completion of the transcontinental railroad as a triumph of American progress, White sees a complicated, bloated, unnecessary, and unsustainable system that sapped the treasury for decades. It was, in short, a national tragedy in his telling. ( )
1 vote gregdehler | Jul 4, 2017 |
An in-depth look at the development of transcontinental railroad in North America and more specifically the United States. Mr. White enlivens the subject with humorous prose and personal stories from people on the ground. A good look at this era of North American history. ( )
  charlie68 | Sep 20, 2016 |
The transcontinental railroads as investment scams. Full of interesting facts and sidelights.
  cstebbins | Jun 29, 2014 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Richard Whiteprimary authorall editionscalculated
Woodson, PaulNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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To my graduate students, past and present
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(Introduction) The idea that railroads remade North America and in doing so created the modern corporate world is hardly new.
In 1860, the year he won the Republican nomination for the presidency, Abraham Lincoln traveled from his home in Springfield, Illinois, to New York, a journey of about 825 miles as the crow flies.
Quotations
It is easier, more delightful, and more profitable to build with other peoples' money that our own.
 - Newton Booth
As Wellington pointed out,"a little practice and a little study of field geometry will enable any one of ordinary intelligence without any engineering knowledge whatever ... to lay out a railway from anywhere to anywhere." There was "no field of professional labor in which a limited amount of modest incompetency, at $150 a month, can set so many picks and shovels and locomotives at work to no purpose whatever." Many engineers built railroads badly, and it might take years to discover the hidden costs of steep grades, sharp curves, missed sources of traffic, and the failure to keep a line as level as possible.
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This work is a history of the transcontinental railroads and how they transformed America in the decades after the Civil War. The transcontinental railroads of the late nineteenth century were the first corporate behemoths. Their attempts to generate profits from proliferating debt sparked devastating panics in the U.S. economy. Their dependence on public largess drew them into the corridors of power, initiating new forms of corruption. Their operations rearranged space and time, and remade the landscape of the West. As wheel and rail, car and coal, they opened new worlds of work and ways of life. Their discriminatory rates sparked broad opposition and a new antimonopoly politics. With characteristic originality, range, and authority, Richard White shows the transcontinentals to be pivotal actors in the making of modern America. But the triumphal myths of the golden spike, robber barons larger than life, and an innovative capitalism all die here. Instead we have a new vision of the Gilded Age, often darkly funny, that shows history to be rooted in failure as well as success.

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Altrhough the author denies it, the book is essentially a rehash of the old "Robber Barron" approach to business history that was popularized by the 'progressive' historians of the 1930s.
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