English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Does anyone remember the name of the train/railroad they built that went completely across the United States... in the days of the coal mining stuff? I remember doing a whole chapter on it in US History 2 when I was a senior in high school about 5 years ago... and my papers are at my mothers house. So any history buff know what it's called?

2007-11-02 16:20:15 · 4 answers · asked by J.C 1 in Cars & Transportation Rail

4 answers

The way you asked the question the answer would be no one railroad ever built completely across the United States. Even the misnamed Transcontinental was built by two railroads. All of the Transcontinental railroad was west of the Mississippi river. Even in the heyday of passenger railroading you would have had to at least use two railroads to go from New York to California. Maybe the Pennsylvania or the New York Central to Chicago and the Santa Fe to California and you used other railroad's track even with those big name trains.

2007-11-05 17:22:37 · answer #1 · answered by landnnut 3 · 0 0

The first transcontinental railroad in the US was completed in 1869. The Central Pacific built east from Sacramento, California. The Union Pacific built west from Omaha, Nebraska. The railroads met at Promontory Summit, Utah. Realistically, it took many years after the meeting in Utah to complete a continuous railroad from coast to coast.

2007-11-02 17:19:27 · answer #2 · answered by The Professor 3 · 1 0

transcontinental railroad. The Union pacific and Central Pacific railroads.

2007-11-02 16:37:10 · answer #3 · answered by tronary 7 · 3 0

probably, yet with warning. previous "texts" can tutor clever offered one realizes the suggestion contained interior of them regularly needs updating, correcting and modernizing as a fashion to mirror extra recent issues that have come to easy because of the fact e book. There are, besides the fact that if, stagnant source information which i could on no account use without guarding myself against tomfoolery alongside with a street map circa 1800 or, spiritually speaking, that bible thingy.

2016-12-15 14:49:16 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers