The Artillery of Heaven
While the Union Pacific moved west again across the Great
Plains, in California the Central Pacific, after a fast start, had
gotten stuck in the Sierra Nevadas. The mountains seemed impenetrable.
And to make matters worse, Charles Crocker, whose
job it was to break through them, could not seem to hold on to his
workers: three out of five stuck with him just long enough to get a
free ride to the railhead, then set out on their own for the Nevada
gold fields. His plans called for a work force of 5,000. He had fewer
than 600.
Desperate, he suggested to his superintendent
of construction, James Strobridge, that he try the Chinese, who were
eking out a living working the gold and silver tailings abandoned by
others. Strobridge was against it: he thought the Chinese were too
small, too frail; they had no experience building railroads. Crocker
told Strobridge to give the Chinese a chance. After all, he said, they
had built the Great Wall of China.
The first Chinese began turning up in early 1865, eager to
work. They were already organized into work gangs, each with its own
headman.
"Crocker expected that these fellows would come up there
in one's and two's like the other nationalities, and he found that the
Chinese sort of marched up there as one group, and all he had to do was
to deal with the foreman of that group. Of course, he would be the clan
leader."
Jack Chen
Before long, 11,000 Chinese were at work on the Central
Pacific and Crocker was advertising for more in China.
But hard work alone was no match for
the Sierra Nevadas. Strobridge worried that his Central Pacific was
falling even further behind in their race with the Union Pacific, and
soon armed the Chinese with black powder to blast their way through.
It took 500 kegs of it a day, week after week, to carve cuts
through the foothills. And then they came up against a face they called
Cape Horn: solid rock, nearly straight up and down, 2,000 feet above a
raging river. There were no footholds, but the Chinese were told to
make a ledge in the cliff wide enough for a train.
"My grandfather was one of the people that they
put in the baskets because he was small and light, and what they did
was, they would be lowered over cliffs and they would drill holes, and
then they'd set the dynamite in them. And then they'd light the
dynamite, and then they'd pull them up by these baskets. And then they
had to get out of there before the dynamite exploded."
Maxine Hong Kingston
Huge masses of rock and debris
were rent and heaved up in the commotion; then... came the thunders of
the explosion like a lightning stroke, reverberating along the hills
and canyons, as if the whole artillery of Heaven was in play.
Before the Central Pacific could get through the Sierras, the
crews had to gouge out fifteen tunnels. They worked in shifts around
the clock, but averaged just eight inches a day. And they had to keep
at in it every kind of weather.
"Charles Crocker had to punch the line through the Sierras
that winter, the winter of '66, and the Chinese had to build the
railroad, lay the tracks. So they built these tunnels under the snow to
keep advancing the line. And sometimes there would be snow slides and
entire crews of Chinese would be trapped under tons of snow. And their
bodies would be left there and found the following spring. Sometimes
the bodies were found with the picks and the shovels still in their
hands."
Ronald Takaki
No one kept a precise count, but more than 1,200 Chinese died
digging and blasting for Charles Crocker and the Central Pacific.
"When somebody died, you just didn't dig a grave for him
and put him down in the grave. You went to a lot of trouble to get his
remains back to the village that he came from, because a Chinese
doesn't want to be buried anywhere. He wants to be buried where his
ancestors were buried, because he wants to stick together."
Jack Chen
Finally, in 1868, after three long years of back-breaking,
dangerous labor, the Central Pacific crews did what few had believed
anyone could do: they broke out of the High Sierras.
John Chinaman, with his patient toil, directed
by American energy and backed by American capital, has broken down the
great barrier at last and opened over it the greatest highway yet
created for the march of commerce and civilization around the globe.
The Territorial Enterprise
The hardest part was behind them. The Central Pacific was back
in the race.
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