One People
Railways, multiplied and spanning
the continent, are essential domestic institutions -- more powerful and
more permanent than law, or popular consent, or political
constitutions... They thoroughly complete the grand system... which
fraternizes us into one people.
William Gilpin
By the spring of 1869, the competition between the Central
Pacific and the Union Pacific was converging on northern Utah. Rival
armies of railroad men vied to cover the most ground -- and earn the
most money for their employers -- before the two lines finally met.
They tried to outdo one another, first laying five miles of track in a
single day -- then six, then seven, and then ten miles, a pace of
railroad-building such as the world had never seen.
No fixed rendezvous-point had ever been
established. Grading crews for the two companies, working far ahead of
the track layers, passed each other in opposite directions and pushed
on for hundreds of miles -- sometimes working so close to one another
that explosions set off by one work gang spattered its rivals with
dirt.
Finally, the government intervened and picked Promontory
Summit, 56 miles west of Ogden, as the place where the two lines
would meet. The race across the West was coming to a close at last.
On May 10th, 1869, everything was ready. A telegrapher stood
by to signal to both coasts and all points in between the driving of
the final spike.
TO EVERYBODY, KEEP QUIET. WHEN THE
LAST SPIKE IS DRIVEN AT PROMONTORY POINT, WE WILL SAY "DONE!" DON'T
BREAK THE CIRCUIT, BUT WATCH FOR THE SIGNALS OF THE BLOWS OF THE
HAMMER.
WE UNDERSTAND; ALL ARE READY IN
THE EAST.
Four spikes -- two gold, one silver and the fourth a blend of
gold, silver and iron -- were to be tapped gently into position with a
silver maul to mark the occasion and then a final spike -- an ordinary
one but wired to the telegrapher's key -- was to be hammered into the
ground.
ALMOST READY. HATS OFF PRAYER IS BEING OFFERED. O Father,
God of our fathers, we desire to acknowledge Thy handiwork in this
great work, and ask Thy blessing upon us here assembled, and that
mighty enterprise may be unto us as the Atlantic of Thy strength, and
the Pacific of Thy love, through Jesus the Redeemer, Amen. THE SPIKE
WILL SOON BE DRIVEN. WE HAVE GOT DONE PRAYING; THE SPIKE IS ABOUT TO BE
PRESENTED.
The final spike was slid into place. Leland Stanford of the
Central Pacific was to have the honor of driving it home.
THE SIGNAL WILL BE THREE DOTS FOR
THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE BLOWS.
Stanford swung the hammer high above his head, brought it down
-- and missed. The telegrapher closed the circuit, anyway.
DONE!
In Washington, a great cheer went up from the
big crowd in front of the telegraph office and an illuminated ball
dropped from the dome of the Capitol. At Independence Hall in
Philadelphia, the Liberty Bell was rung -- gingerly, so that its crack
would not worsen. And in San Francisco a huge banner was unfurled that
proclaimed: "California Annexes the United States."
From the time of Columbus, explorers had searched in vain for
a passage that would connect the Atlantic with the Pacific. The
centuries-old dream had finally come true. No such passage existed, so
the Americans had built one.
"Once the rails were joined at Promontory, I think you can
say that we began for the first time, truly, to think of ourselves as a
continental nation. It was kind of a reach of the national
consciousness into a place that had once only been occupied by dreams,
and myths and imagination, and here was the great technological marvel
of its time, crashing through those mythic barriers and going into a
very real place."
T. H. Watkins
"That moment, at Promontory Point is a moment of
tremendous significance, because on either side of that moment, were
vastly different worlds, radically different worlds. It foretold the
whole story of technology. The coming of the machine. And what could be
more symbolic of that new age than the completion of the railroad and
the driving of the golden spike. Nothing would ever be the same in the
West."
N. Scott Momaday
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