Joining of the Rails CeremonyJoining of the
Rails Ceremony
Bellringer: Pony Express
Bellringer: Pony Express
Read p. 154 “The Pony Express and the Telegraph” and answer the following question: What was the Pony Express, how long did it operate, and what replaced it?
How shall we celebrate this incredible event?
How shall we celebrate this incredible event?Green = Government
Red = Union Pacific
Blue = Central Pacific
Read the section in your packet about your assigned person and write down the following information in your journals:
group, name of person, how this person contributed to the railroad
ActivityActivity
In your groups number off.
You will share your information with the corresponding numbers in the other two groups.
In your journals take notes about the people in the other groups, including their character name, group, and how they contributed to the completion of the railroad.
InstructionsInstructionsWho - Major contributors to the completion of the railroad and reasons why they are included in the ceremony.
What - Incorporate activities to celebrate the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad and reasons why they are included. Also, include the creation of memorabilia (plaques, markers, etc.) and explain their significance.
Where - Location of your ceremony. Explain why you chose this location.
Why - Include reasons for your celebration. Why was the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad so important?
How - Explain how the railroad was completed. Give specific examples. These examples might include contributions by certain people, sacrifices and hardships, teamwork, and examples of engineering.
Rendezvous at Promontory
Rendezvous at Promontory
Railroad coming to Utah
Railroad coming to Utah
Please read page 156 “Trains! The Transportation Revolution” and answer the following questions:
Where did the two rail lines meet? When?
How did the train affect Utah?
Transcontinental Railroad
Transcontinental Railroad
Activity: The Nation’s Reactions
Activity: The Nation’s ReactionsImagine you are living in America as the transcontinental
railroad is completed. This event touched emotions deep in the American character, but it also meant different things to different people. You are going to look at this event from different perspectives.
An ordinary Citizen
A citizen in the Far West
A citizen in the East
A business person
A Native American
In your journals, write a letter or journal entry as if you were living at this time. Express your reactions, thoughts, and feelings through the eyes of someone who lived at this time.
The Nation’s Reactions
The Nation’s Reactions
Native American and the Railroad, 1868. Courtesy of the Union Pacific MuseumNative American and the Railroad, 1868. Courtesy of the Union Pacific Museum
Nation’s ReactionsNation’s ReactionsThe United States was exuberant as the construction of the transcontinental railroad drew to a close in the spring of 1869. The transcontinental railroad was called the “Eighth Wonder of the World.” Building the railroad was compared to the voyage of Columbus or the landing of the Pilgrims.
They may have exaggerated, but for the people of 1869, especially those over 40 years old, there was nothing to compare to it. A person born in 1829 or earlier was in a world in which President Andrew Jackson traveled no faster than Julius Caesar, a world in which no thought or information could be transmitted any faster than in Alexander the Great’s time.
In 1869 with the railroad and the telegraph that was beside it, a man could move at 60 miles per hour and transmit an idea from coast to coast almost instantly. The completion of the transcontinental railroad meant different things to different people of the country.
Joining of the Rails Ceremony
Joining of the Rails Ceremony
Pony ExpressPony Express
Read p. 154 “The Pony Express and the Telegraph” and answer the following question: What was the Pony Express, how long did it operate, and what replaced it?
How shall we celebrate this incredible event?
How shall we celebrate this incredible event?1 = Government
2 = Union Pacific
3 = Central Pacific
Read the section in your packet about your assigned person and write down the following information in your journals:
Group, name of person, how this person contributed to the railroad
InstructionsInstructionsDecide who you would invite of the people you learned about. Write down who they represented (Central, Union or Gov’t), their names, and why you invited them.
Be prepared to share.
The Joining of the Rails Ceremony
The Joining of the Rails Ceremony
Officials of both railroads had set Saturday, May 8th as official completion date
Chinese worker riot
Hostage situation
Thomas C. DurantThomas C. Durant
Chinese workers curving iron rail in 12-mile Canyon, Nevada during construction
of the Central Pacific. Alfred A. Hart photograph.
Chinese workers curving iron rail in 12-mile Canyon, Nevada during construction
of the Central Pacific. Alfred A. Hart photograph.
The arrival of the paymaster's car was the occasion that gathered a large group of Union Pacific employees
together. Most were Civil War veterans and the faded grays and blues were always in evidence in the line.
The arrival of the paymaster's car was the occasion that gathered a large group of Union Pacific employees
together. Most were Civil War veterans and the faded grays and blues were always in evidence in the line.
Gap between Union Pacific and Central Pacific Rails
Gap between Union Pacific and Central Pacific Rails
Promontory, Utah, May 10, 1869. Notice the uneven, hacked ties of the Union Pacific and that all but one rail (in the foreground) is in
place. A.J. Russell photograph.
Promontory, Utah, May 10, 1869. Notice the uneven, hacked ties of the Union Pacific and that all but one rail (in the foreground) is in
place. A.J. Russell photograph.
Looking over the top of the Central Pacific's locomotive, Jupiter, you can see soldiers from the United States 21st Infantry Regiment and a few Utah luminaries assembling to lay the last
rail. A.J. Russell photograph.
Looking over the top of the Central Pacific's locomotive, Jupiter, you can see soldiers from the United States 21st Infantry Regiment and a few Utah luminaries assembling to lay the last
rail. A.J. Russell photograph.
Promontory, Utah, May 10, 1869. East and West shake hands in a famous photograph by A. J. Russell. Central Pacific Railroad Chief Engineer Samuel S. Montague (left) shaking hands with Union Pacific Railroad Chief Engineer
Grenville Dodge (right). The Cp's engine Jupiter is on the left (it is using wood for fuel; thus the smokestack is round and covered by a screen to
catch sparks). The UP's Engine No. 119 is on the right (it used coal for fuel and thus had a straight smokestack). From an original glass plate at the
Oakland Museum.
Promontory, Utah, May 10, 1869. East and West shake hands in a famous photograph by A. J. Russell. Central Pacific Railroad Chief Engineer Samuel S. Montague (left) shaking hands with Union Pacific Railroad Chief Engineer
Grenville Dodge (right). The Cp's engine Jupiter is on the left (it is using wood for fuel; thus the smokestack is round and covered by a screen to
catch sparks). The UP's Engine No. 119 is on the right (it used coal for fuel and thus had a straight smokestack). From an original glass plate at the
Oakland Museum.
Railroad officials and wives at the Driving of the Stake Ceremony, May 10, 1869.
A.J. Russell photograph
Railroad officials and wives at the Driving of the Stake Ceremony, May 10, 1869.
A.J. Russell photograph
Some of the Union Pacific Directors meet in their private car at Echo City, Utah. Silas Seymour is
seated at the table, on the left, with Sidney Dillon seated beside him. Doc Durant is beside Dillon, with
John Duff on the right. They were on their way to Promontory Summit for the driving of the last spike.
Courtesy of the Union Pacific Museum.
Some of the Union Pacific Directors meet in their private car at Echo City, Utah. Silas Seymour is
seated at the table, on the left, with Sidney Dillon seated beside him. Doc Durant is beside Dillon, with
John Duff on the right. They were on their way to Promontory Summit for the driving of the last spike.
Courtesy of the Union Pacific Museum.
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