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Empire Express: Building the First Transcontinental Railroad
By David Haward Bain
Viking Press. 427pp. $24.47
Friday, December 10, 1999

Chapter One: For All the Human Family

Nine weeks out of New York and bound for Macao, the leaky and overburdened
merchant barque Oscar struggled to round the Cape of Good Hope and was
becalmed. Its captain cursed and swore at their slackened sails and abused
his crew, while the vessel's sole passenger, a pious and sensitive man,
tried to ignore a tirade made worse because it was the Lord's Day.

As was common on Sundays, he tried to pass the time in prayer and
meditation. But he found himself brooding over his lot in life. It was at
such a time that Asa Whitney, staring over the ship's rail at the bright
green sea and brooding, most strikingly resembled Bonaparte. The similarity
in physiognomy had caused him no end of trouble during business trips to
France, when strangers would stop and annoy him on the street. Nonetheless
his admiration for Napoleon knew no bounds; his empathy over losing one's
entire world had never been stronger than on this poky, Asia-bound
barque—there was nothing but loss behind him, little promise ahead. By
forty-five years of age Whitney had buried two wives and a child and lost
all his considerable worldly possessions, and now he had started life anew.
Even if we could have told him that in a few years he would not only have
regained his wealth, and discovered a cause worth making his life's work,
but also would come to be considered a prophet of a new age, it is unlikely
that such a prediction would have allayed his bitterness. Still, he
struggled to retain his perspective. "It certainly is a great tryal at my
time of life," he had written in his diary, "to recommence the work, too in
a strange foreign Land. Yet I hope it is Gods providence that guides me & I
feel that I shall succeed. I hope above all things that I may yet be enabled
to do some good to mankind & in some small degree make amends for the abuse
of all Gods providences to me."

Within days of doubling the cape, Asa Whitney was afflicted with boils. He
was the eldest child born, on March 14, 1797, to Sarah Mitchell and Shubael
Whitney, near Lantern Hill in North Groton, Connecticut. For five
generations in New England, Whitneys had engaged in farming or
manufacturing. (Asa's fifth cousin, when not occupied by patent suits over
his invention of the cotton gin, fabricated arms in New Haven.) Shubael, the
son of an iron manufacturer, chose to coax corn from the rock-choked soil
east of the Thames, raising nine children to help him in this effort.
Meanwhile, he and his neighbors hired Indians from the Pequot reservation to
hoe, paying them with rum. Apparently this arrangement pleased everybody,
but as Asa grew into his teens he showed no interest in agriculture. He was
likewise uninterested in going to sea on the countless whalers and sealers
operating from the Connecticut coast. Before he was twenty he was in New
York, engaged in that other great Yankee occupation, trade.

Beginning as a clerk with one of the city's largest importers of French
goods, Whitney was promoted, and spent most of the decade between 1824 and
1834 in Europe as a purchasing agent. By 1832 he was a well-rewarded
merchant who was about to be made a partner in the firm; that year he also
acquired a wife abroad. Little is known about Herminie Antoinette Pillet
Whitney except that she was French and that she died in New York City
shortly after their marriage, on March 31, 1833, and that she was buried in
the Trinity Churchyard in New Rochelle, close to where Asa had purchased
seventy acres of land for their new home.

Whitney kept a lock of her hair for some years thereafter, but it was not
long before he married again. Sarah Jay Munro was the daughter of a wealthy
landowner and grandniece of the former chief justice and governor of New
York, John Jay. The early years of the Whitneys' marriage were comfortable
ones, for there was a great demand for French goods and Asa prospered. In
1835 he purchased two more tracts of New Rochelle land, and in 1836 he not
only left his firm to begin a new importing partnership but bought a large
commercial plot in Lower Manhattan, upon which he erected five wholesalers'
buildings. Soon he had begun to build an imposing brick house in the Greek
Revival style, in New Rochelle, completed in 1837.

It was around this time that Asa Whitney's upward-tending graph became a
downward spiral, for as the Whitneys settled into their new home and the
merchant saw to his expanded commercial interests, banks were closing,
businesses were failing, crowds were rioting in the streets of New York and
breaking into food warehouses—the beginning of that tribute to rotten
banking and frenetic speculation, the seven-year misery known as the Panic
of 1837—not a propitious time to find oneself overextended. Although he was
not immediately affected, Whitney found it increasingly difficult to get by.
His import business naturally required hard capital; moreover, he owed some
$80,000 and interest on his Manhattan real estate, though tenants' rent came
nowhere near his mortgage. Like a juggler whose arms grow weak from effort
despite his skill, Whitney refinanced his commercial mortgage in March 1838
and took out a loan on the New Rochelle property in the December following
but was still unable to make timely payments. In September 1840, he was
faced with foreclosure.

An even greater tragedy struck while the merchant's case was before the
magistrates. On November 12, 1840, Sarah Whitney died—"after a few days
illness," as her obituary notices reported—which, one may surmise from
family papers, occurred either after a miscarriage or following an
unsuccessful childbirth.

Asa Whitney buried her beside his first wife and in his grief turned to face
the courts. After foreclosure, his New York property went to auction, was
bought by his mortgage holder for $80,000 (the amount of principal owed),
and left Whitney holding a bill for over $10,000 in unpaid interest. He sold
his house and remaining land, beginning to be, certainly, in an antipodal
frame of mind, with but one word in his head: China, a place of dawning
commercial promise where one could start anew.

Thus, as the Oscar was towed from the Pike Slip Wharf out to Sandy Hook and
cast loose on Saturday, June 18, 1842, its heavily disappointed passenger
could not be blamed for keeping his sight on the horizon, not back toward
home. Whitney had put pride away, secured himself an appointment as
purchasing agent for several firms trading in the Orient, and hoped to do a
little business of his own on the side. For the long voyage he had packed a
trunk full of books—including George Tradescant Lay's new guide, The Chinese
As They Are; the life and writings of John Jay; a biography of Napoleon; a
French grammar; the good Reverend William Wilberforce's Family Prayers—and
several cases of wines.

But such would provide only limited diversion and small solace on a voyage
whose misery would become memorable in that closing era of snail-paced,
square-bowed, wooden-hulled sailing vessels, for the Oscar was loaded down
like a coal barge—worse, even, for its cargo consisted mostly of lead
ingots—and it was afflicted by the most adverse weather. Gales, calms, rough
seas, and contrary winds followed the barque across the Atlantic in dreary
procession. Whitney, a seasoned voyager, suffered from seasickness for the
first time in his life, to which was added sleeplessness, rheumatism, his
plague of boils, and growing dismay at the behavior of his only social
companion, Captain Eyre.

The captain filled their quarters with cigar smoke. ("I cannot in anyway
escape it," Whitney confided to his diary. "In consequence I have much of
the head ache. What a vile practice, so useless, yes worse, so injurious to
health & habits, for I have always found it creates a disposition to drink,
if not to drunkenness, & so disagreeable to those who dislike it: that I
sometimes think no real Gentleman can smoak.") The captain was prone to
tearing, profane rages aided by the seaman's astonishing vocabulary. ("Very
disagreeable, presumptuous & wicked.") The captain seemed to take
satisfaction from flogging transgressors in his crew, particularly the
Chinese steward who appeared to be drunk one breakfast. "I did not see it &
could not & I cannot bring my mind to believe in the necessity of such a
discipline anywhere," Whitney wrote. "It is too humiliating, too degrading,
too beastly, poor fellow I do feel for him.... these poor Chinese seem to be
considered but dogs only fit to be kicked and flogged; this our Americans
have learned from the English." Besides, Whitney added in afterthought, a
steward punished thus could wreak revenge by poisoning all who dined in the
captain's cabin.

Still, being an affable man, Whitney took comfort from his books, from good
weather, from sightings of other ships and of various inhabitants of the
deep. "Thus far on our long voyage," he admitted with relief, "we are
without an accident & all in good health."

>From New York to the Cape of Good Hope the sailing distance is eight
thousand miles; from the cape to Dutch Anjier (Java Head), the gate between
the Indian Ocean and the China Sea, another six thousand miles; from Anjier
to the Portuguese colony of Macao on the Chinese coast, some two thousand
more. When Asa Whitney was but a boy, the voyage between New York and China
normally took six months, with runs of 125 days considered good, and by the
1830s this had been shortened to 100 days or less; in the year Whitney
sailed, fast new China packets made the trip as short as 79 days. On the
drawing tables of naval architects were plans for even speedier clippers,
for a new era dawned.

Nevertheless, a leaky relic with a tyrant for a master and a hopeless case
for a passenger, the barque Oscar plodded eastward across the Indian Ocean,
making land at Java for provisions after all of 107 days at sea. In port,
Whitney could not bear to watch the Dutch subjugation of Javanese, and it
moved him to philosophize. "Oh how long must the mighty oppress & brutalize
the weaker," he wrote. "When I see human beings in such oppressive ignorance
& servitude, I cannot but feel that they were created for a more noble &
exalted purpose & that the purposes of a wise Creator are turned by the
ambition & lust of Man or preparation of Nations perhaps for their eternal
destruction, look at Spain, look at Portugal, & even Look at England too her
time is allmost come. Her starving millions will not be willing to starve
much longer, her wailing day must come & awful must be that day."

He was relieved when the Oscar weighed anchor and proceeded northward into
the torrid Java and China Seas, "full of fish and snakes," and "little wind
& excessive heat." Passing Borneo, Palawan, and Luzon, evading reefs and
Malay pirates, sustaining some damage and more delays due to typhoons, the
Oscar cast anchor at Macao. It was Sunday, November 20, 1842. They had been
at sea for 153 days—perhaps a record for slowness that year.




* * *




Asa Whitney's business in China was to last for a year and four months. He
arrived amid that Sino-British dispute recalled as the Opium Wars—a dispute
characterized for three years by Chinese riots against the barbarians who
had insisted on their imperial right to free trafficking in all commodities,
especially opium, and by retributory British naval attacks upon heathen
ports. A treaty had been signed in Nanking three months earlier, in August.
A typically lopsided document it was—granting the British the island of Hong
Kong, a cash indemnity, access to five ports, and license to profitably
addict as many Chinese as they could manage. Whitney had little sympathy for
the British and their imperial ways. ("Oh England," he wrote in one typical
diary entry, "thine arrogance cannot be endured & thy pride must have a
fall.") His sentiments were hardly improved when, immediately after he
arrived in Canton, angry mobs plundered and torched some British businesses
and cornered many Westerners (including Whitney and a group of fellow
Americans) in their establishments. A tense night passed as the merchants
could do little but peer out at the massed Chinese and at the firestorm
raging toward their factory, but in the morning the Americans (and British
posing as Americans, an irony not lost on Whitney) were allowed to evacuate.

Affairs in China would settle down. As other foreign nations began to press
for similar commercial access, Whitney found himself among a select few
Americans arranging exportation of teas, spices, and other Chinese goods.
There is no evidence that he trafficked in opium, as did many others; that
would seem to have gone against his grain. He was a good businessman,
though, dividing his time between Canton and Macao, and his profits mounted.
Indeed, on April 2, 1844, when he rejoined Captain Eyre on the deck of the
Oscar for its return voyage, he had assured himself of enough money to make
further labors unnecessary for the rest of his life.

Any sort of idleness was not in his nature, however. Sometime during the
grief-ridden year when Whitney had lost his family, home, business, and
wealth, he had sworn to devote the remainder of his life to a higher
purpose. "I hope above all things," he had confided to his diary, "that I
may yet be enabled to do some good to mankind & in some small degree make
amends for the abuse of all Gods providences to me."

His return trip was tediously long, marred further by his cabin-mate's
"segars" and rages and fondness for flogging seamen, but it gave Whitney all
the time he needed to consider an idea that had been growing inside him for
some time, perhaps encouraged by events at home reported in months-old
newspapers. What began to take shape was a plan he thought would consign
such long and uncomfortable voyages to history, put an end to the sort of
unChristian, colonialist abuses he had witnessed in the Orient, and place
his little nation on a more equal footing with the great powers.

Perhaps fittingly for such world-shaking aspirations, the Oscar put in for a
few days at the island of St. Helena, where Whitney was outraged to discover
that the British had allowed the quarters of his departed, "misunderstood,"
illustrious doppelganger to be used as a stable. It is not recorded whether
Bonaparte's living double excited any comment on St. Helena when he strode
about the island, probably muttering under his breath at "English pride
English Tyranny & oppression" as he committed those fulminations to his
diary—"the settling day must, will come," he added, "& awful must be that
day." Staring from the heights beyond Jamestown to the sea, he thought that
"the imagination almost pictures a Napoleon on every ridge, on every peak, a
kind of awful supernatural sensation ... different from any thing before
experienced, like the child in the dark expecting any moment to meet a
Spectre." But any ghosts Whitney may have encountered belonged, instead, to
his own time and his own world—a world to which he was returning with a
steadily developing agenda.

Five months and nine days after departing Canton, Whitney stepped ashore at
New York with joy and purpose. He tarried in the city for some
weeks—probably disposing of a shipful of Chinese imports and counting his
money—before moving onward to another Canton, some fifteen miles from the
St. Lawrence River in upstate New York. It was there, as winter began its
descent, that Asa Whitney put away his diary in favor of another document.
It was a memorial addressed to the United States Congress. As he began
working on it, his travel-stained little account book, consigned to history
in his trunk, offered a hint and a caution about "the great purpose" to
which he would devote himself. He had taken a steamboat to Albany, his diary
recorded, from where he boarded a westward-bound railroad. "I was anxious to
see the towns & villages through which we passed," he continued,





but, alas, in vain, time & space are annihilated by steam, we pass through a
City a town, yea a country, like an arrow from Jupiters Bow. Schenectady, I
can only say I passed through it because it is on the rout.... At Utica we
stopped to dine, had only time to pass from the Cars to the Hotel & dined on
the high pressure plan, they told me it was Utica but I have no memorial, I
know nothing of it....

Oh, this constant locomotion, my body & everything in motion, Steam Boats,
Cars, & hotels all cramed & crowded full the whole population seems in
motion & in fact as I pass along with Lightning speed & cast my eye on the
distant objects, they all seem in a whirl nothing appearing permanent even
the trees are waltzing, the mind too goes with all this, it speculates,
theorizes, & measures all things by locomotive speed, where will it end.



"Can it be happy," that diary entry had concluded in late 1844, "I fear
not." Fatigued and out of sorts the merchant might have been, and not in
step with the American pace after two years abroad. But if Whitney was truly
fearful of an unhappy end he showed no other evidence of it—only industry
and the most intense single-mindedness—in setting forth to harness the very
contrivance that had set his head to spinning, in a plan he hoped would at
once bring the world down to manageable size and make it a better place to
inhabit. Asa Whitney, with no previous experience and having nothing but his
faith and self-assurance to tell him he was not pursuing a chimera, began to
outline how he would get a railroad across the vast, uninhabited middle of
the American continent to the Pacific shores, where the lure of Asia
beckoned, within reach. He would annihilate distance, yes—and with it,
ignorance, want, and barbarism—through the ineffably promising devices of
American trade and American Christianity.

Whitney's attention was first called to the importance of railroads as a
means for the transportation of commerce as well as of passengers as early
as 1830, he recalled later. It was only a year after British crowds had
beheld the world's first steam-powered locomotive, George Stephenson's
Rocket, draw a train of cars faster than a horse could haul a carriage. The
Rocket trials in 1829 attained a top speed of twenty-nine miles an hour; a
year later, when Asa Whitney paused during a buying trip to ride the newly
formed Liverpool and Manchester Railroad, the locomotive sped them over a
distance of thirty-four miles of solid English roadbed in forty-two
minutes—a little over forty-eight miles an hour, he thought, though he may
have been exaggerating. The merchant saw clearly, he said later, "their
present importance and predicted their future importance to us as a means of
communication with the Pacific." During his sojourn in the Orient, as the
British secured commercial rights in China and it seemed that America would
soon follow (as it did in July 1844), he foresaw "the importance to us if we
could have a more ready, frequent, and cheap communication than the present
long and dangerous voyage around either of the capes."

In China Whitney had gathered much commercial information on "that ancient,
numerous, and most extraordinary people," he would write. The principal
object of inquiry was how to increase Sino-American commerce, for Whitney
had chafed at the time and expense involved and at how limited the return
was in comparison to the "almost boundless" possibilities. He also
considered "the vast commerce of all India, of all Asia, which has been the
source and foundation of all commerce from the earliest ages to the present
day, possessed and controlled by one nation after the other, each fattening
upon its golden crop, till proud England at last holds it in her iron
grasp." This did not have to continue, Whitney noted. "She holds on, and
will hold on until our turn comes, which will be different, and produce
different results from all. We do not seek conquest, or desire to subjugate.
Ours is and will be a commerce of reciprocity—an exchange of commodities."

Whitney had much more in mind than mercantile matters—his plan fairly shone
with global promise. His argument would grow fervent, a near-religious
preoccupation for him as time passed, for the Pacific railroad idea, he
would write, would not merely hold benefits for its projectors but for every
American and a multitude beyond:





for the destitute overpopulation of Europe, without food and without
homes—for the heathen, the barbarian, and the savage, on whom the blessings
and lights of civilization and Christianity have never shone—for the
Chinese, who, for want of food, must destroy their offspring—for the aged
and infirm, who deliberately go out and die, because custom, education, and
duty, will not permit them to consume the food required to sustain the more
youthful, vigorous, and useful—and for all the human family.



For a merchant with no engineering ability, no political contacts, no
experience in mounting any campaigns, especially of such national scope,
Whitney had embarked on a project that seemed ambitious, quixotic,
chimerical. However, in his absence from the United States—even before, when
Whitney's whole energy had been directed at salvaging his business from
creditors—the nation had begun a monumental transformation. "The mind too
goes with all this," he had written, addressing not only his project but
also the strange new American pace to which he had returned, "it speculates,
theorizes, & measures all things by locomotive speed."

As he set forth to make his congressional memorial for a railroad to the
Pacific as comprehensive as possible, a nation stirred.




* * *




It was a nation which, in 1844, some mossbacks believed had grown as far as
nature and man's treaties would allow, and beyond which lay a dangerous
overextension that threatened dissolution of the Union itself.

The stage of North America: Thirteen free and thirteen slave states extended
westward from the Atlantic seaboard to the Missouri River—the sum of the
United States. The two free territories of Iowa and Wisconsin waited in the
wings for admittance, as did Florida. Another great chunk of the
continent—Mexico, her medieval promise long faded—stretched improbably from
the Gulf of Tehuantepec and Guatemala away to the Oregon border, all
scattered, desultory rancheros and huddled mission settlements. There were
the disputatious Oregon and Texas. The former extended from the Pacific to
the Rocky Mountains and from Mexico to well north of Vancouver Island, being
sparsely settled and occupied jointly by Britain and America; the latter had
been for some eight years the independent Republic of Texas. If both were
understudies, their parts awaited them.

The United States, British Canada, Oregon Country, Mexico, the Texas
Republic—all encircled a vast and mysterious land, the subject of much
speculation and not much careful thought. Call it Indian Territory for now,
for it contained survivors of the displaced, decimated eastern tribes and
the great unmolested, unsuspecting Plains Indians. As limitations to
American growth, man's treaties had already proved to be the expedient
instruments that they were intended to be by the enforcing party. But
nature, the other great limitation, was not as malleable to national
destiny, or so at least it seemed in 1844 as America stood on the eastern
bank of the Missouri River and looked across to a hallucination known for
thirty years as the Great American Desert.

Thomas Jefferson, who knew much, was ignorant about most of the territory he
purchased unseen in 1803 at a bargain-basement price. The few settlements of
the Louisiana Territory, he reported to Congress, "were separated from each
other by immense and trackless deserts." Three years after this hearsay,
William Clark and Meriwether Lewis returned from their examination of the
country; they had found the plains to be simply dry and barren, though not
desertlike. In that year, however, young Lieutenant Zeb Pike traveled the
Far West and returned with the most fanciful impressions. "This area in time
might become as celebrated as the African deserts," he wrote of the
territory sitting between the meridian of the great bend of the Missouri and
the Rockies. "In various places [there were] tracts of many leagues, where
the wind had thrown up the sand in all the fanciful forms of the ocean's
rolling wave, and on which not a spear of vegetable matter existed." Pike's
visions of sand dunes, pathless wastes, and sterile soils were reported,
widely read, and faithfully believed by geographers. The myth became
innocently embellished by subsequent visitors, especially those in the party
of Major Stephen H. Long, who traversed the whole area in 1820. It was
reported to be "an unfit residence for any but a nomad population ...
forever [to] remain the unmolested haunt of the native hunter, the bison,
and the jackall."

Twenty-four years later the Santa Fe trader Josiah Gregg issued his Commerce
on the Prairies, a book based on extensive experience on the plains. "These
steppes," he wrote, "seem only fitted for the haunts of the mustang, the
buffalo, the antelope, and their migratory lord, the Prairie Indian." Soon
young Francis Parkman would see sand dunes along the Platte River, in his
imagination extending this "bare, trackless waste" for hundreds of miles.
Thus the future states of Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, the Dakotas, Montana,
Wyoming, and Colorado existed in the American minds of 1844 in hopelessness
and sterility—fitting continental leavings for the aborigines.

Little as the Great American Desert interested politicians and pioneers
alike, temptations lay on its western and southern frontiers. As Asa Whitney
composed his Pacific railroad memorial in the closing months of 1844, the
upstate New York countryside rumbled with political activity, as was true
all over the nation, with much attention being paid to the issue of
expansion. Six months earlier in Baltimore the convened national Democratic
Party plodded through seven deadlocked ballots before finally rejecting its
obvious choice, Martin Van Buren. As former senator, governor, secretary of
state, vice president, and president, Van Buren had, by 1844, served his
country perhaps too well, but his failure this time around had less to do
with his shopworn self than with his disinclination to invite war by
annexing new territory—a position that was then at distinct variance with
prevailing sentiments. Two canvasses later the Democrats acclaimed a dark
horse, James Knox Polk. He had twice failed to be re-elected governor of
Tennessee, but when he appeared in Baltimore, his proprietary urges toward
hitherto disputed lands plainly in sight, Polk prevailed. In the ensuing
presidential contest the opposing Whig party could muster little more than
the slogan "Who is James K. Polk?" for their own candidate, Henry Clay, who
was otherwise silent on the great issue of the day. That issue lay at the
heart of the Democratic platform, but more important, it had already been
accepted as a fait accompli by most Americans: the annexation of those
title-clouded expanses known as Texas and Oregon—Mexico and England be
damned.

Exactly a decade had passed since our neighbor to the south had reopened its
Texas lands to American immigration after some years of nervous border
restriction. Likewise, it had been ten years since the first Methodist
missionaries had drifted to the bank of the Willamette River in Oregon
Country, seeking Flatheads with a hankering for the Good Book (there were
none). The latter territory had an agreeable climate and an excess of lush
farmlands, and though it was jointly occupied with Britain there were
relatively few British.

Oregon's emptiness beckoned. So did the equally virginal lands of Texas. By
1836, the number of American settlers in Texas had grown to nearly thirty
thousand—ten times the resident Mexican population and more than enough to
enforce a nascent Republic of Texas only weeks after the tragedies at the
Alamo and at Goliad. President Andrew Jackson, in formally recognizing Texas
sovereignty in March 1837, had less influence on encouraging further
settlement than did the other great event of that season, which overshadowed
it. The Panic of 1837 sent thousands of bankrupt and debt-ridden farmers of
the Mississippi River valley flooding into Texas to join those who had
preceded them. Others, their hopes dashed no less by the deepening
depression, began to weigh the odds of the longer, more hazardous route to
Oregon, across the Great American Desert. By 1839 some five hundred
Americans had sunk their plow blades in the Willamette bottomland and a new
destination had entered the dreams of would-be migrants: Mexican California.




* * *




Texas fever! Oregon fever! California fever! Rare was the American newspaper
or magazine that did not carry a rhapsodic letter from a newly arrived
settler in those and subsequent years. Farmers seemed to be spending as much
time urging their fellow Americans to join them in paradise as they did in
raising crops—that is, when they were not deluging Washington with petitions
urging annexation.

If for many the lure of a new purchase on life was balanced by the numerous
threats to life during the overland journey, news from those who had
survived the ordeal was persuasive. Especially so were reports of the
Bidwell-Bartleson party, which in the summer of 1841 followed the West's
lure from Missouri, eventually splitting into two groups which attained
Oregon and California after much hardship. Then, in 1843, young Lieutenant
John Charles Frémont issued a report on his army exploration of the Oregon
Trail from the Mississippi River through the South Pass and into the Wind
River range of the Rockies. Published obligingly by the government, the
path-follower's book was an instant success, with its descriptions and maps
both a Bible and a Baedeker for thousands of potential migrants. And when
the Democrats rallied behind James Knox Polk, with Texas and Oregon (and—who
knows—California) at the forefront of their minds, the expansionist party
prevailed, albeit narrowly, in the electoral college. Those faraway
settlements seemed at once closer and more alluring. Meanwhile, an obscure
merchant, recently returned from China, signed his name to a document which
was handed to an upstate New York legislator, the Honorable Zadock Pratt of
Prattsville, who packed it away for his trip to Washington and the second
session of the Twenty-eighth Congress.




* * *




The subject of railroads seemed remote in the opening weeks of the
congressional session. Only the prospect of admitting the Republic of Texas
to the Union held any interest. But three days after the House passed a
joint annexation resolution and a month before it joined the Senate in
approving an amended measure, Zadock Pratt rose in the chamber. The title of
the document he presented for consideration was Railroad From Lake Michigan
to the Pacific: Memorial of Asa Whitney, of New York City, relative to The
construction of a railroad from lake Michigan to the Pacific ocean.

All of the states east and north of the Potomac River, Whitney had written,
were or soon would be connected with the waters of the Great Lakes by
rivers, railroads, and canals. At that moment a chain of railroads was
projected—in some places, already under construction—along the 840-mile
route between New York and the southern shores of Lake Michigan. It was
entirely practicable to extend the railroad from there across the unsettled
lands of the West, through the Rocky Mountains, to the Pacific Ocean, some
2,160 miles. "To the interior of our vast and widely-spread country," he
said, "it would be as the heart to the human body; it would, when all
completed, cross all the mighty rivers and streams which wend their way to
the ocean through our vast and rich valleys from Oregon to Maine, a distance
of more than three thousand miles."

The importance of such a route was incalculable, he said. Military forces
could be concentrated at any point east or west in eight days or less. A
naval station near the mouth of the Columbia River in Oregon, "with a
comparatively small navy, would command the Pacific, the South Atlantic, and
Indian oceans, and the China seas." Using a combined rail and steamship
route between New York and China, which would require only thirty days, the
products of American factories could be exchanged for Asia's rarities.
Compare this to the round-trip sailing distance between New York and China
(nearly thirty-four thousand miles, requiring up to three hundred days).
World commerce would be revolutionized, with Whitney's Pacific route its
channel. Each state and every town "would receive its just proportion of
influence and benefits," he wrote, "compared with its vicinity to, or
facility to communicate with, any of the rivers, canals, or railroads
crossed by this great road."

Such easy and rapid communication, he argued, "would bring all our immensely
wide-spread population together as one vast city; the moral and social
effects of which must harmonize all together as one family, with but one
interest—the general good of all." Moreover, because the destitute overflow
population of Europe was beginning to clog the cities of eastern America,
the railroad would attract throngs of hopeful farmers and workers to settle
along its route,





where they will escape the tempting vices of our cities, and where they will
have a home with their associates, and where their labor from their own soil
will not only produce their daily bread, but, in time, an affluence of which
they could never have dreamed in their native land.... Their energies will
kindle into a flame of ambition and desire, and we shall be enabled to
educate them to our system, to industry, prosperity, and virtue.



All that was required to set this in motion, Whitney reasoned, was an
elementary exchange. He asked that the United States set aside out of its
public lands a strip of land some sixty miles wide and the length of his
proposed route. Beginning at Lake Michigan, Whitney would sell this
land—which would be settled and the proceeds of which would finance
construction of his railroad. Section by section, the rails and their
supporting population would leapfrog westward "so far as the lands may be
found suited to cultivation." The cost of planting the railroad he estimated
at $50 million, with a further $15 million for maintenance of the road until
completion. The cost of building across uninhabitable terrain would be
offset by this maintenance fund and by sale of the public lands—all proceeds
to be "strictly and faithfully" applied to railroad construction, subject to
whatever checks and guarantees Congress required. To determine the route he
asked the legislators to order a survey between the forty-second and
forty-fifth degree of north latitude from lake to ocean.

Only when the route was finished, when the travelers and commerce of the
world crossed the nation in comfort and security, would the New York
merchant collect his compensation. Whatever unsold land remained in that
sixty-mile-wide belt would be deeded to Asa Whitney. It was that simple.
Finally, tolls along the road should be kept low, to a level just above what
was required for maintenance. The excess would "make a handsome
distribution," he reasoned, "for public education."

Thus set forth before the House of Representatives, Asa Whitney's remarkable
railroad proposal was referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals.

© 1999 David Haward Bain

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