It was
on May tenth in 1869 that the two coasts of the United States became connected
by rail.
At that
time, the state of Utah was still a territory and a spot called
"Promontory" was about to received the attention of the world and
mark its place in American history. It was there where the final rail was to be
laid, linking the Union Pacific tracks out of Omaha, with the Central Pacific
tracks out of San Francisco.
Five
years of labor had gone before to bring the two to Promontory, Utah. The year
was 1869, Leland Stanford, President of the Central Pacific, took a silver
plated sledge hammer in his burly hands and took aim at the gold spike in the
final rail. America was listening for that clank. The Railroad's future was
bright. Two engines were puffing in anticipation. The Union Pacific number 199
and the Central's Jupiter waited to touch iron noses. All was set Sanford swung
the silver hammer at the bright golden spike...and he missed.
Somehow, now that seems appropriate. The
railroads future was never perfect. Progress took a different route and a new
track eventually bypassed Promontory. Then as irony would have it, the old
rails were needed for steel during the 2nd world war and they were removed.
Promontory today has no tracks, only a memory in May.
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