You are here: Learn > The Library > Daily News Desk > Ancestry Daily News

Ancestry Daily News
11/3/2005 - Archive

•  Ancestry Daily News, 3 November 2005
•  “Railroads,” Excerpt from ‘Printed Sources,’ Chapter 3-Geographic Tools: Maps, Atlases and Gazetteers

Ancestry Daily News, 3 November 2005
Ancestry Daily News
Ancestry Daily News Ancestry.com
In This Issue 03 November 2005    
 
Ancestry Classic Databases  
     
Today's Map  
     
 
articles
Ancestry Quick Tip
Clipping of the Day
Fast Fact
Product Spotlight
Thought For Today
Ancestry.com Quick Search
Advanced Search
 
Search the Ancestry Daily News Archives
 
 
 
 

Excerpt from Printed Sources, Chapter 3- Geographic Tools: Maps, Atlases, and Gazeteers
Railroads

by Carol Mehr Schiffman

In 1829, a little-noticed event that would soon drastically alter the future transportation of people and commodities took place. Horatio Allen, an engineer, arranged to have four steam locomotives built in England for use by the Carbondale and Honesdale Railroad in Pennsylvania, On 8 August 1829, with Allen at the controls and a crowd watching, the Stourbridge Lion locomotive made its trial run at ten miles an hour down the rails, over a trestle one hundred feet high, and around a curve. This event is described by Rupert Sargent Holland in his book Historic Railroads (1927, 134-35). From this humble but successful beginning, other charters to build railroads were granted, and construction began. In 1830 there were only twenty-three miles of railroad in operation. On 15 January 1831, the first passenger train in the United States that was pulled by a locomotive made a run between Charleston and Hamburg, South Carolina. By 1836 there were 1,098 miles of railroad, most of which were in the seacoast states. Mileage was 9,021 in 1850, 30,055 by 1860, 52,922 by 1870, and 74,096 by 1875 (Encyclopedia Americana 1956, 410). The extensive railroad system in the North played an important part in the Union's winning the Civil War because it aided greatly in the transport of troops and equipment to and from the battlefields.

Most early railroads were individual segments that were not joined. They connected waterways, the seacoast, and the interior river system. By the late 1830s new technology had improved the steam engine and lowered the cost of building railroads. Because railroads could be built over rough terrain, they joined different market areas that were not dependent on waterways. By 1841 a railroad ran between Boston and Albany. High priority was given to building railroads from east to west, and by 1842 Albany was connected by rail to Buffalo. A line running through southern New York connected Pierpont on the Hudson to Lake Erie in 1851. Also in 1851, Albany and New York were connected by rail, making it possible to travel from New York by way of Albany to Lake Erie. Other lines ran between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh (1852) and Baltimore and Wheeling (1853) (Billington and Ridge 1982, 341). Transportation by rail was cheaper and more efficient than by canal barges or steamboats. Because canals could not compete economically with the flourishing railroads, the canal era came to a close.

As railroads extended farther west, pioneers traveled by trains to the newly opened lands. In 1856 a line was opened between Chicago and the Mississippi River. In the same year the Illinois Central completed a line from Galena down through the center of the state to Cairo and a branch line from Centralia to Chicago. The total distance was 705 miles; it was the longest railroad in the United States at the time. An average of seven thousand and sometimes as many as ten thousand German immigrants were employed in its construction (Holbrook 1947, 103).

Railroads preceded the settlement of the country in the west. They linked isolated cities and towns and brought about the establishment of new towns. Industries appeared along the routes and pioneers settled on neighboring lands. On 10 May 1869 the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroads joined at Promontory Summit, Utah, forming the first transcontinental railroad.

Key Sources-- Railroad Maps

  • Billington, Ray Allen and Martin Ridge. Westward Expansion: A History of the American Frontier. 5th ed. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1982. Small maps show early western transportation routes, including railroads.
  • Cram's Standard American Railway System Atlas of the World: Accompanied by a Complete and Simple Index of the United States Showing the True Location of All Railroads, Towns, Villages and Post Offices. . . . Chicago: George F. Cram, 1895 (FHL microfilm no. 1421836, item 2.
  • The Handy Book for Genealogists: United States of America. 8th ed. Logan, Utah: Everton Publishers, 1991. A map shows railroads built by 1860.
  • McLaughlin, Patrick D., comp. Transportation in Nineteenth-Century America: A Survey of the Cartographic Records in the National Archives of the United States. Reference Information Paper no. 65. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Service, 1973. The development of the transportation network in nineteenth-century America is documented in this survey of nine series of maps.
  • Modelski, Andrew M., comp. Railroad Maps of North America: The First Hundred Years. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1984. This book traces the history of railroad mapping and includes ninety-two maps.
  • Railroad Maps of the United States: A Selective Annotated Bibliography of Original 19th-Century Maps in the Geography and Map Division of the Library of Congress. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1975 (FHL microfilm no. 108314, item 6). This book includes thorough descriptions of 622 railroad maps chosen from the several thousand in the library's collection. It includes maps of five major geographical regions, maps of states (at least one for each state), and maps of individual railroads.
  • See "Nineteenth-Century Maps--American History Atlases," [later in this chapter of 'Printed Sources.']

Reference List

Billington, Ray Allen and Martin Ridge. Westward Expansion: A History of the American Frontier. 5th ed. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1982.

Drago, Harry Sinclair. 1972. Canal Days in America: The History and Romance of Old Towpaths and Waters. New York: Clarkson N. Potter. Distributed by Crown Publishers.

'The Encylopedia Americana.' United States -- Domestic Trade and Commerce. New York: Americana Corp., 1956.

Greenhood, David. 1964. Mapping. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964.

Holbrook, Stewart H. 1947. The Story of American Railroads. New York: Crown Publishers.

Makower, Joel, ed. 1992. The Map Catalog: Every Kind of Map and Chart on Earth and Even Some Above It. 3rd ed. Newly rev. New York: Vintage Books, a division of Random House.

Mason, Philip P. 1967. A History of American Roads. Chicago: Rand McNally & Co.

Schweitzer, George K. 1996. Civil War Genealogy. Knoxville, Tenn.: the author.

Stephenson, Richard W., comp. 1967. Land Ownership Maps: A Checklist of Nineteenth Century United States County Maps in the Library of Congress. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress.

Thompson, Morris M. 1987. Maps for North America: Cartographic Products of the U.S. Geological Survey and Others. 3rd ed. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Geological Survey.


The above is an excerpt from Printed Sources: A Guide to Published Genealogical Records, edited by Kory L. Meyerink (Salt Lake City, UT: Ancestry Inc., 1998.), Chapter 3: Geographic Tools: Maps, Atlases and Gazetteers, by Carol Mehr Schiffman. (http://www.ancestry.com/rd/prodredir.asp?sourceid=831&key=P1023)

Copyright 2005, MyFamily.com.

Access a printer-friendly version of this article, e-mail it to a friend, or submit your feedback.

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Ancestry Quick Tip
Extra Batteries
Walter Busse

Having extra batteries in the camera case is a smart thing to do. Having dead extra batteries is not. After recharging them, I wrap a rubber binder around them. You can tell at a glance as to how well you are prepared before going on a picture taking spree. That way the moaning you hear in the graveyard won't be you realizing that your batteries are as dead as your ancestors.


Thanks to Walter for today's Quick Tip! If you have a tip you would like to share with researchers, you can send it to: ADNeditor@ancestry.com.

Quick Tips may be reprinted, with credit to the submitter, in other Ancestry publications, so if you do not want your tip included in a publication other than the "Ancestry Daily News" and "Ancestry Weekly Digest," please state so clearly in your message.

Access a printer-friendly version of this article, e-mail it to a friend, or submit your feedback.

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Clipping of the Day
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Anti Masonic Star (Gettysburg, Pa.), 03 November 1830, page 3:

The attention of Road Makers and Bridge Builders is called to the advertisement, in our paper to-day, of C.W. Wever, Esq. Superintendent of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road.

It is with pleasure we learn, that this great and magnificent undertaking progresses with such success as to meet the most sanguine wishes of its enterprising projectors. Such is the confidence entertained by the citizens of Baltimore in the Speedy and successful accomplishment of this great work, that some shares of the stock, belonging to the estate of a deceased person, were sold by order of the orphans court of Baltimore county, at the court-house door on the 23d ult. for thirty dollars per share, being the full amount paid.

Notice To Road Makers and Bridge Builders..
Sealed proposals will be received from the 22d to the 27th of next month (November,) for the graduation of parts of the 4th and of the 5th Divisions of the Rail-road and of a lateral road to Fredericktown, together embracing a distance of about 20 miles. Those parts near the mills of Smith and Anderson, about one mile South of New Market and extend across the Monocacy river to the "Point of Rocks" on the Potomac River. The lateral road commences near the crossing of the Monocacy and extends to the city of Frederick, Frederick County, Md.

Proposals will be received at the same time for the necessary masonry.

Between these days, the subscriber will attend on the ground for the purpose of giving such information as may be desired by those disposed to contract. Proposers are invited to devote more attention to an examination into the situation and character of the earth to be removed, and the Stone Quarries to be used, than has usually been done. Proper attention to this matter may prevent much difficulty and embarrassment, if no loss in the progress of the work. The line will be divided into convenient Sections.

Recommendations for temperance, capacity and integrity will be expected to accompany all Proposals.

Casper W. Wever, Sup't.
Fredericktown, Md. 22d Oct. 1830.-[Nov 3.]


Subscribers with access to the Historical Newspapers Collection can view this clipping.

Click here to subscribe to the Historical Newspapers Collection at Ancestry.com.

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Fast Fact
Using Maps in Your Research

Geography is an important aspect of your genealogical research. Learn more about using maps in your research through these helpful articles:

"Historical Maps: The World at Your Fingertips"
by Michael L. Strauss, AG

"Using Maps and Gazetteers in Your Research"
by Juliana Smith

 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Product Specials

  Printed Sources: A Guide to Published Genealogical Records
edited by Kory Meyerink
Normally, this book retails for $49.95, but today you can buy it in the Shops@Ancestry.com for $39.95.
     
  Hidden Sources: Family History in Unlikely Places
by Laura Szucs Pfeiffer
Normally, this book retails for $39.95, but today you can buy it in the Shops@Ancestry.com for $29.95.
 
     
  Top  
     
 
 

Thought for Today
Isaac Newton, 1642-1727

If I have ever made any valuable discoveries, it has been owing more to patient attention, than to any other talent.

 
     
  Top  
     


  Printer Friendly
 
E-mail to a friend

Search The Library



Weekly Journal

Sign up for the Ancestry Weekly Discovery and get free family history tips, news and updates in your inbox.