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On
10 May 1869 from Promontory Summit northwest of Ogden,
Utah, a single telegraphed word, "done," signaled
to the nation the completion of the first transcontinental
railroad. Railroad crews of the Union Pacific, 8,000 to
10,000 Irish, German, and Italian immigrants, had pushed
west from Omaha, Nebraska. At Promontory they met crews
of the Central Pacific, which had included over 10,000
Chinese laborers, who had built the line east from Sacramento,
California.
Actually, the construction crews built several miles of
track parallel to each other. The federal legislation
chartering the transcontinental project had not provided
that the tracks join. There was nothing to prevent each
line from continuing to build and thus increase the subsidies
it might receive from the federal government. Therefore,
Congress acted to set the meeting point at Promontory.
The ceremony that day to mark the completion of the last
set of ties and spikes was somewhat disorganized. The
crowd pressed so close to the engines that reporters could
not see or hear much of what was actually said, which
accounts for many discrepancies in the various accounts.
Union Pacific's No. 119 and Central Pacific's "Jupiter"
engines lined up facing each other on the tracks, separated
only by the width of one rail. Leland Stanford, one of
the "Big Four" of the Central Pacific, had brought
four ceremonial spikes. The famed "Golden Spike"
was presented by David Hewes, a San Francisco construction
magnate. It was engraved with the names of the Central
Pacific directors, special sentiments appropriate to the
occasion, and, on the head, the notation "the Last
Spike." A second golden spike was presented by the
San Francisco News Letter. A silver spike was Nevada's
contribution, and a spike blended of iron, silver, and
gold represented Arizona. These spikes were dropped into
a pre-bored laurelwood tie during the ceremony. No spike
represented Utah, and Mormon Church leaders were conspicuous
by their absence.
At 12:47 P.M. the actual last spike--an ordinary iron
spike--was driven into a regular tie. Both spike and sledge
were wired to send the sound of the strikes over the wire
to the nation. However, Stanford and Thomas Durant from
the Union Pacific both missed the spike. Still, telegraph
operator Shilling clicked three dots over the wire: "done."
Meanwhile, with an unwired sledge, construction supervisors
James H. Strobridge and Samuel R. Reed took turns driving
the last spike.
For several weeks Promontory continued to be a town of
tents and crude shacks. The land speculators, petty merchants,
saloon keepers, gamblers, and prostitutes who had followed
these tent cities stayed only as long as there were workers
to entice. But, unlike many of these "hell on wheels"
camps, Promontory never became the site of a permanent
city.
In 1901 the Central Pacific steam engine "Jupiter"
was scrapped for iron. The Union Pacific's No. 119 was
scrapped two years later. The 1903-04 construction of
the Lucin Cutoff siphoned most of the traffic from Promontory's
"Old Line." The last tie of laurel was destroyed
in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. One of the supporting
ties had been used as a roof beam in a barn that Edgar
Stone, the fireman on the Jupiter, had built in North
Ogden. Only the "Last Spike" remained--ensconced
at Stanford University.
In 1942 the old rails over the 123-mile Promontory Summit
line were salvaged for war efforts in ceremonies marking
the "Undriving of the Golden Spike." Artifact
hunters picked over the area for ties and materials. The
event of the completing of the transcontinental railroad,
which some historians had compared in significance to
the Declaration of Independence, seemed to fade from public
consciousness.
However, a memorial marker of the "Last Spike"
had been placed along the right-of-way in 1943, and in
the years after World War II local residents began marking
the event. In the 1948 reenactment of the driving of the
last spike, miniature locomotives were furnished by the
Southern Pacific. In 1951 a monument to the event was
dedicated and placed in front of the Union Station in
Ogden. In 1957 Congress established a seven-acre tract
as the Golden Spike National Historic Site. Bernice Gibbs
Anderson of Corinne organized the National Golden Spike
Society in 1959 to promote the site. In 1965 Congress
enlarged to site to encompass 2,176 acres and be administered
by the National Park Service. That same year Weber County
extended the highway from 12th Street to Promontory, which
made access to the site easier.
The enthusiasm to mark the centennial of the transcontinental
railroad grew during the next few years. Searches were
made for old engines, a commission to plan the reenactment
was organized, the Golden Spike Monument was moved 150
feet to the northwest, and the National Park Service began
the reconstruction of the two railroad grades, the lines
of track, and two telegraph lines, as well as switches
and siding connections.
The engines used in the 1969 ceremonies were modified
to resemble the originals. From 1970 to 1980 the annual
reenactment used two vintage locomotives on loan from
Nevada. But, in 1980, with water from Liberty Island in
New York Harbor and Fort Point in San Francisco Bay, two
replica steamers constructed by Chadwell O'Connor Engineering
Laboratories of Costa Mesa, California, were dedicated.
Built with $1.5 million in federal funds, these were the
first steam engines constructed in the United States in
twenty-five years. They now run daily from May to August
and from Christmas to New Year's Day. Park Service personnel
at the Golden Spike Information Center, also dedicated
in 1980, can direct visitors to walking and driving tours
along the old grades, as well as to photo and other exhibits
celebrating the transcontinental railroad.
Deborah Blake
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