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Historians
agree that the driving of the golden spike marking the
completion of the transcontinental railroad at Promontory
Summit, Utah, on 10 May 1869 was one of the most important
events in United States history, as it was also in Utah
history. In fact, 1869 is considered to be a benchmark
year in Utah history--the pioneer era coming to an end
with the coming of the railroad.
Brigham Young, as community leader and president of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, foresaw the
impact that the coming of the railroad would have and
wanted the transcontinental rail line built through Salt
Lake City. He was aware of the role that a railroad could
play in tying a community together as well as connecting
a region with the outside world. After representatives
of both the Central Pacific and the Union Pacific met
with him and explained the difficulty and extra expense
of a route through Salt Lake City, Young accepted the
decision and helped wherever he could to speed the completion
of the project, including arranging for the use of local
contractors for the construction of the tracks across
the territory.
The construction of a connecting railroad line south to
Salt Lake City, and later into almost all parts of the
state, had a much larger impact on the local populace
than did the joining of the rails at Promontory. In early
1869, prior to the completion of the transcontinental
railroad, Mormon Church leaders began working on the organization
of a connecting railroad between Ogden and Salt Lake City.
In January 1870 that line was completed, connecting Salt
Lake City to the national rail system. One of the benefits
that the Mormon Church received from the coming of the
railroad was the availability of low-cost transportation
that would help to bring large numbers of its members
to the new Zion. From places as distant as Europe, new
members came by way of the ports of call along the East
and Gulf coasts.
The Union Pacific was the first of the major railroad
companies to successfully build within Utah's borders,
connecting with the Central Pacific tracks at Promontory
in 1869. Twenty years later, Union Pacific had become
the largest railroad company in the territory. In 1889
the Union Pacific consolidated the control of its interests
in Utah and Idaho through the organization of the Oregon
Short Line and Utah Northern Railway.
In 1893, however, Union Pacific was forced into bankruptcy
along with its subsidiary railroad companies. The Oregon
Short Line emerged from bankruptcy in 1897 as an independent
company, and the reorganized Union Pacific emerged from
bankruptcy in 1898. The former Oregon Short Line had controlled
much of the traffic that the Union Pacific depended on,
and the new situation was no different. Within two years,
the new Oregon Short Line was again under the full control
of the reorganized Union Pacific.
The Union Pacific lines west from Evanston, Wyoming, down
Weber Canyon to Ogden follow the original Union Pacific
route into Utah. The Oregon Short Line routes in Utah
included the Union Pacific lines between Salt Lake City
and Ogden, as well as the lines north of Ogden. The lines
operated by the Union Pacific south and west of Salt Lake
City were originally those of the Los Angeles and Salt
Lake Railroad, which completed its route to Los Angeles
in 1905. Instead of building a new route through Utah,
in 1903 the Los Angeles and Salt Lake purchased the former
Utah and Pacific Railroad line between Milford and the
Nevada state line, that was completed in 1899. The new
company also purchased the former Utah Central/Utah Southern
line between Salt Lake City and Milford, completed in
1880. Both lines were purchased from the Oregon Short
Line Railroad, which had purchased the Utah and Pacific
line in 1901.
Also included in this 1903 sale was the Oregon Short Line's
new standard-gauge line west of Salt Lake City, called
the Leamington Cut-off. Completed in 1903, the new line
ran west from Salt Lake City and then south through Tooele
before it connected with the former Utah Southern route
at Lynndyl. The new line roughly paralleled the former
narrow-gauge Utah Western Railway, completed in 1877 between
Salt Lake City and a point just north of Stockton called
Terminus. Union Pacific gained control of the Utah Western
in 1881 and reorganized the company as the Utah and Nevada
Railway.
The Denver and Rio Grande Western Railway completed its
narrow-gauge line between Colorado and Salt Lake City
in March 1883; it was extended to Ogden two months later.
The company was reorganized in 1889 as the Rio Grande
Western Railway to enable it to finance the conversion
of its line from narrow gauge to standard gauge. In 1901
the Rio Grand Western came under the control of the Denver
and Rio Grande Railroad in Colorado. The original Denver
and Rio Grande Western, after 1884, and the Rio Grande
Western after 1889, were independent railroads until 1901.
In the seventeen years that the two companies were independent,
they succeeded in completing a network of branch lines
that put them in direct competition with the Union Pacific
in the state of Utah. In addition, the Rio Grande also
had a virtual monopoly on the movement of coal out of
the state.
The Western Pacific Railway started construction in 1906
and was completed between Salt Lake City and Oakland,
California, in 1909. The company was controlled by the
same people who controlled the Rio Grande, and its line
was completed as a Pacific Coast extension of the Denver
and Rio Grande tracks. In 1908 the Denver and Rio Grande
consolidated its various branch lines and subsidiary companies
in Utah and Colorado, including the Rio Grande Western,
to finance the completion of the Western Pacific line.
The route was completed west from Salt Lake City around
the south end of the Great Salt Lake, continuing due west
across the salt desert to the Nevada line at Wendover.
Rio Grande lost control of the Western Pacific in 1916,
with the latter railroad company remaining independent
until it was merged with the Union Pacific in 1982, giving
Union Pacific direct access to the ports of Oakland and
San Francisco.
The Southern Pacific came into the state by leasing the
original line of the Central Pacific. Although most of
the Southern Pacific's line in Utah is located west of
the Great Salt Lake, that part of the railroad which crosses
the lake is unique in the nation. In 1903 the Southern
Pacific completed one of the longest railroad trestles
ever built when it constructed a new line across the north
arm of the Great Salt Lake. In 1959 the trestle was replaced
by an earthen fill dirt causeway. In 1988 the Southern
Pacific and the Denver and Rio Grande Western merged,
forming the fifth largest rail system in the nation.
The growth of a network of railroads in Utah began with
the completion of the Utah Central between Ogden and Salt
Lake City in January 1870, and with the start of construction
of the Utah Southern south from Salt Lake City in May
1871. Brigham Young viewed the completion of these railroads
more as a benefit to the communities they served rather
than as profit-making enterprises. These "Mormon
Roads," as some historians have called them, radiated
like spokes of a wheel from Salt Lake City and Ogden.
They made the movement of goods and people easier within
the territory, and included, in addition to the Utah Central
and the Utah Southern, the Utah Western, built west from
Salt Lake City, and the Utah Northern, which was built
north from Brigham City and later connected with Ogden.
Also among the Mormon Roads was the Summit County Railway,
completed between Echo and Coalville, and extended to
serve the silver mines in Park City in 1880. At the same
time that the railroad was being completed into Park City,
it was also being converted from narrow gauge to standard
gauge. In 1881 the line was sold under foreclosure to
the Echo and Park City Railroad, a Union Pacific subsidiary.
Other railroads were planned in the region to move Coalville
coal to the Park City mines, as well as furnish competition
to Union Pacific's monopoly in moving Wyoming coal to
Salt Lake City. The first company to construct a line
was the Utah Eastern Railway, completing its narrow-gauge
line between Coalville and Park City in 1880. Both the
Summit County and the Utah Eastern companies reached Park
City on the same day over virtually parallel routes. Union
Pacific soon gained control of the Utah Eastern company,
however, and shut it down in December 1883. Much to Union
Pacific's chagrin, another local road soon was successful
in reaching Park City. This time it was the Salt Lake
and Eastern Railway, completed up Parley's Canyon from
Salt Lake City in 1890. Just before its track reached
Park City, the company was reorganized as the Utah Central
Railway. The Rio Grande gained control of this line in
1898, realigned and rebuilt the worst parts of it, made
it standard gauge, and operated the route as its Park
City branch until 1946, at which time most of the line
was removed. Union Pacific operated its Park City Branch,
originally the Summit County Railway and later the Echo
and Park City Railroad, until late 1987. The line was
removed during the summer of 1989.
The development of Utah's abundant mineral resources also
included the building of a large network of railroad branch
lines to serve the transportation needs of the mining
industry. The availability of low-cost transportation
did much to help Utah gain its reputation as one of the
nation's treasure houses.
The earliest railroad lines built to move Utah's minerals
were the American Fork Railroad, completed in 1873, and
the Utah Southern Railroad extension, built to serve the
rich Horn Silver Mine near Milford in 1880. Other early
mining railroads included two built by Charles Scofield
that are sometimes called the Scofield lines. They were
the Wasatch and Jordan Valley line and the Bingham Canyon
and Camp Floyd line, built to tap the silver mines in
Little Cottonwood Canyon and in Bingham Canyon; both were
completed in 1873. A third Scofield line, the Utah and
Pleasant Valley, went south from Springville in 1879 to
reach the newly discovered Winter Quarters coal mines.
The large quantities of coal in eastern and central Utah
were just being discovered in the early 1880s when the
Denver and Rio Grande Western completed its line into
Salt Lake City during 1883. The Denver and Rio Grande
Western was able to improve its position in Utah by purchasing
all three of the Scofield lines. The former Utah and Pleasant
Valley track shortened the Denver and Rio Grande's route
between eastern Utah and Utah Valley. The purchase of
the other two Scofield lines gave the company some guarantee
of holding the highly valued mining traffic once it reached
the Salt Lake Valley.
The construction of the Rio Grande line through what is
now Carbon County provided transportation for the coal
from the mines as they were discovered and developed.
The discovery of coal mines in Price Canyon was followed
by the development of other coal mines at Sunnyside.
After the turn of the century, additional coal mines were
developed at Kenilworth, Hiawatha, Mohrland, and in Spring
Canyon. Later railroad lines built to serve the region's
coal mines included the Kenilworth and Helper Railway,
the Southern Utah Railroad, the Utah Railway, and the
National Coal Railway, which completed its line in 1925
to serve the newly developed coal mines located in Gordon
Creek Canyon. The Carbon County Railway was completed
in 1923 to furnish coal to the new steel mill at Ironton,
near Springville in Utah Valley. This line was a subsidiary
of United States Steel Corporation and was closed in 1984
along with other U.S. Steel properties in the state. The
Utah Railway remains in service today, moving huge amounts
of coal from Carbon County mines to the Intermountain
Power Project near Lynndyle.
By 1915, in part because of the availability of low-cost
transportation, coal had become a major contributor to
the economic growth of the state of Utah, and remained
such until the late 1940s.
The Tintic Mining District near Eureka was developed in
the early 1870s, just after the coming of the transcontinental
railroad. The silver, lead, and gold ore was of such high
value that the first mines were successful even with the
high cost of wagon transportation. The first railroad
that arrived in the district, the Union Pacific-controlled
Salt Lake and Western Railroad, was actually headed toward
California in competition with the Central Pacific. Construction
stopped in 1882 at Mammoth Mills in the Tintic Valley
south of Eureka. Within a year the company completed a
branch into Silver City, and in 1889 a branch was completed
to serve Eureka. The line immediately began transporting
ores out of the district. With the availability of low-cost
rail transportation, many of the marginal mines became
successful operations.
By the end of 1891 the Rio Grande-controlled Tintic Range
Railway had completed its line into the Tintic District
from Springville and gave the Union Pacific line some
needed competition. Other railroad lines built to serve
the mines around Eureka were the Eureka Hill Railway,
the Goshen Valley Railway, and the New East Tintic Railway.
Both the Eureka Hill and the New East Tintic roads used
Shay locomotives, which are a special type of gear-driven
locomotive designed for use on railroads with steep grades
and sharp curves. The New East Tintic later came under
Union Pacific control, and its two Shay locomotives, along
with a third purchased later, were the only ones of their
type on the Union Pacific lines.
Other mining districts in the state attracted other railroad
companies. The Deep Creek Railroad was built to serve
the copper and gold mines in the Deep Creek District along
Utah's western border. The Los Angles and Salt Lake Railroad
built branches in Iron County to move iron ore from the
mines to steel mills in Utah County as well as in California
and Colorado. The St. John and Ophir Railroad was completed
between the Union Pacific tracks at St. John and the silver
mines in Ophir, along the western slope of the Oquirrh
Mountains.
Just south of Ophir was the fabulous gold-mining district
of Mercur. In 1895 the Salt Lake and Mercur Railroad completed
its line into Mercur from a connection with Union Pacific's
former Salt Lake and Western line at Fairfield. The track
was constructed along some of the most tortuous curves
and grades of any railroad track in the state. This line
was among those in the state that used Shay locomotives
as their sole source of locomotive power; the other railroad
lines included the New East Tintic; the Eureka Hill; the
Logan City Transit; the Copper Belt; the Kenilworth and
Helper; the Crescent Tramway; the Newhouse, Copper Gulch
and Sevier Lake; and the Salt Lake and Alta.
About ten miles north of Mercur was the mining camp of
Bingham Canyon. By the late 1890s the silver mines in
Bingham Canyon were fading. Any further expansion would
require much larger financial resources--resources that
the local operators didn't have. A series of mining company
consolidations, with out-of-state financial backing, took
place over the next decade. These consolidations were
spurred on by the increasing quantities of copper ore
discovered. Copper ore was becoming a consideration because
of the growing market for copper, coming mostly from the
growing use of electricity in America's households and
the consequent need for copper electrical wiring.
In 1903 the Utah Copper Company was organized to mine
the vast quantities of low-grade copper ore discovered
in Bingham Canyon. Utah Copper, along with Boston Consolidated,
and later Ohio Copper Company, soon developed the methods
of mining and milling that were needed to make the mining
of the low-grade ore profitable.
Railroad transportation played a very important part in
the new mining method, which is called open-cut mining.
First, steam shovels would remove the capping, or waste
material, which covered the ore, and then load it into
railroad cards for movement to other locations. As the
ore was exposed, the shovels would load it into rail cars
and these would be transported to the mills. Both Utah
Copper and Boston Consolidated built mills sixteen miles
north of Bingham Canyon on the south shore of the Great
Salt Lake, where the availability of free-flowing springs
could furnish enough water for the milling operations.
Ohio Copper chose to build its mill at Lark, just outside
of Bingham Canyon.
At first the facilities of the Rio Grande Western's Bingham
branch, along with the Copper Belt Railway, completed
in 1901, were sufficient to handle the growing amounts
of traffic. To increase the capacity, in 1907 the Rio
Grande Western completed a new line into the canyon, allowing
for the operation of larger and heavier trains.
Within a year, however, the copper companies wanted still
more capacity; but the Rio Grande hesitated to build more
track just to serve the mining operations. To overcome
the lack of capacity, in 1911 Utah Copper completed its
own line between the mine in Bingham Canyon and the mills
near Magna. The new line was called the Bingham and Garfield
Railway, and it soon became one of the busiest rail lines
in the nation, moving some of the heaviest trains.
In 1924, to reduce the costs of operations, Utah Copper
installed rotary car dumpers and electric switching locomotives
at the mills. Additional cost reductions came between
1925 and 1927 when the shovels and the locomotives used
in the mine itself were converted from steam power to
electric power. The Utah Copper Company's Bingham Canyon
mine soon gained the reputation as being one of the most
modern mining operations in the world.
The Bingham Canyon mine became the Utah Copper Division
of Kennecott Copper Corporation in 1941. By the end of
1941, Kennecott's Bingham Canyon mine was producing a
third of the nation's copper, and the Bingham and Garfield
railroad was setting records by moving more than 100,000
tons of copper ore per day.
The copper company continued to lower its cost by completing
three railroad tunnels between the open-pit mine and the
lower portions of Bingham Canyon. The first tunnel was
completed in 1944, the second in 1952, and the third,
and longest at 3.4 miles, was completed in 1961. In 1947
Kennecott completed an entirely new, completely electrified
rail line between the mine and the mills. The new line
was built using grades that were much lower than those
of the original Bingham and Garfield line. The new electric
line allowed production to increase, with a daily average
of 110,000 tons of ore being moved over the company's
own railroad. The traffic was still at this high level
in 1979 the electric locomotives that were built in 1947
were replaced by new diesel locomotives. Beginning in
1976 the electric locomotives in the mine itself also
were replaced by diesels.
The railroads also built a network of branch lines to
serve Utah's major agricultural industries, including
dairy products, wheat, sugar beets, and many kinds of
fruits and vegetables. Most of the vegetables and some
of the fruits were grown to support the state's canning
industry, centered mostly in Weber, Davis, and other counties
along the Wasatch Front.
The railroads played an important part in agriculture
by moving the goods to markets both within and outside
of the state. Most of the dairy products were shipped
to California, and the wheat was shipped either as grain
or as flour to California and the southern states. The
destination for the finished sugar from sugar beets was
local markets and points in the Midwest and Pacific Northwest.
Utah's canned goods were sold mostly on the Pacific Coast
and in the Intermountain West and the Midwest.
The agricultural branch lines which the railroads built
were almost solely used for the movement of sugar beets
from the fields to the sugar factories. The major sugar-beet-growing
regions included the Cache Valley, the Bear River Valley,
and Weber and Davis counties. Also included were parts
of Salt Lake Valley, Utah Valley, and the areas around
Gunnison and Delta.
The Oregon Short Line built several branch lines in these
beet-growing regions. Three branches were built in the
Cache Valley, four were built in the Bear River Valley,
and both the Oregon Short Line and the Denver and Rio
Grande completed branches into the area west of Roy and
Clearfield, as well as building short spurs in the West
Jordan, Spanish Fork, and Gunnison areas. The Los Angeles
and Salt Lake Railroad built two branches to serve the
region around Delta. Beet-loading stations were also built
at many points along the railroads' other branch lines
and some of the main lines themselves. In the period between
1895 and 1940, before the widespread use of trucks, railroads
were the most efficient way to transport sugar beets to
the factories, located in the Cache Valley, the Bear River
Valley, Brigham City, Ogden, Layton, West Jordan, Spanish
Fork, Gunnison, and Delta.
The canning industry in the state placed Utah as the eighth-ranked
producer of canned goods in the nation. Of the more than
seventy-five canning companies that have been in business
in the state, less than fifteen were truly successful
and able to remain in business year round. Each of these
successful canning factories was serviced by a direct
railroad connection, allowing direct shipment of their
canned goods to waiting markets. The largest canneries
were located in West Ogden and in Smithfield, which remains
today as the only cannery operating in the state. Successful
smaller canneries were located in Tremonton, Perry, North
Ogden, Roy, Hooper, Clearfield, Syracuse, Morgan, Murray,
and Spanish Fork.
In 1914, to support Utah's growing canning industry, the
American Can Company built one of the West's largest can-manufacturing
facilities in Ogden. Between 1915 and 1979, when the plant
was closed, the company shipped many railroad boxcars
filled with new, empty cans to canneries all over the
state and the region.
The railroads also had an important role in Utah's canned
milk industry, which produced both evaporated and condensed
milk. In 1904 Utah's, and especially Cache Valley's, dairy
industry received a major boost when Sego Milk Products
Company opened a condensing plant in Richmond, north of
Logan. In 1925 Sego built a processing plant in Hyrum.
The Borden Company opened its milk-condensing plant in
Logan in 1916. The Morning Milk Company opened a condensing
plant in Wellsville in 1923, and sold it to the Carnation
Company in 1946. The Sego plant in Richmond was served
by the Oregon Short Line, as was the Morning Milk plant
in Wellsville. The Sego plant in Hyrum was served by a
spur of the Utah-Idaho Central electric line. Borden's
Logan plant was served by both the Utah-Idaho Central
and the Oregon Short Line.
The opening of these plants has been called the single
greatest stimulus to the dairy industry in northern Utah.
In 1933 milk was collected from nearly three thousand
dairy farms and delivered daily to the condensing plants,
mostly using the trains of the Utah-Idaho Central interurban
railroad and those of the Oregon Short Line's Cache Valley
Branch. Between 1926 and 1930 the dairy industry was the
third largest farm-based industry in the state, and half
of the dairy production came from the annual production
of sixty million cans of condensed and evaporated milk.
The story of Utah's railroads includes the completion
of electric railroads, including the electric interurban
lines and the electric streetcar lines, for the movement
of passengers. Between 1890 and 1920 Utah's population
more than doubled, from 210,779 to 449,396. Most of that
growth was in the urban areas and nearby farming communities
along the Wasatch Front. By the turn of the century, the
steam railroads were straining to provide the local populace
with transportation to local destinations. To fill this
need for additional local passenger transportation, several
local electric interurban railroads were organized between
1900 and 1910. This group of companies developed into
what became one of the largest electric railroad systems
in the nation.
Between 1910 and 1920 four separate railroads completed
either the electrification of their lines or the actual
construction of their lines as electric railroads. The
Salt Lake and Utah Railroad was begun in 1914 as an electric
line south from Salt Lake City to Provo, and was completed
to Payson in 1916.
The Salt Lake, Garfield and Western began in 1891 as the
Saltair Beach Railway, running from Salt Lake City west
to the new Saltair Resort. Construction began in 1892,
at which time the name of the line was changed to the
Salt Lake and Los Angeles Railway to show that the company
had larger plans. In 1916 the company was reorganized
as the Salt Lake, Garfield and Western Railway and made
the announcement that the line would be electrified, a
process completed in 1919.
The Utah Idaho Central railroad began as the Ogden, Logan
and Idaho Railroad. The earlier road had taken over the
streetcar lines of both the Ogden Rapid Transit and the
Logan Rapid Transit and completed a connection between
the two by way of Brigham City in 1915. The Logan Rapid
Transit had completed their line north to Preston, Idaho,
in 1912. Preston remained as the northern end of a network
of electric interurban railroads that spread along the
Wasatch Front from Cache Valley south to Payson, at the
southern end of Utah Valley. In 1910 the Salt Lake and
Ogden Railroad electrified its line between those two
cities. The railroad was built by Simon Bamberger and
had been completed to Ogden in 1905. In 1917 the company
became the Bamberger Electric Railroad.
Simon Bamberger was elected governor in 1917, as the Progressive
candidate. And ironically it was the improved road and
highway system that he promoted while he was in office
which led to the eventual demise of the interurban railroad
system in Utah. As people were better able to get around
in their own cars, they were less inclined to take the
electric-powered trains into and between Utah's major
cities. The improved road system also allowed trucking
companies to become more competitive, and they gradually
took the lucrative package express business away from
the interurban lines. The interurban railroad companies
were able to gain back some of the lost traffic by offering
their own trucking services between the cities that they
also served with electrified railroad service.
Two of Utah's interurban companies--the Utah Idaho Central
in the north and the Salt Lake and Utah in the south--were
able to hold on only until the late 1940s. The Bamberger
ceased passenger train service in 1952, using diesel locomotives
to remain in the freight business until 1958. Utah's last
interurban line, the Salt Lake, Garfield and Western,
is still in business today, having converted to using
diesel locomotives in 1951. The line stopped running passenger
trains during the early 1960s, however.
The Emigration Canyon Railroad was built in 1907 to move
sandstone from quarries located in Emigration Canyon down
to Salt Lake City for use as building stone. Unfortunately,
the company's timing coincided with the availability of
cement within the state. Since concrete is a much better
building material, the market for building stone (the
railroad's traffic base) virtually disappeared within
a three-year period between 1909 and 1912.
Streetcar lines were built in Salt Lake City, Provo, Ogden,
and Logan. The line in Provo consisted of only a single
line and was abandoned after being in operation for only
six years--from 1913 to 1919. There were six lines in
Ogden, with a total length of about twenty-four miles.
In Logan there were three lines, totaling just over eight
miles, with the longest being from the Oregon Short Line
depot to the Utah State Agricultural College.
After the 1915 merger of the Ogden and Logan lines, the
new Ogden, Logan and Idaho Company continued streetcar
service until the respective cities began paving their
streets. At that time many of its lines were removed because
the company couldn't pay its share of the paving costs.
The Ogden lines were sold to a separate company in 1920,
and by the mid-1930s the streetcars in Ogden had been
replaced by buses.
The streetcar lines in Salt Lake City were by far the
most extensive in the state, beginning with those of the
Salt Lake City Railroad in 1872 and the Salt Lake Rapid
Transit Company in 1890. These two companies built a large
network of streetcar lines throughout the city and outlying
area. Other companies also were organized in the 1890s
and built lines into other parts of the city. All of the
lines were merged in 1901 as the Utah Light and Railway
Company and again in 1914 as the Utah Light and Traction
Company.
The streetcar system in Salt Lake City reached its peak
in 1918 with over 146 miles of tracks, including a line
south of Holladay and another line north to Centerville.
Beginning in the late 1920s buses began to replace the
streetcars, and slowly over the next twenty years the
individual lines were abandoned. The last streetcar ran
in Salt Lake City in 1946.
The part that the railroads have played in the economic
development of both the territory and the state of Utah
was a major one. There can be no doubt that without the
railroads our state would not be what it is today. The
completion of the transcontinental rail line through Utah
Territory in May 1869 was the beginning of a much larger
story of railroads in Utah that has largely gone untold.
The availability of low-cost transportation has as much
to do with Utah's economic success as the state's ability
to produce the goods being shipped.
A good example of the importance of transportation is
the delay in economic development within the Uinta Basin
until a network of federally funded highways was completed
in the 1930s, connecting the area with the rest of the
surrounding region. The region still does not enjoy railroad
service to the surrounding areas, although railroads were
planned through the Uinta Basin as early as the 1870s.
Of course, with the development of a complete network
of modern paved roads and highways throughout the state,
along with modern facilities for airline shipment, the
role that the railroads play today in the everyday business
of the state has been much reduced. Yet the railroads
still have a vital role in moving goods and people around
and through the state. The amount of rail traffic that
moves into, out of, and through Utah is today setting
record levels every year. This trend likely will continue,
because railroads are still an irreplaceable element in
a dynamic chain of the transportation of our nation's
goods and services.
Don Strack
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