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Transportation In The 1800's

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During the early 1800’s America needed a type of transportation that was faster, cheaper, and more reliable. So when in 1811 the British made the first successful railroad it did not take long for Americans to start building the first common railroad the Baltimore and Ohio in 1828. After the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was built America felt railroad fever and hundreds of railroads were built. The Railroad changed the American economy and culture in just a few years.
People built so many railroads that within 10 years of the first railroad the amount of miles of canals and railroads was the same. During the 1840’s there were many improvements to railroad like the T-Rail, cowcatcher and many others. The number of miles of railroad in 1840 was …show more content…

The benefits railroads had over wagons were all three of the benefits I had listed. The benefits over shipping through a canal was that the canals in the north were closed in the winter for three or four months and in the south it was faster and there as too much water in the canals. What also helped railroads was that competition with other railroads and also other modes of transportation was that railroads lowered their ten-mile rate of 2.4 cents to 3.5 cents and for “Erie and the Ohio canals were averaging just over a penny” (Stover 34). The lowering of the ton-mile rate helped the railroads put carriages and canals out of business. “1840 is usually regarded as the watershed date for the ascendancy of railroads over the canals. Huge track-laying increases began to occur. The Great Lakes were reached in 1850, Chicago in 1853 and the Mississippi River was crossed in 1856”(United States American …show more content…

My railroad will be vastly different than the early American railroads because they were so fragmented that “if a traveler wanted to go from Boston to Georgia, he could go by rail to to Stonington,Connecticut; by steamer to New York City and across to Jersey: by rail to Washington, via Camden,Philadelphia, and Baltimore: and by steamer forty miles down the Potomac to rail service which would get him to Wilmington, North Carolina.” After that take stage trip to Charleston and the train to Hamburg and cross the river into Georgia (Stover 20-21.) In my Railroad if you were in Johntown and wanted to get to Crayola you hop onto train go to Retroville and then Harlem to New Orleans and finally New Orleans to Crayola and all through the convenience of the railroad. My will cost 16,000 per mile and 10,000 per bridge and the total cost would total up to be 65,524,000 in total which is why I need a right of way 400 feet wide and for every mile of track, I will be given 10 square miles of land for every mile of the railroad so I can build it. In return for all of that I will deliver the mail for free and only use American steel to make my

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