![]() ![]() The early terminal lines, ending on the East St. Louis waterfront. Image Credits |
Nineteenth Century Rail
During the late nineteenth century railroad companies built their tracks
into East St. Louis with increasing frequency. The city was new, a merger
of the city of Illinoistown, the town of Illinoistown, the town of St.
Clair, and eventually the important riverfront area known as Bloody Island,
and the railroad companies had little trouble buying the right of way for
their tracks. The timing of East St. Louis' development as a city and the
desire of the railroads to establish central terminals on the Mississippi
River's edge came at a high cost to the local residents. Rail tracks ran
throughout the city; long snaking roads of steel and wood converged on the
area, finding space wherever necessary to reach the huge rail yards
developing on the waterfront. East St. Louis was a means to an end for the
railroad companies. The men who ran them cared nothing for the condition
of the city or the status of its inhabitants. They focused on making their
lines profitable and they let very few things interfere with this pursuit.
More complex than the mass of tracks twisting through East St. Louis,
railroads were businesses where the difference between success and failure
was often narrow. Industrial production in America began to grow rapidly
near the end of the nineteenth century. Railroads offered a new way to
connect the far reaches of the country with industrial centers. New
products could be sold in places where it was once prohibitively expensive
to ship goods. Railroads also promoted rural growth. Wherever a new line
passed, towns would soon follow, relying on the line to bring them the
goods and materials to survive and prosper. A railroad boom swept America
in the 1880s. Soon, one out of every thirty-two people would be working in
some way for a railroad company. The entrepreneurs of the era understood
that rail transportation promised a means to make great fortunes in little
time.
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