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The First Railroads
The first railroads had tracks in the eastern United States. When they
began service in 1830 there were less than 13 million people living in the
United States and its territorial holdings. Most people lived east of the
Mississippi River. During this time, west of the Mississippi there were
fewer people than there are in a medium sized city today. The railroads
opened up the west with a relatively cheap, fast, and efficient means of
transporting goods and people over great distances. Indeed, throughout the
country, where railroads laid their tracks towns, industry, agriculture,
and commerce grew.
The growth of the country from the effects of the railroads was not without
its costs. Small towns that failed to get tracks laid in their vicinity
would often be subject to harsh economic decline. Other people had no say
in the matter when the railroad came to town. Tracks were laid through
once quiet neighborhoods, some people found their homes condemned to clear
the way for the lines, and others found their towns divided by the tracks.
Rail yards and terminals were large industrial areas where freight could be
transferred, engines serviced, and goods shipped out. They destroyed the
land, left hazardous wastes, bred disease, and made a general mess of the
environment. Nevertheless, railroads took hold in America and participated
in the transformation of the country, linking together diverse regions.
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