Title: Railroad Transportation
1Railroad Transportation
- Oregons railway system formed the foundation of
Oregons development and industrialization in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries.
2The First Railroads Come to Oregon
- Railroads had already changed life in the east by
the mid-1800s, bringing prosperity and
industrialization. Oregon still had only river
navigation and overland wagons for travel and
transport of goods. Oregonians anxiously awaited
the arrival of railroads to their territory. - Congress began granting federal land to develop
railroads in 1850, opening up the west for
railroads that would bring settlers, and allow
goods to flow easily to and from Oregon country. - The Oregon Steam Navigation Company built the
states first railroads in 1863, a pair of short
portage lines used to move goods around the
rapids at Celilo Falls and the Cascades. - In 1868, Ben Holliday began building the Oregon
and California Railroad up the Willamette Valley.
It was intended to link Oregon to the
transcontinental railway that was about to reach
California. He made it to McMinnville, and then
ran out of money.
3Wheat farming in eastern Washington stimulates
railroads to Portland
- The Columbia River was the main route for
shipping grain to market. - Dr. Dorsey Baker built a rail line from Walla
Walla to the mouth of the Walla Walla River on
the Columbia in 1875. - It was called the Rawhide Railroad because
there was no steel, so he used wooden ties
covered with iron, although legend says it was
leather. - He floated logs from the Yakima River Valley down
the Columbia to use as ties. - Railroads reduced the price of shipping grain to
the Columbia, but a railroad was still needed to
Portland, as navigation of the river was
difficult and expensive.
4Henry Villard brings the First Transcontinental
Railroad to the Columbia River
- Villard, a German, came to Oregon in 1873 to
oversee the interests of German bondholders in
the Oregon and California Railroad. - He took over control of the Oregon and
California, purchased the Oregon Steam Navigation
Company, added the Rawhide Railroad, and
combined all of these into the Oregon Railway and
Navigation Company. - In 1882, Villard built a railway line on the
Oregon side of the Columbia River. - He bought stock in the Northern Pacific and took
control over it, and linked the Northern Pacific
to his Oregon Railway and Navigation Company line
along the Columbia River to make a
transcontinental railroad link to Portland. - His new rail route funneled trade from the east
to Portland, not Seattle.
5The railroad brings large-scale development of
the Columbia River country
- The population of Oregon almost doubled every
decade from 1860-1890. - Settlers were arriving at the rate of 1,000 per
week in 1890 - 2.5 million acres of new farmland were opened up
in Washington, Oregon and Idaho between 1880 and
1890. - Logging grew from modest operations near streams
to industrial scale harvests wherever a branch
railroad could be put.
6Railroads Brought Growth and Prosperity to Oregon
- Railroads became the determining factor in the
life or death of cities. For example,
Jacksonville was a mining boom town in the
1850s. When the Oregon and California Railroad
bypassed it for Ashland, Jacksonville sank into
obscurity. - Trains brought in bulky equipment such as
seeders, cultivators and steam-powered threshers
that multiplied the number of acres a family
could farm. - In Linn County in the Willamette Valley, wheat
production increased 250 in seven years after
the trains arrived. - Rails reached Eugene in 1871, and smaller feeder
lines helped Willamette Valley farms prosper by
shipping their goods to Portlands seaport.
7Trains promoted industrialization and drew
workers to towns and cities
- Oregons industries included railway repair, wool
factories, fish canneries, print shops, flour
mills, and lumber. - Lumber, salmon and wool were Oregons only
significant processed exports. - Trains allowed shipments of meat, wool, lumber
and minerals to distant markets. - Many Chinese immigrants came to Oregon in search
of work. They were instrumental in building the
railroads.
8Timber Became the Leading Industry in Oregon
- Steam locomotives traveled on narrow-gauge tracks
into western and eastern Oregon. They
dramatically increased the amount of land that
could be profitably logged. - Railroads allowed logging and milling of timber
to become a year-round occupation. - Railroads supported the timber industry because
so much lumber was required to make the ties and
trestles. - By the 1890s, Portland was sending a large
percentage of its timber exports east, along the
Northern Pacific route, rather than west by
steamships.
9The Oregon Railway and Navigation Company and
other Columbia River Lines
- Oregon Railway and Navigation Co. - Completed
line along the Oregon side of the Columbia River
in 1882 - Union Pacific- After building the first
transcontinental railroad from Omaha to
Sacramento in 1869, the UP main line was
connected through the Oregon Short Line to the
Oregon Railway and Navigation Company and thus to
Portland. - Oregon Short Line went from eastern Oregon
through Idaho and then connected with the
transcontinental Union Pacific line in Granger,
Wyoming. - Spokane, Portland and Seattle- a new main line on
the north side of the Columbia River with
connections to Pasco, Spokane and Seattle through
bridges - Astoria and Columbia River first link between
Portland and Astoria - Great Southern Railroad Went from the Dalles to
Dufur
10Main Trains in Portland Area
- Major railroads connected to branch lines and
short lines. Branch lines were short extensions
operated by larger companies. Short lines were
small railroad companies that operated
independently but connected to large lines. - Portland Area Short Lines allowed people to
commute to Portland, included streetcars. - Tualitin Valley Short Lines and Branch lines The
Southern Pacific and Oregon Electric operated the
major branch lines. - Willamette Valley Short Lines and Branch Lines
11 Eastern Oregon Rail Lines
- Sumpter Valley narrow gauge line started in 1891
from Baker City to Sumpter - Malheur Valley- from Ontario to Vale, became part
of the Oregon Short Line and then the Oregon
Railway and Navigation Co. in 1910 - Northwestern Railroad Co. started in 1906 as a
short line along the Snake River, became part of
the Oregon Railway and Navigation Co. in 1911
12Southern Oregon Rail Lines
- Southern Pacific the main line went from
Springfield, Oregon to Black Butte, California.
Another Southern Pacific line went from Eugene to
Coquille, Oregon. - Oregon and California one of the first
railroads in Oregon, started from Portland to the
Willamette Valley and was later extended. - Union Pacific currently the main line from
Portland to California, was once merged with the
Southern Pacific.
13Conclusion
- Railroads are part of the colorful history of
Oregon. They are largely responsible for the
settling of Oregon and the development of the
states economy. Railroads still thrive in
Oregon today.