They Found the Workers Still Standing — Frozen Upright With Shovels in Their Hands

The Giants Who Built the Railroads — Then  Vanished From Every Photo After 1890   Eight men lifted one hundred and twenty five tons  of iron each. They did it in a single twelve hour   shift. On April 28, 1869, every one of those  men was named. Michael Shay, Patrick Joyce,   Thomas Dailey, and Michael Kennedy.

 Frederick  McNamara, Edward Killeen, Michael Sullivan,   and George Wyatt. They lifted five hundred and  sixty pound rails all day long. They dropped one   into position every thirty seconds without  stopping. They laid ten miles of railroad   track before sunset that evening. That record has  never been equaled in the century since. But those   eight men were not working alone out there.

  Alongside them that day labored thousands of   unnamed workers. This was the largest industrial  workforce in American history. Stanford University   has spent over forty years searching for something  specific. A single document written by any one of   those workers. One letter home, one diary entry,  one sentence in their own hand.

 They describe   finding that single document as their holy grail.  After all those decades of searching, they have   not found it. Twelve thousand workers built the  western railroad and left zero words behind. The   hands that stitched a continent together left  no written trace of their own existence.   Before the first rail was spiked, before the  Pacific Railway Act even passed Congress,   a man who understood mountains looked at  the Sierra Nevada and made a prediction.  

William Tecumseh Sherman was no romantic. He was  an engineer, a surveyor, a San Francisco banker   who had walked those granite ridges himself in the  1850s. He wrote five words to his brother about   the proposed railroad that would need to cross  them. “If it is ever built, it will be the work   of giants.” Historians have always treated that  as metaphor.

 A colorful way of saying the project   was ambitious. But in 1865, the Central Pacific  Railroad began assembling the workforce that would   prove Sherman literally correct. Not giants in the  fairy tale sense. Giants in the engineering sense.   People who accomplished feats that qualified  professionals still struggle to explain with the   documented tools and crew sizes available. Consider what that workforce actually did.

 They   blasted fifteen tunnels through solid Sierra  granite using black powder and, eventually,   nitroglycerin manufactured on site because  shipping it was too dangerous. At the summit,   they carved one thousand six hundred  and fifty four feet of tunnel by hand.   Progress was measured in inches per day.

 Chinese  workers were lowered on ropes down sheer cliff   faces to drill holes for explosive charges. They  lit the fuses. They scrambled back up the ropes   before the mountain exploded beneath them.  Not every man made it back up in time. More   than one thousand workers are estimated to have  perished during construction, though the actual   number is unknown because few records of Chinese  deaths were kept.

 During the winter of 1866 to   1867, forty four storms buried the Sierra under  forty five feet of snow. Avalanches swept workers   off the mountainside without warning. When  spring came, some were found still standing,   frozen upright, shovels in their hands. The  railroad’s own superintendent, James Harvey   Strobridge, had initially refused to hire Chinese  workers.

 He believed they were too small and too   fragile for hard labor. Within months, those  same workers were setting construction records   that his preferred Irish laborers could not  match. Eighty eight miles of track over the   Sierra took twelve thousand men thirty eight  months. Five hundred and seventy one miles of   flat desert track from Truckee to Promontory took  five thousand men just over a year.

 The mountain   section required more than twice the workforce  for a fraction of the distance. Sherman had   understood what that granite would demand. And then came the day that defied everything.   April 28, 1869. Charles Crocker bet ten thousand  dollars his men could lay ten miles in a single   shift.

 He had waited strategically, making  the wager when the Union Pacific had fewer   than ten miles left to build, ensuring they  could not attempt to break whatever record he   set. A San Francisco Bulletin reporter stood  there with a watch. He timed the rail teams   twice. Two hundred and forty feet of iron  placed in one minute and fifteen seconds.   The pace of a leisurely walk, the reporter wrote.

  Except the people walking were carrying rails that   weighed five hundred and sixty pounds apiece. Each  spike was tapped into position, then driven home   with three heavy strokes of a ten pound maul. Ten  spikes per rail. Four hundred rails per mile. The   math is relentless.

 By day’s end, they had moved  over four million four hundred thousand pounds of   material. Twenty five thousand eight hundred ties.  Three thousand five hundred and twenty rails.   Fifty five thousand spikes. Fourteen thousand  and eighty bolts. When it was over, the eight   Irish rail handlers rode in a wagon through  Sacramento’s railroad celebration. The crowds   threw flowers until the wagon overflowed.

 That  evening, a locomotive ran the freshly laid track   at full speed. Forty minutes for ten miles.  The rails held. They held for decades.   Now the mainstream historical  establishment will tell you,   correctly, that this workforce was primarily  Chinese immigrants. Roughly ten thousand to   fifteen thousand at any given time.

 Ninety  percent of Central Pacific’s labor force by   1867. And to the credit of modern historians,  this story is no longer completely buried.   Stanford launched the Chinese Railroad  Workers in North America Project in 2012.   The Smithsonian has published major features.  The National Park Service maintains exhibits   at Golden Spike. The broad outline of erasure  has been acknowledged.

 But the acknowledgment   has a strange ceiling. We know approximately how  many workers there were. We know they were paid   thirty to thirty five dollars in gold per month,  roughly half what white workers received for   identical labor. We know they went on strike  in 1867 and that Central Pacific broke it by   cutting off food supplies to their camps.

 We know  they ate dried vegetables and drank boiled water,   which made them healthier than their counterparts.  We have their archaeological remnants. Ceramic soy   sauce jugs. Qing dynasty coins. Fragments of  teacups unearthed from the Utah desert. What   we do not have is them. Not as individuals.  Not as people with specific histories,   families, and inner lives.

 Twelve thousand  human beings compressed into a demographic   statistic and a handful of broken pottery. This is where the records themselves become the   story. The California State Railroad Museum  states plainly that it does not have complete   employee records for any railroad. Not one. The  Minnesota Historical Society notes that Great   Northern Railway personnel files from the 1890s  are “selected,” with many missing, particularly   from earlier years.

 Family historians are warned  that railroad employment records are scattered   across hundreds of repositories and that many  have been destroyed or simply lost. Before 1937,   there was no centralized system. Every record  lived with an individual company. And companies   did not stay individual for long. The Louisville  and Nashville Railroad alone acquired, leased,   or constructed fifty six different railroads  during the 1880s and 1890s.

 Each merger was an   opportunity for older records to be consolidated,  which meant standardized, which meant simplified,   which meant thinned. The granular employment  documentation from the construction era is exactly   what vanished first.

 The records that would tell  you who swung a hammer on which section of track,   those are the first pages to go when filing  cabinets get reorganized. The 1870 census was the   first to even include a code for Chinese residents  that could be cross-referenced with occupation.   Before 1870, these workers simply do not exist  in American government records. After 1882 and   the Chinese Exclusion Act, the paper trail becomes  actively dangerous to maintain.

 Documents linking   Chinese families to American labor were  sometimes destroyed on purpose. In China,   during the twentieth century Cultural Revolution,  anything connecting a family to Western employment   could mark them for persecution. The records  are not just incomplete. They were attacked   from both ends and corroded in the middle.

 Something else was happening during these exact   same decades that nobody in railroad history talks  about. Between 1863 and 1890, the circus sideshow   industry reached its absolute peak. P.T. Barnum  had been exhibiting individuals of extraordinary   height since the early 1860s. Anna Swan of Nova  Scotia stood seven feet eleven inches tall and   joined Barnum’s American Museum in 1862, the same  year President Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway   Act. She nearly burned to death when the museum  caught fire in 1865, the same year Chinese labor  

gangs started blasting through the Sierra. By  the 1870s, exhibitions of unusual bodies were   standard features at every major circus. By  1880, the industry had professionalized into   a significant entertainment sector. And here  is what matters for the photographic record.   PBS documented that sideshow photographers of  this exact era deliberately manipulated scale   in their images.

 Tall men were photographed  beside miniature furniture to exaggerate their   height. Short performers were placed next to  oversized chairs. The images were products,   not documents. They were designed to distort  proportion for commercial purposes. These   manipulated photographs used the same formats as  every other photograph of the period. Cartes de   visite. Cabinet cards. Tintypes. The same formats  used to document railroad construction crews.

 Two   industries running on parallel tracks during the  same narrow window. One building the physical   infrastructure of the nation. The other absorbing  unusual human bodies into the entertainment   infrastructure. Both producing photographs in  identical formats. And the overlap in their   timelines has never been seriously examined.

 I need to say something here that cost me a   week of hesitation. When I laid out the  engineering numbers, the workforce gaps,   the photographic parallels, I could feel the  argument pulling toward a conclusion I was not   sure I could defend. I almost set the entire  project aside. What stopped me was not finding   more evidence for the extraordinary claim. What  stopped me was the ordinary claim.

 The verified,   documented, academically confirmed erasure  of twelve thousand real people is already   extraordinary enough. Stanford spent forty five  years and still cannot find a single first-person   document. That is not a conspiracy theory.  That is a confession. When the factual record   is already this broken, asking what else might be  missing is not paranoia. It is due diligence.  

Anna Swan married Captain Martin Van Buren Bates  in 1871. He stood seven feet nine inches. She   stood seven feet eleven. Queen Victoria sent the  wedding gown. They were real people. After the   circus, they settled in Seville, Ohio and built a  house with fourteen foot ceilings and eight foot   doors. Not a curiosity. Not a museum exhibit.  A home.

 Functional architecture scaled for two   people whose bodies required it. Their doorways  measured the same proportions as the government   buildings and courthouses going up across America  in that same decade. Not because of a conspiracy.   Because when you build for someone approaching  eight feet tall, the architecture converges on the   same dimensions regardless of purpose. Bates was  a Confederate Captain.

 A military man experienced   in organized labor under brutal conditions. He  lived through the most intensive construction   era in American history. I have found  no evidence that he personally worked   on the railroads. But I keep circling a simpler  question. How many people of unusual physical   capability were alive during those years?  And would the incomplete, consolidated,   partially destroyed employment records capture  any of them if they had been on those crews?   After approximately 1890, the pattern shifts.  Everything shifts at once, as if someone turned a  

dial. Sideshow attendance begins its long decline  as motion pictures and amusement parks emerge   as competing entertainment. Railroad photography  moves from candid crew documentation to controlled   corporate compositions.

 The Chinese Exclusion Act  has already severed the immigrant labor pipeline   that built the western half of the nation’s rail  network. Railroad companies undergo a wave of   mergers and record consolidation that swallows  individual employment files by the thousands.   The kind of photograph where a crew stands  together at end of track, tools in hand, faces   visible, that format vanishes from the archive.  It is replaced by promotional images.

 Locomotives   gleaming. Stations freshly painted. People  carefully arranged. The granular, human record   of who actually did the work narrows exactly  when it would become most useful to answer these   questions. Stanford’s researchers have used census  cross-referencing, descendant oral histories,   archaeological excavation, and international  archival collaboration to reconstruct what   they can. They can name some workers now. They can  trace some family lines.

 But the complete picture,   their own word for it, remains a holy grail.  An object of faith as much as scholarship.   There is something about the 1969 centennial  ceremony at Promontory Summit that crystallizes   everything. One hundred years after the golden  spike, the Chinese Historical Society of America   sent a delegation to the anniversary celebration.

  They were unexpectedly excluded from the official   program. The one Chinese speaker who had been  invited was bumped from the stage. The reason,   preserved in multiple historical accounts, is that  John Wayne showed up. A movie star replaced the   descendants of the actual builders at a ceremony  honoring what their ancestors built. One hundred   years of erasure, and the centennial itself became  another act of erasure.

 The names on the stage   did not match the names on the rails. Your town has a railroad. Or it has the scar   where one used to run, a corridor of gravel and  wildflowers cutting through the grid of streets.   You have driven over crossings without thinking  about who graded the earth beneath those rails.   If your family came to America between 1863 and  1890, the infrastructure that carried them was   built by people the records chose not to see.  Not hidden by a shadowy conspiracy.

 Just never   written down. Assigned a number instead of a name.  Photographed but not captioned. Present in every   image and absent from every ledger. There are more  than one thousand three hundred photographs from   the construction era held across American archives  and museums. Many have never been fully digitized.  

Some require academic credentials to access. The  originals sit on glass plate negatives in climate   controlled storage, holding a level of detail that  no reproduction has captured. Every face in those   images belongs to a person who lifted iron, drove  spikes, and risked death for thirty five dollars a   month. Most of them will never be identified.

  The question I cannot stop asking is not whether   giants built the railroads. The question is  what the complete story would look like if   every photograph were digitized, every archive  fully opened, every name recovered from every   fragment of surviving paperwork. Because right  now we are trusting a version of this history   that even the institutions preserving it admit  is incomplete. The rails still run.

 The tunnels   still hold. The engineering still functions  after more than a century and a half. But the   full accounting of who laid those rails, what they  looked like, what they were physically capable of,   that remains locked away. Locked in collections  that are only partially accessible. Preserved   in records that are only partially intact.

  Captured in photographs that are only partially   digitized. We counted every spike. Twenty one  million hammer strokes between Sacramento and   Omaha. We mapped every mile. We calculated every  dollar of profit the railroad barons extracted.   What we cannot do, after one hundred and fifty  six years, is name the people who carried it all   on their backs. The iron remembers their weight.  The granite remembers their blasting.

 The records   forgot their names. Whether we choose to keep  forgetting is the only question that remains.

 

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