The Modern Railroad

audiobook

The Modern Railroad

by Edward Hungerford

EN·~16 hours·31 chapters

Chapters

31 total

THE MODERN RAILROAD

0:30

PREFACE

22:50

CHAPTER I

27:54

CHAPTER II

37:18

CHAPTER III

27:39

CHAPTER IV

15:40

CHAPTER V

47:02

CHAPTER VI

54:49

CHAPTER VII

22:34

CHAPTER VIII

39:13

Description

This work opens a window onto the massive, interconnected world of American railways, guiding listeners through the evolution of tracks from modest wooden lines to the steel arteries that stitched the continent together. Drawing on vivid photographs and clear explanations, it walks through the challenges of early construction—tunneling through mountains, spanning rivers with innovative bridges, and laying the first single‑track routes. The author also shares the everyday rhythm of stations and yards, revealing how locomotives, freight cars, and passenger terminals were organized and operated.

Beyond the machinery, the book highlights the human side of the railroad, from the yardmaster’s coordination to the strategic decisions of presidents who shaped the network’s growth. Readers will discover the step‑by‑step process of surveying, financing, and rebuilding lines to meet the demands of expanding commerce. All of this is presented without delving into the political or financial controversies, making it an accessible primer for anyone curious about how the modern railroad came to be.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~16 hours (926K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive.)

Release date

2012-07-15

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

EH

Edward Hungerford

1875–1948

A longtime journalist with a deep love of rail travel, this American writer turned the story of the railroad into lively, accessible history. His books helped everyday readers see trains not just as machines, but as a force that shaped modern life.

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