
audiobook
by Southern Pacific Company. Passenger Department
This travelogue follows the Southern Pacific Coast Line from the sunny streets of Los Angeles through San Francisco up to Oregon’s evergreen forests. The author paints each mile with sea, sky, mountains and valleys, noting a mild climate that invites year‑round travel. Readers can picture vineyards, orchards and occasional desert blooms along the route.
The book pairs lyrical prose with photographs of historic stations, bustling towns and quiet resort retreats. It describes how the rail opened health‑seeking spots such as mineral springs and shaded parks, and the outdoor activities early tourists enjoyed. Along the way, snippets of local culture—from mission ruins to modern steel skyscrapers—show the region’s evolving character.
Listening feels like a relaxed train ride, with the narrator’s steady voice guiding you past waterfalls, pine‑covered passes and coastal cliffs. The work offers a snapshot of early‑twentieth‑century travel, preserving the optimism of an era when the West was still being mapped for leisure. It’s an ideal companion for anyone curious about the natural and cultural wonders along the Pacific corridor.
Full title
The Road of a Thousand Wonders The Coast Line—Shasta Route of the Southern Pacific Company from Los Angeles Through San Francisco, to Portland, a Journey of Over One Thousand Three Hundred Miles
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (59K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Stephen Hutcheson, Carol Spears, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2015-03-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Created by the Southern Pacific Company’s Passenger Department, this travel-writing voice was really a publishing arm of the railroad rather than a single named author. Its guides were designed to spark interest in rail travel across the American West, blending practical route information with vivid, promotional storytelling.
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