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  • Railroads Triumphant: The Growth, Rejection, and Rebirth of a Vital American Force
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Buy from Amazon $99.00$0.01 $75.00 $50.00 $25.00 Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2016 $83.89, May 25 - May 30$2.97, May 25 5:26 pm$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$83.89, May 25 - May 30$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$96.76, Jun 3 8:49 pm$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$96.77, Jun 8 - Jun 23$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$96.76, Jun 27 - Jul 5$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$96.56, Jul 11 - Jul 22$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$96.55, Jul 26 - Aug 6$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$97.08, Aug 9 7:24 pm$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$94.05, Aug 13 - Aug 24$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$94.29, Aug 28 - Sep 5$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$94.05, Sep 9 - Sep 12$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$98.38, Sep 16 - Sep 28$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$99.00, Oct 2 - Mar 12$5.99, May 27 - Nov 7$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$99.00, Oct 2 - Mar 12$5.98, Nov 11 - Dec 4$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$99.00, Oct 2 - Mar 12$5.99, Dec 9 - Dec 24$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$99.00, Oct 2 - Mar 12$6.00, Dec 29 - Jan 12$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$99.00, Oct 2 - Mar 12$5.99, Jan 17 - Apr 16$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$87.45, Mar 24 1:06 am$5.99, Jan 17 - Apr 16$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$66.04, Apr 4 12:34 pm$5.99, Jan 17 - Apr 16$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16$63.09, Apr 16 5:45 am$5.99, Jan 17 - Apr 16$0.01, May 25 - Apr 16 95,4131,941,683 1,562,500 1,171,875 781,250 390,625 Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2016

Price Details

New

Latest $63.09 Apr 16, '16
Highest $99.00 Oct 2, '15
Lowest $63.09 Apr 16, '16
Average $76.63 (30d avg)
$93.24 (90d avg)
$96.12 (180d avg)
$95.95 (Lifetime average)
Added May 25, 2015

3rd Party New

Latest $5.99 Apr 16, '16
Highest $6.00 Dec 29, '15
Lowest $2.97 May 25, '15
Average $5.99 (30d avg)
$5.99 (90d avg)
$5.99 (180d avg)
$5.97 (Lifetime average)
Added May 25, 2015

3rd Party Used

Latest $0.01 Apr 16, '16
Highest $0.01 May 25, '15
Lowest $0.01 May 25, '15
Average $0.01 (30d avg)
$0.01 (90d avg)
$0.01 (180d avg)
$0.01 (Lifetime average)
Added May 25, 2015

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30 day average: 1,246,824
90 day average: 1,544,885

Product Description

In 1789, when the First Congress met in New York City, the members traveled to the capital just as Roman senators two thousand years earlier had journeyed to Rome, by horse, at a pace of some five miles an hour. Indeed, if sea travel had improved dramatically since Caesar's time, overland travel was still so slow, painful, and expensive that most Americans lived all but rooted to the spot, with few people settling more than a hundred miles from the ocean (a mere two percent lived west of the Appalachians). America in effect was just a thin ribbon of land by the sea, and it wasn't until the coming of the steam railroad that our nation would unfurl across the vast inland territory.

In , Albro Martin provides a fascinating history of rail transportation in America, moving well beyond the "Romance of the Rails" sort of narrative to give readers a real sense of the railroad's importance to our country. The railroad, Martin argues, was "the most fundamental innovation in American material life." It could go wherever rails could be laid--and so, for the first time, farms, industries, and towns could leave natural waterways behind and locate anywhere. (As Martin points out, the railroads created small-town America just as surely as the automobile created the suburbs.) The railroad was our first major industry, and it made possible or promoted the growth of all other industries, among them coal, steel, flour milling, and commercial farming. It established such major cities as Chicago, and had a lasting impact on urban design. And it worked hand in hand with the telegraph industry to transform communication. Indeed, the railroads were the NASA of the 19th century, attracting the finest minds in finance, engineering, and law.

But Martin doesn't merely catalogue the past greatness of the railroad. In closing with the episodes that led first to destructive government regulation, and then to deregulation of the railroads and the ensuing triumphant rebirth of the nation's basic means of moving goods from one place to another, offers an impassioned defense of their enduring importance to American economic life. And it is a book informed by a lifelong love of railroads, brimming with vivid descriptions of classic depots, lavish hotels in Chicago, the great railroad founders, and the famous lines. Thoughtful and colorful by turn, this insightful history illuminates the impact of the railroad on our lives.

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