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EIGHTH GRADE Part Nine: Railroads and Westward expansion With the Cherokee nation gone, white settlers were now living and forming counties all over present-day Tennessee. In the meantime, something else was reshaping the state: Railroads were being developed.
Although the state government played a role in helping the railroads come to Tennessee, for the most part railroads were financed and planned by private companies. The private companies were given the right of eminent domain – which is the power to force people to sell their land to them. But that’s about all that the government did to help.
Because the state government didn’t do much to help the railroads come to Tennessee, the first few attempts to bring the railroad here failed. Knoxville wanted a railroad badly because steamboats generally had a hard time making it up the Tennessee River that far. But several attempts by officials there to get a railroad failed. Memphis wanted a rail line that would head east and connect that city with the Atlantic Ocean. That effort failed too. The first city to get a real rail connection was Chattanooga. The railroad was called the Western and Atlantic, and it was built by private investors and by the government of the state of Georgia to connect the brand new city of Atlanta (then known as Terminus) with the Tennessee River. Incredibly, it took 14 years to get the rail line finished, and the first train rolled into Chattanooga in 1850. By the time Chattanooga got this railroad, businessmen in Nashville had already begun organizing a new railroad, one that would connect Nashville to Chattanooga (and thus the new Western and Atlantic Railroad). It took years to raise all the money. One thing that they did was to go to every town between Nashville and Chattanooga and ask for investments. As a general rule, towns willing to raise the most money were the ones who got the railroad through them. Towns that refused got passed up by the railroad. It was through a process like this that many old towns died, new towns were created, and some county seats were moved. The Nashville and Chattanooga line was finished by 1854. By this time there were other railroads in the works across the state. And, by 1860, Tennessee had about 1,000 miles of railroads.
Tennessee and the West
As we have said before, Tennessee once was "the west." And as America's frontier pushed further west, Tennesseans played a huge role in the acquisition of places such as Texas and California. Three such people were Sam Houston, James K. Polk, and William Walker. Sam Houston
Sam Houston was a big, strong man, but many of his biographies say that he was afraid of the dark. He also became governor of two American states even though he seemed to prefer Native American culture over white culture. James K. Polk
When Andrew Jackson was president, one of his most devoted supporters in the U. S. House of Representatives was James K. Polk. In fact, Polk was often known as “Young Hickory.” In 1844 Polk was elected president of the United States. When Polk became president, the country of Mexico claimed a lot of what we now know as the state of Polk did not run for a second term. He died only months after he left office. William Walker
There was a time, in the early 1850s, when William Walker was considered one of the great American heroes. Born in 1824 in what is now downtown In 1854 A few years later Today, most Americans don’t know who QUIZ
1) What is the power to force someone to sell land known as? 2) (TRUE OR FALSE) The state government took the lead when it came to developing the railroads. 3) ____ ______ was president of the United States when Texas became part of the country. 4) ____ ________ was governor of both Tennessee and Texas. 5) _______ ________ was a Nashville native who once led an army that fought a war over Nicaragua. For quiz answers, click here.
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All photographs taken by Bill Carey for THKF unless otherwise stated.







