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Blood on Gold Mountain - Iron Horse Road: a Tale from Gold Mountain

Iron Horse Road: a Tale from Gold Mountain

07/19/23 • 47 min

Blood on Gold Mountain

Iron Horse Road: a Tale from Gold Mountain recounts one of the great untold epics of American history: The story of the Chinese laborers–neither truly enslaved nor truly free–who built the most rugged stretches of the Transcontinental Railroad.

More than 150 years ago, these Gold Mountain Men tunneled through mountains, dangled over cliffs, and dragged entire trains over alpine summits where other Americans feared to tread. The prosperity of the gilded age was founded on their blood, sweat and grit, but their story has long been suppressed, minimized and forgotten.

For Iron Horse Road, the father/son team behind Blood on Gold Mountain retrace the steps of these workers from the Sacramento hills to the snows of Donner Summit. Equal parts history and travelogue, Iron Horse Road uses binaural 3D audio to transport the listener to deep canyons, echoing caverns and windswept peaks–a world where adventure is always around the corner, and the past is carved in blood and stone.

Note:

I mention that Cantonese was a common language among the Railroad Chinese. This Is true, however, it is important to acknowledge that other dialects, such as Toishan, and languages, such as Hakka, were spoken by large numbers of Chinese laborers in the old west.

Bibliography:

Importance of Transcontinental Railroads:

https://www.history.com/news/transcontinental-railroad-changed-america

https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2015/beyond-bls/railroads-old-industry-still-vital-in-todays-economy.htm

https://www.american-rails.com/i.html#:~:text=With%20World%20War%20I's%20outbreak,issues%20on%20the%20home%20front

https://www.aar.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/AAR-Rail-Shutdown-Report-September-2022.pdf

Union Pacific vs Central Pacific

https://www.up.com/heritage/history/overview/construction/index.htm

https://www.trains.com/trn/railroads/history/sherman-hill-the-first-rocky-mountain-railroad-pass/

https://www.truckeehistory.org/native-americans.html

John Henry

https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=165173

https://www.americanheritage.com/iron-spine

https://www.constructionequipmentguide.com/hand-built-railroad-defines-unites-nation/8310

https://railroad.lindahall.org/essays/tunnels-bridges.html

https://www.trains.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/150transconrrebook.pdf

Work Conditions

https://books.google.com/books?id=Kig4DQAAQBAJ&pg=PA71&lpg=PA71&dq=central+pacific+120+degrees+railroad&source=bl&ots=TVLWIzO6xH&sig=ACfU3U3qrNRSX6nerMgudT2OYSAgIq3zSA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj8tPiKjcn_AhWliO4BHX-8Aj8Q6AF6BAhJEAM#v=onepage&q=central%20pacific%20120%20degrees%20railroad&f=false

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pl2WDfkTa3g

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Iron Horse Road: a Tale from Gold Mountain recounts one of the great untold epics of American history: The story of the Chinese laborers–neither truly enslaved nor truly free–who built the most rugged stretches of the Transcontinental Railroad.

More than 150 years ago, these Gold Mountain Men tunneled through mountains, dangled over cliffs, and dragged entire trains over alpine summits where other Americans feared to tread. The prosperity of the gilded age was founded on their blood, sweat and grit, but their story has long been suppressed, minimized and forgotten.

For Iron Horse Road, the father/son team behind Blood on Gold Mountain retrace the steps of these workers from the Sacramento hills to the snows of Donner Summit. Equal parts history and travelogue, Iron Horse Road uses binaural 3D audio to transport the listener to deep canyons, echoing caverns and windswept peaks–a world where adventure is always around the corner, and the past is carved in blood and stone.

Note:

I mention that Cantonese was a common language among the Railroad Chinese. This Is true, however, it is important to acknowledge that other dialects, such as Toishan, and languages, such as Hakka, were spoken by large numbers of Chinese laborers in the old west.

Bibliography:

Importance of Transcontinental Railroads:

https://www.history.com/news/transcontinental-railroad-changed-america

https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2015/beyond-bls/railroads-old-industry-still-vital-in-todays-economy.htm

https://www.american-rails.com/i.html#:~:text=With%20World%20War%20I's%20outbreak,issues%20on%20the%20home%20front

https://www.aar.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/AAR-Rail-Shutdown-Report-September-2022.pdf

Union Pacific vs Central Pacific

https://www.up.com/heritage/history/overview/construction/index.htm

https://www.trains.com/trn/railroads/history/sherman-hill-the-first-rocky-mountain-railroad-pass/

https://www.truckeehistory.org/native-americans.html

John Henry

https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=165173

https://www.americanheritage.com/iron-spine

https://www.constructionequipmentguide.com/hand-built-railroad-defines-unites-nation/8310

https://railroad.lindahall.org/essays/tunnels-bridges.html

https://www.trains.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/150transconrrebook.pdf

Work Conditions

https://books.google.com/books?id=Kig4DQAAQBAJ&pg=PA71&lpg=PA71&dq=central+pacific+120+degrees+railroad&source=bl&ots=TVLWIzO6xH&sig=ACfU3U3qrNRSX6nerMgudT2OYSAgIq3zSA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj8tPiKjcn_AhWliO4BHX-8Aj8Q6AF6BAhJEAM#v=onepage&q=central%20pacific%20120%20degrees%20railroad&f=false

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pl2WDfkTa3g

Previous Episode

undefined - Jianchi/ Perseverance

Jianchi/ Perseverance

Act One of the play Jianchi/Perseverance is based on the outbreak of bubonic plague in 1900 in San Francisco Chinatown, which led to suspicion and demonization of Chinese who were identified with the “China plague,” a term used to describe the bubonic plague.

The history of Chinese in San Francisco is a fraught affair. Drawn at first by mid-nineteenth century stories of riches to be found in “Gold Mountain” (California) just for the working, many impoverished Chinese laborers left home to escape war and famine, and to earn money to send to their starving families. Most arrived too late for the Gold Rush, so many had no choice but to become laborers for the transcontinental railroad, doing the most dangerous and least remunerative work. Little by little the survivors drifted back to cities, to try to build a life for themselves. By 1880, nearly 16% of the population of San Francisco were Chinese immigrants. They experienced daily humiliations, persecution and segregation: the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act was the first act to ban legal immigration rights to a country on the basis of race.

After killing more than half the population of Europe during the Middle Ages, bubonic plague had taken a break as a pandemic, but it resurged in Asia in the mid-1800s, taking 6 million lives in India and millions more in southern China. Because of San Francisco’s position as America’s foremost Western port, Dr. Joseph J. Kinyoun, the chief quarantine officer of the Marine Hospital Service on Angel Island, anticipated that San Fransisco would be the first American city to experience plague cases before any other. Unilaterally, he instituted a new policy: all ships from Asia or Hawaii would be thoroughly inspected before disembarking in San Francisco. California’s businessmen, newspapers and politicians were derisive. They accused Kinyoun of overstepping his authority and dismissed any suggestion of a potential outbreak as a “plague fake” intended to create a panic that would boost demand for his medical services.

Since ship checks focused on finding infected people, for several months, rats and their plague carrying fleas went ashore from ships onto San Francisco’s streets, concentrating in the city’s most squalid and poverty-stricken neighborhood - Chinatown. In March 1900, the first suspected plague victim died there.

For many upper and middle-class white San Franciscans, the first sign something was wrong in Chinatown on March 7, 1900, were their empty kitchens. Switchboard operators noticed next, as lines lit up with angry callers, demanding to talk to their missing Chinese servants. From there, word began trickling out around the city: Chinatown was locked down. It was only then that white San Franciscans began to remember that they had started seeing dead rats — far more than the regular count — on the streets of Chinatown in January 1900.

“The Chinese were not the only people who had to suffer,” huffed The San Francisco Chronicle. “The white employers of the Chinese awoke to find that there was nobody on hand to prepare breakfast.”

Responding to white outrage, San Francisco Mayor James Phelan ordered a company of doctors to make a sweep of Chinatown to track down and identify every possible plague case. This provoked terror throughout the SF Chinese community, which was well aware that just a few months earlier, 4,000 homes had been burned to the ground in Honolulu’s Chinatown to eradicate a plague outbreak.

After a year of waging a campaign of denunciations and denial, California Governor Henry Gage finally allowed federal officers in to inspect, test and diagnose Chinatown residents, on condition of Dr, Kinyoun’s immediate reassignment out of state. On June 1st 1901, he declared victory over the “China plague.”

The epidemic’s official death toll is recorded as 119, but it’s likely that more cases were hidden, covered up or never discovered.

In 1907, another bubonic plague outbreak recurred among white residents in Oakland and San Francisco. This time, officials jumped into action immediately, spending $2 million to trap and kill rats — the equivalent of over $55 million today. Such measures had not been taken to protect the lives of the Chinese in SF Chinatown seven years earlier. Chinese lives had not mattered except when they put white lives in jeopardy simply through proximity.

What is certain is that Chinese were blamed for endangering white lives by bringing bubonic plague to San Francisco.

Act Two of Jianchi/Perseverance is based on a true incident involving Denny Kim, a South Los Angeles resident. Knocked to the ground and berated with racial slurs and anti-Asian threats, the U.S. Air Force veteran spoke out about the assault in Los Angeles' Koreatown. Los Angeles police are now investigating this attack as a potential hate crime, investigators said.

Blood on Gold Mountain - Iron Horse Road: a Tale from Gold Mountain

Transcript

Micah:

When John Henry was a little baby

sittin on his daddy's knee,

He picked up a hammer and a little piece of steel

said "Hammer be the death of me, Lord, Lord,

Hammer be the death of me."

So begins the ballad of John Henry, the legendary Black railroad worker who embodies the values of physical power, indomitable spirit and personal sacrifice at the heart of the American story. My Dad used to sing that song to me, back when

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