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Louisville, Cincinnati and Charleston Rail Road Dreams of Linking North and South

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ISBN-10: 0253011817

ISBN-13: 9780253011817

Edition: 2014

Authors: H. Roger Grant

List price: $36.00
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Description:

Among the grand antebellum plans to build railroads to interconnect the vast American republic, perhaps none was more ambitious than the Louisville, Cincinnati & Charleston. The route was intended to link the cotton-producing South and the grain and livestock growers of the Old Northwest with traders and markets in the East, creating economic opportunities along its 700-mile length. But then came the Panic of 1837, and the project came to a halt. H. Roger Grant tells the incredible story of this singular example of "railroad fever" and the remarkable visionaries whose hopes for connecting North and South would require more than half a century—and one Civil War—to reach fruition.
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Book details

List price: $36.00
Copyright year: 2014
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 4/17/2014
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 216
Size: 7.00" wide x 10.00" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 1.408
Language: English

Born in 1943 in Ottumwa, Iowa, H. Roger Grant is a professor of history at the University of Ohio at Akron. A contributor to numerous history journals, Grant is also a noted railway historian and editor of Railway History. His books on the subject include Erie Lackawanna: Death of an American Railroad, 1938-1992 (1994), and Living in the Depot: The Two-Story Railroad Station (1993). Grant has also published several collections of postcards with railways and Ohio history as their themes.

Preface
Acknowledgments
Slow, Difficult and Dangerous Travel
A Rail Road?
Knoxville, 1836
Surveys, Finances and Construction
Crisis and Contraction
What Happened
What Might Have Happened
Notes
Index