In 1869, Leland Stanford hammered in the golden spike. He was the head of one of the two companies that built the railroad. Today, the golden spike sits in a glass case in the university Stanford founded in California. The hammer and a silver spike used in the ceremony are also on display at Stanford University’s Cantor Arts Center.
David Pendleton is a fourth-grade teacher in Utah. He visited the museum in 2022, excited to take photos of the golden spike to show his students.
“Every person who grew up in Utah knows about the golden spike and the transcontinental railroad,” explains Pendleton. “It’s something we teach in school every single year.”
But Pendleton was disappointed by the display. The golden spike didn’t even have a label explaining what it was. Pendleton knew that the spike and the two other railroad artifacts are a source of pride for Utahans. He thought the objects would get the special treatment they deserve in his home state.
Pendleton decided to get his students at Neil Armstrong Academy involved. Last February, he shared his big idea. The class would start a letter-writing campaign. They hoped to get as many people as possible to write letters to officials at Stanford. Their goal was to bring the golden spike back to Utah.