On May 10, 1869, one small act transformed our nation. As crowds watched, a railroad worker hammered the last spike into a track, connecting America’s eastern and western railways. The first transcontinental railroad was finished! That meant that it would take only a week to travel across the country instead of the four months or more it took horse-drawn wagons to make the 1,900-mile trip.
Thousands of workers toiled for six long years building the railroad. With rivers, mountains, and deserts blocking their way, many doubted that the daring project could be pulled off.
They were proved wrong when a telegraph operator tapped out the message “D-O-N-E” from Promontory Summit in what is Utah today. As the news spread, people celebrated from coast to coast.