Life in the camp was very bad. Some people even called it hell on wheels. It usually consisted of grueling work that took all day. The camps were always on the move. Mining would boom in one place, a town would be built, railroad would be established and then the mining would completely die off and there would be no reason to stay in the town. Miners and traders would be scattered around the countryside working and doing what they do just to survive. Regular train service on 
constructed track also brought carloads of migrants and workers looking to settle down, 
make a buck, or simply experience the beauty of a town out in the wild. North Platte and towns that followed were the new 
boomtowns, they grew without any law. Which, of course, encouraged a spirit of
 anarchy, not to mention a good number of criminals.
          One of the most striking things about the colonies was their 
portability. As winter commenced, and the railroad workers built toward new 
towns, agents could simply pack up their wares, 
dismantle their shacks, and follow along on the brand new track. It did not require days of packing up and moving.
          Workers
 lived in canvas camps alongside the grade. In the mountains, wooden 
bunkhouses protected them from the drifting snow. Most of the houses were compromised by the elements. Each group had a cook who purchased 
dried food from the Chinese districts of Sacramento and San Francisco to
 prepare on site. While Irish crews stuck to an unvarying menu of boiled
 food, like beef and potatoes, the Chinese ate vegetables and seafood, 
and kept live pigs and chickens for weekend meals. The 
newcomers were very strange and seemed alien in other ways. They were very clean, they bathed themselves, washed 
their clothes and stayed away from whiskey. Instead of water they drank 
lukewarm tea, boiled in the mornings and dispensed to them throughout 
the day.
Source: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/general-article/tcrr-hell/
Linked to Taryn's Blog: tarynpoole.blogspot.com 
By Max Buchner
 
Nice job Max! this is so specific and such great detail! :) love it
ReplyDeleteNice Maxi! So great!
ReplyDelete