The following was originally posted on January 9. It did not get distributed to various social media sites with which I share my posts, so I’ll repost it.

In January 1869, Charles Francis Adams, Jr., grandson and great-grandson of U. S. presidents, published an article in the North American Review (the oldest literary magazine in the US) entitled “The Pacific Railroad Ring.” He was making public the financial shenanigans of the Crédit Mobilier of America, the Union Pacific’s construction company. Adams exposed numerous Congressmen, bondholder trustees, corporate directors, and construction contractors who were getting rich off a scheme concocted by Thomas “Doc” Durant, the UP’s vice president/general manager. Crédit Mobilier charged the UP more money than it cost to build the railroad, then issued construction contracts at lesser amounts allowing the stockholders to pocket the difference. Some estimates put the illicit profit at more that $50 million. Durant and Oakes Ames, a member of the House of Representatives from Massachusetts and a member of the board of directors of the UP, distributed stock in Crédit Mobilier to thirty Congressmen and several bureaucrats who could influence the issuance of the government bonds used to finance the railroad. The growing scandal created embarrassing moments during the Presidential election of 1872.
Not as well known until several years later, it was eventually revealed that the Central Pacific Railroad had a similar contractual scheme. Their construction firm was known as the Contract and Finance Company and was managed by Charles Crocker. The big difference between the CP’s company and the UP’s was that the stock was owned only by the Big Four founders of the Central Pacific, plus Charles Crocker’s brother E. B. Crocker, an associate justice of the California Supreme Court. The records of the Contract and Finance Company were so convoluted that no one has been able to untangle them.

[/media-credit] Drawing of snow sheds in various stages of construction.
Out on the lines, both railroads continued to build through the winter weather. The ground was so frozen they used black powder to blow it into chunks which they then used to create roadbed. In the spring thaws, the tracks sagged and slid as the ice melted, requiring reworking large segments of the tracks. Still, they were able to show they had laid many miles of track during January and were thus able to collect government bonds. The Central Pacific had the further complication of battling heavy snowfall in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. They solved that problem by erecting miles of snow sheds.
 
			



 We all three returned to South Point the next day for dinner at Don Vito’s, one of the casino’s many outstanding restaurants. Beth and I are standing beside the Benny Binion equestrian statue which is located just to the right side of the above picture of our book signing table.
We all three returned to South Point the next day for dinner at Don Vito’s, one of the casino’s many outstanding restaurants. Beth and I are standing beside the Benny Binion equestrian statue which is located just to the right side of the above picture of our book signing table.

 Next on the agenda will be the fourth annual book signing at South Point Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, mid-way through the National Finals Rodeo. My wife, Barbara, will assist me during the event. Also helping will be our daughter Beth who will fly in from California to reprise her role, in costume, as Jenny McNabb, the principal female character in The Iron Horse Chronicles. If you are in the Vegas area on Saturday, December 8, 2018, stop by South Point Casino between noon and 4 PM and say hello.
Next on the agenda will be the fourth annual book signing at South Point Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, mid-way through the National Finals Rodeo. My wife, Barbara, will assist me during the event. Also helping will be our daughter Beth who will fly in from California to reprise her role, in costume, as Jenny McNabb, the principal female character in The Iron Horse Chronicles. If you are in the Vegas area on Saturday, December 8, 2018, stop by South Point Casino between noon and 4 PM and say hello.

 Golden Spike, The Iron Horse Chronicles, Book Three, has been awarded the 2018 Silver Will Rogers Medallion in the category of Younger Readers. I went to Fort Worth, Texas, to receive this prestigious award and enjoyed wonderful fellowship with the other award recipients while there. On Friday evening, October 26, a great reception, hosted by Charles Williams, the Executive Director of the Will Rogers Medallion Award Committee, kicked off the celebrations.
Golden Spike, The Iron Horse Chronicles, Book Three, has been awarded the 2018 Silver Will Rogers Medallion in the category of Younger Readers. I went to Fort Worth, Texas, to receive this prestigious award and enjoyed wonderful fellowship with the other award recipients while there. On Friday evening, October 26, a great reception, hosted by Charles Williams, the Executive Director of the Will Rogers Medallion Award Committee, kicked off the celebrations.

 I was pleased with the interest in The Iron Horse Chronicles. As you can see from the stacks in front of me, I had all three volumes available: Eagle Talons, Bear Claws, and Golden Spike. The books in the foreground are the hardcover editions from Five Star Publishing. Slightly visible behind the stack of Eagle Talons (to my right) are some large print editions from Wheeler Publishing.
I was pleased with the interest in The Iron Horse Chronicles. As you can see from the stacks in front of me, I had all three volumes available: Eagle Talons, Bear Claws, and Golden Spike. The books in the foreground are the hardcover editions from Five Star Publishing. Slightly visible behind the stack of Eagle Talons (to my right) are some large print editions from Wheeler Publishing.


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