America’s National Parks Podcast
Society & Culture:Places & Travel
On May 10th, 1869, in Promontory Summit, Utah, two sets of ordinary railroad tracks met under extraordinary circumstances. Together the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroad companies, building from Sacramento, California, and Omaha, Nebraska, joined to revolutionize travel. Before that day, a single person would pay $1000 to travel from east to west in the United States. On a steam engine train, it only cost $150. More than 1700 miles of track were laid in just seven years, across deserts, over plains, and through mountains. Its completion was one of the most defining moments in our nation’s history.
On today’s episode of America’s National Parks, the Golden Spike National Historical Park, and the nation’s first transcontinental railroad, celebrating its 150th anniversary this May.
Climate Change and Glacier National Park
A Music Mecca
Songs of Joshua Tree
New NPS Director, More than Half of Lassen Burned | National Park News
Novarupta
Mary Kwart: Wildland Fire Pioneer
Sea Turtles of Cape Hatteras National Seashore
Hottest Days, Terrible Tourists, Flash Floods, and Masks (again) | National Park News
La Casa Nevada — Yosemite's Snow House
National Park of American Samoa
News from the Parks | 300 Rock Cairns, 200-foot Cliff Face Breaks, and 1 New Peregrine Falcon
Sleeping Bear Dunes
The Carriage Roads & Bridges of Acadia National Park
National Park News | Record Crowds, Biden's Budget, a Grim Anniversary
Buffalo Bird Woman
Synchronous Fireflies in the Smokies
Spring Migration in the Parks
Restore Hetch Hetchy
Driverless Shuttles, Murder in Hot Springs, Pike Trail | National Park News
Kalaupapa
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