Synopsis
Prospectus Of A Combined System Of Railways: Embracing The Selma And Gulf Railroad, And Forming Connections Between The Western, North Western, And Central Southern States, And The Nearest And Best Harbor On The Gulf Of Mexico by James W. Lapsley. This 1870 prospectus describes a proposed network of railways designed to knit the western, northwestern, and central southern states to the Gulf port at Pensacola. It promotes a perpendicular main line from Nashville to Selma and thence to Pensacola, with connections to the Selma and Gulf Railroad and to parallel lines such as the Ashby and Red Mountain, the South and North-Alabama, and the Alabama and Chattanooga roads. The author details Alabama's mineral resources—coal, iron ore, limestone, fire-clay—and argues that the region’s geography and climate favor rapid industrial development. The work argues that Pensacola, with a deep, protected harbor, offers advantages over Mobile, New Orleans, and Galveston, and contends that improved inland routes would unlock large-scale commerce with the Caribbean, the Orient, and across the isthmus. The prospectus also discusses existing rail projects, funding approaches, and the strategic value of uniting various lines to concentrate traffic at Pensacola.
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