Iron Horse Imperialism
192 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:30 Oct 2008
ISBN:9780816528035
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Iron Horse Imperialism

The Southern Pacific of Mexico, 1880-1951

The University of Arizona Press
The Southern Pacific of Mexico was a U.S.–owned railroad that operated between 1898 and 1951, running from the Sonoran town of Nogales, just across the border from Arizona, to the city of Guadalajara, stopping at several northwestern cities and port towns along the way. Owned by the Southern Pacific Company, which operated a highly profitable railroad system north of the border, the SP de Mex transported millions of passengers as well as millions of tons of freight over the years, both within Mexico and across its northern border. However, as Daniel Lewis discloses in this thoroughly researched investigation of the railroad, it rarely turned a profit. So why, Lewis wonders, did a savvy, money-minded U.S. corporation continue to operate the railroad until it was nationalized by the Mexican government more than a half-century after it was constructed? Iron Horse Imperialism reveals that the relationship between the Mexican government and the Southern Pacific Company was a complex one, complicated by Mexico’s defeat by U.S. forces in the mid-nineteenth century and by SP’s failure to understand that it was conducting business in a country whose leaders were ambivalent about its presence. Lewis contends that SP executives, urged on by the media of the day, operated with a reflexive imperialism that kept the company committed to the railroad long after it ceased to make business sense. Incorporating information discovered in both Mexican and American archives, some of which was previously unavailable to researchers, this comprehensive book deftly describes the complicated, decades-long dance between oblivious U.S. entrepreneurs and wary Mexican officials. It is a fascinating story.
List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Nationbuilding Versus Foreign Penetration: The Question of Why Southern Pacific of Mexico Operations Failed
2 ‘‘Ungrateful Yankees and the Means to Combat Them’’: Mexican Governmental Treatment of Railroads (1837–1920)
3 The Revolution, Reparations, and the Railroad (1909–1923)
4 ‘‘Get Out if You Can’’: The Salsipuedes Gorge, Taxes, and Completion of the Line (1923–1929)
5 Multicultural Mosaic: The Impacts of Otherness (1923–1929)
6 An Island upon the Land: Labor Law, Tari√s, and the Isolation of the Southern Pacific of Mexico (1930–1939)
7 Hard Freight: The Impossible as Inevitable
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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