Stanford University
CESTA

This website is no longer updated and has been replaced with a static copy. The Spatial History Project was active at Stanford University from 2007-2022, engaging in dozens of collaborative projects led by faculty, staff, graduate students, post-docs, visiting scholars and others at Stanford and beyond. More than 150 undergraduate students from more than a dozen disciplines contributed to these projects. In addition to a robust intellectual exchange built through these partnerships, research outputs included major monographs, edited volumes, journal articles, museum exhibitions, digital articles, robust websites, and dozens of lightweight interactive visualizations, mostly developed with Adobe Flash (now defunct). While most of those publications live on in other forms, the content exclusive to this website is preserved in good faith through this static version of the site. Flash-based content is partially available in emulated form using the Ruffle emulator.
Shaping the West
By the end of the 19th century, railroads stretched across the United States from coast to coast connecting cities and peoples. The railroads were the conduits along which people, traffic, power, money, and influence flowed towards the West. They represented, if not always in reality, then at least in the public's imagination, the great, indelible link to the rest of the world and to the progress of the future. As transcontinental travel and shipping became easier, people's experiences of space and time changed dramatically. The Shaping the West Project is developing tools to represent and analyze visually how and to what degree the railroads created new spatial patterns and experiences in the 19th century American West. 

The Shaping the West project in the Spatial History Lab at Stanford University was established to explore the growth and influence of the railroads on the Western United States. While the eventual goal is to reconstruct a network that includes every historic rail line in the West before 1900, the project puts particular emphasis on the railroads of California and on those around San Francisco. The project connects data gathered from more traditional historic sources (letters, freight tables, books, newspapers, accident reports, ledgers) to its specific geographic location using historic maps and surveys georeferenced in ArcGIS. This spatial history, as we call it in the lab, examines how historic perceptions of space in the newly settled West were influenced by more than Cartesian geography: specifically by patterns of land holding, commerce, and communication. 

We started by examining rates for commodities shipped on rail lines in the West to see how these rates influenced California's development and how what might be called "cost space" (measured by the cost of shipping commodities) differed from an absolute space measured in miles. Our results led us to ask new questions: why, for example, do railroad rates act to erase rivers - eliminating them as competing means of transportation - in some areas while other rivers a short distance from railroads effectively compete for cargo? Why is geographic distance as a factor in transportation virtually erased in some communities while others of similar size and composition see the effects of distance actually increased? In short, how do railroad rate tables act as a kind of software for the hardware of railroad lines in order to control the construction of lived space? We are eager to see how visualizations such as this one can illustrate and help us understand changes in historical space and their social, political, and economic results. Our goal is that models such as this one will prove useful for other research and teaching applications. 

In other projects, our research assistants explored California's changing manufacturing and agricultural landscape along the railroads and studied the geographic distribution of stockholders in the Union Pacific Railroad Company. They are examining the temporal and spatial patterns of accidents along the railroads and investigating the effect of the railroads and infrastructure on local development in Fresno County in 1891. 

Pairing tabular data, like census reports and land patents, with geographic data allows us to ask spatially relevant questions. Which stretches of rail were the most dangerous? Was one railroad profession more at risk of death or injury than another? How did the railroads affect settlement in the counties immediately adjacent to the railroads? What happens to these populations over time as more transportation and irrigation options became available?

We use Geographic Information Systems (GIS), spatial analysis and visualization graphical representation algorithms to visually manipulate maps and graphs. We intend our projects to be both a proof of concept and a tool that can be put to immediate use in research and teaching spatial concepts in history. We look forward to sharing our results and data over the web and in public forums.
Former Lab Staff:
Celena Allen

GALLERY:
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Colorado Railroad Accidents, July 1884 - June 1885
Extent of Digitized Rail
Extent of Digitized Rail
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Exports from Colorado by Station in 1885
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Population Density in the United States from 1790 to 2000
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Per Capita Income in the United States: 1880-1910
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Transcontinental Railroad Development, 1879-1893
Railroaded
Railroaded
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What is Spatial History?
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Speculative Spaces: Land Speculation and Social Formation in Two California Counties
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Land Speculation in Fresno County: 1860-1891
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When the Loss of a Finger is Considered a “Minor” Injury
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A Data Model for Spatial History
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Union Pacific Shipping from Nebraska: Forwarded/Received
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Union Pacific Shipping from Nebraska: East/West
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Tracing Railroad Directors, 1872-1894
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Railroad Repeats: The Alfred A. Hart Photo Project
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Cattle Production in the American West, 1867-1935
Quad Index
Quad Index
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California Railroad Commission,
Station Construction Data, 1850-1900
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Western Railroads and Eastern Capital: Regional Networks on Railroad Boards of Directors, 1872-1894
Distribution of Union Pacific Stockholders by City (1869)
Distribution of Union Pacific Stockholders by City (1869)
The Expansion of the Western Railroad
The Expansion of the Western Railroad
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The Central Pacific and Transcontinental Eleven Step:
How to Run a Transcontinental Railroad
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Patterns of Change in Railroad Company Board Members, 1872-1894
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The Rise in the American Railway Union, 1893-1894
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Seeing Space in Terms of Track Length and Cost of Shipping
Examples of Digitizing Rail from Historic USGS Quads
Examples of Digitizing Rail from Historic USGS Quads

Spatial History