Union Pacific
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1939
- 135 min
- 138 Views
(man #1) Building a railroad that
long is somebody's crazy dream.
(man #2) It's a
wonderful age we live in.
[laughing] A railroad
from Omaha to California?
One might as well think of flying.
President Lincoln is for it.
(Smith) This is the
most monumental folly...
ever conceived in the mind of man.
In all this broad land of ours...
who wants this railroad...
that will start at the
outer edge of civilization...
and wander expensively
through the wilderness?
Who, I ask you, except a small group...
of money-grabbing financiers,
self-seeking politicians...
and fanatical engineers?
[senators chattering]
[gavel tapping] Mr.
President. Mr. President.
(President) Does the Senator yield
to the gentleman from California?
I am not done, Mr. President.
I would like to read...
from a speech by the late
Daniel Webster on this subject.
Delivered from this very floor.
"What do we want with this
vast, worthless area...
"this region of savages
and wild beasts...
"of deserts and endless mountain ranges?
"What can we ever hope
to do with 3000 miles...
"of cheerless rockbound coast...
"and not a harbor on it?"
[senators chattering]
Not a harbor on it?
[gavel pounding]
(President) Order! Order!
[snickering] Why, there's room
in the San Francisco Bay...
to float all the navies of the world.
[senators laughing]
His word against Webster's.
[all cheering]
Mr. President. Mr. President.
(President) Mr. Sargent.
Gentlemen. The learned Senator asks...
Who wants this railroad?
Well, I'll tell you.
This nation, crippled by
four years of war, wants it.
[senators chattering]
A great artery...
through which may flow the
gold and silver of the West...
into the empty treasuries of the East.
(Sargent) Grain and cattle
into a war-torn South.
And thousands of men
released from both armies...
want it for the work and
the wages it will bring.
And the merchants of the whole world...
who need a shorter route
to the Orient, they want it.
[senators exclaiming]
[gavel pounding]
Gentlemen...
I move you the adoption
of this railroad bill...
that shall bind us
together, East and West...
forever as one people.
[senators cheering]
[gavel pounding]
(Lincoln) Mr. Ames...
I want to take a ride
on this railroad...
the first thing after I
retire from the presidency.
(Ames) Mr. Lincoln had the
vision to conceive this railroad.
You gentlemen must have the
vision to help us finance it.
(Barrows) Frankly, Mr. Ames,
the only vision I can see...
is a lot of loose dollars
rolling away over those prairies.
Good day, gentlemen.
(Ames) But there's more than profit...
in the lap of this undertaking.
This railroad is the
future of the United States.
Along its rails, new cities will rise.
Is there not some danger
that the Central Pacific...
which is building east across
California, may reach Ogden first...
and keep you out of
the Salt Lake Valley?
President Lincoln wisely arranged...
that the Central Pacific will build
only to the California state line.
Here, where our tracks
will join with theirs.
General Dodge, uh...
as Chief Engineer of
the Union Pacific...
are you quite sure that a railroad
more than 1000 miles long...
can actually be built
through such a wilderness?
Yes. Yes. My brother Oliver and I...
are staking our fortune
on General Dodge's word...
that it can be done.
How much of your fortune, Mr. Ames?
We'll back the Union Pacific down
to the last shovel in our factory.
You're enthusiastic.
I promised Mr. Lincoln
to see it through.
Mr. Lincoln is dead. Well,
my promise to him is not dead.
Splendid, Mr. Ames, splendid.
I'm beginning to see a golden
harvest in these iron rails.
Then you are with us?
My hand on it.
(Ames) Thank you.
Thank you, Mr. Barrows.
On the contrary, I am indebted to
you for showing me the fortune...
there is to be made out of Union
Pacific. Good day, gentlemen.
(all) Good day, sir.
(Barrows) Good luck, General Dodge.
Good luck. (Dodge) Goodbye, all.
Goodbye, sir.
Who is Barrows?
The biggest moneybag in Chicago.
He makes them and breaks them out there.
I never thought he'd join you.
What do you think would happen
if the Central Pacific...
should build all the way to
Ogden in the Salt Lake Valley?
It would bust the Union
Pacific higher than a kite.
Much higher.
But he said that Lincoln had
arranged for the Central to stop...
at the California
border. Lincoln is dead...
and there are those in Washington who
do not wish the Union Pacific well.
Can't both lines have
terminals in Ogden? No, Whipple.
You miss the point.
The Union Pacific has
authority to build only...
to where it meets the Central. Well?
And if the Central should
pass through Ogden first...
and meet the Union in the wilds
of the Wasatch Mountains...
Yes. Exactly.
The Union would have
1000 miles of track...
and a gopher hole for
its Western terminal.
Splendid.
We'll sell Union stock
short and buy Central.
We'll make millions, Mr.
Barrows. A golden opportunity.
Pure gold. Oh, yes. Yes, indeed.
But suppose the Union
Pacific gets to Ogden first?
It won't, Whipple.
I can assure you.
It won't.
(Rose) # They call me
the rose of St. Louis #
# The rose of this river town #
##[Rose humming]
Gentleman to see you, boss.
Mr. Barrows.
Bring in a bottle of
that extra-dry champagne.
Yes sir, extra dry.
Take a seat.
Oh. Rose...
# They call me the Rose of St. Louis ##
Sit down.
We ain't had the pleasure of
seeing you here before, Mr...
[chuckles]
Interesting decorations.
Only one like it in St. Louis.
idea with you from Panama.
Panama?
This biography of yourself, written by
the best detective agency in Chicago.
What's on your mind, mister?
How's that partner of
mine doing? Very good, sir.
Mr. Campeau...
in the past, your operations
have always been, shall we say...
of a minor nature.
Do you think you could manage the
biggest gambling outfit in America?
Do you think you could
handle 10,000 workmen...
with plenty of money...
out in the wilderness?
Supplying them with liquor...
and any excitement the devil can brew?
Do you think you could keep them drunk
and discontented, month after month?
Go on.
Excuse me, Mr. Allen.
see you in the other room.
Excuse me, gentlemen. Al. Al Brett...
take over.
It's your deal.
It means keeping your tent with its many
diversions at the end of the track...
as it moves West...
and selling the tracklayers all the
trouble they'll buy. You'll be protected.
What's the split? None. You take it all.
Including orders from me.
What kind of orders?
They will all add up the same. Delay.
Anything... I might say everything...
the Union Pacific Railroad.
Why not?
Longer it takes, the more money I make.
Mr. Barrows, this is
my partner, Dick Allen.
Late of the Union Army...
but never late with a gun.
He'll be very handy, I assure you.
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"Union Pacific" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/union_pacific_22587>.
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