Historically Thinking
Historically Thinking
Steam Powered
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Steam Powered

Aaron W. Marrs on steamboats, railroads, and the cultural power of steam in antebellum America

Originally published on April 8, 2024 (Episode 355)

Introduction

In the antebellum United States, the sudden arrival of steam power—through steamboats, railroads, and engines—transformed not only transportation but also the imagination. At a pivotal moment in Chapter 17 of Nathanael Hawthorne’s House of the Seven Gables, two of his protagonists escape from haunted Salem, Massachusetts, and are whirled away from its power by the even greater power of steam: “…Looking from the window, they could see the world racing past them. At one moment, they were rattling through a solitude; the next, a village had grown up around them; a few breaths more, and it had vanished, as if swallowed by an earthquake. The spires of meeting-houses seemed set adrift from their foundations; the broad-based hills glided away. Everything was unfixed from its age-long rest, and moving at whirlwind speed in a direction opposite to their own.”

From Hawthorne’s House of the Seven Gables to a Texas teenager’s diary, Americans wrote about the iron horse as though it were both natural and otherworldly at one and the same time, a force that not only uprooted landscapes, and raced across them, but unsettled time itself. Aaron W. Marrs explores how steam became a cultural metaphor as well as a practical revolution in his book The American Transportation Revolution: A Social and Cultural History (Hopkins, 2024).


About the Guest

Aaron W. Marrs is a historian at the U.S. Department of State. His previous book was Railroads in the Old South: Pursuing Progress in a Slave Society (Hopkins, 2009). The views expressed in this conversation are his own and not those of the State Department or the federal government.


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When steam shrank time and space, did it also reshape how Americans saw themselves and their nation? Share your thoughts in the comments—and maybe your favorite train or steamboat story too.

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