In 1869, the world's First Transcontinental Railroad was completed. It was possible, for the first time, to travel between the eastern and western halves of the United States on one continuous rail line stretching from Omaha, Nebraska to Sacramento, California. Supplanting earlier means of travel, the railroad turned what used to be a hazardous, months-long journey by wagon train and stagecoach into a safe, relatively comfortable one-week affair that could be had for as little as $65.
Airplanes came on the scene in 1903, but the first coast-to-coast flight wouldn't happen until 1911, when Calbraith Rogers flew from Sheepshead Bay, New York to Pasadena, California. Sponsored by Armour Meat Packing Company to the tune of $5 per mile, Rogers' trip required 70 stops for fuel, sleep and food. (His mechanic, who rode by train, often arrived at their meeting points before Rogers did.) That wasn't the only record Rogers set -- he was also aviation history's first casualty due to a bird strike.
This trip time would be shortened significantly by other historically significant aircraft (some of which are still in use today), but on February 11, 1939, Ben Kelsey flew the XP-38, an experimental fighter aircraft which would go on to play a major role in WWII, to set a record by flying from California to New York in 7 hours and 2 minutes. Kelsey also punctuated his own record with a crash when ice fouled his engines (but lived to tell about it).
In just 70 years, the time to travel across America had fallen from months to days to hours, a reduction of over 99%.
Air travel became ever more efficient, and today we're herded into pressurized aluminum tubes and disgorged five hours later on the other end of the country. But amidst what we've gained, something has also been lost. The coasts, fat with technology and media conglomerates, have risen to dominate an influential segment of public opinion but can be accused of having lost touch with the way of life and values which persist in the nation's interior. The coasts ignore the middle at their peril. Flyover country will have its say.
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