Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
Juan Bautista Alberdi belonged to a generation of Argentines fervently dedicated to the ideal of lifting the Río de la Plata out of the internal chaos which had delayed national consolidation and economic growth since the time of independence. In his Bases y puntos de partida para la organización política de la república argentina, published in 1852, Alberdi asserted that only the railroad could effect the long awaited unification of the Argentine people. He stated: “Without the railroad political unity cannot be had in a country where distance makes central political power impossible.” “Political unity,” Alberdi added, “can only be begun through territorial unity, and only the railroad can make places separated by five hundred leagues a unified country.”
1 Obras completas de J. B. Alberdi (Buenos Aires, 1886), III, 432.
2 Ibid., III, 434.
3 This figure is compiled from statistics which appear in Brady, George S., “Railways of South America, Part I: Argentina” (hereafter cited as Brady, “Railways of Argentina ”) in U. S. Department of Commerce, Trade Promotion Series, No. 32 (Wash ington, D. C., 1926).Google Scholar
4 Pendle, George, “Railways in Argentina,” History Today, VIII (February, 1958), 121.Google Scholar
5 Brady, “Railways of Argentina,” p. 83.
6 Pendle, George, Argentina (2nd ed.; London, 1961), p. 57.Google Scholar
7 Brady, “Railways of Argentina,” pp. 84-85.
8 Shepherd, Henry L. Jr., “Default and Adjustment of Argentine Foreign Debts, 1890–1906” (hereafter cited as Shepherd, “Default and Adjustment”), in U.S. Department of Commerce, Trade Promotion Series, No. 145 (Washington, D. C., 1933), pp. 7–8.Google Scholar
9 Cárcano, Miguel A., Evolución histórica del régimen de la tierra pública, 1810-1916 (Buenos Aires, 1925), pp. 190–192 Google Scholar; Duncan, Julian S., “British Railways in Argentina,” Political Science Quarterly, LII (December, 1937), 561, 564-565.Google Scholar
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11 Williams, John H., Argentine International Trade Under Inconvertible Paper Money, 1880-1900 (Cambridge, Mass., 1920), pp. 88–94.Google Scholar
12 Bunge, Alejandro E. (comp.), Ferrocarriles argentinos, contribución al estudio del patrimonio nacional (Buenos Aires, 1918), pp. 89–90 Google Scholar; Rippy, J. Fred, British Investments in Latin America, 1822-1949 (Minneapolis, 1959), p. 160.Google Scholar
13 Pendle, Argentina, p. 57.
14 Alberdi, Juan B., The Life and Industrial Labors of William Wheelwright in South America (Boston, 1877), pp. 138–152.Google Scholar
15 Brady, “Railways of Argentína,” p. 40.
16 Cárcano, Evolución histórica del régimen da la tierra pública, pp. 190-192; Scobie, James R., Argentina: A City and a Nation (New York, 1964), pp. 113–114.Google Scholar
17 Brady, “Railways of Argentina ” pp. 35, 38, 56.
18 Ibid., pp. 57-61.
19 Tornquist, Ernesto & Co. (comp.), The Economic Development of the Argentine Republic in the Last Fifty Years (Buenos Aires, 1919), p. 120.Google Scholar
20 Brady, “Railways of Argentina,” p. 104.
21 U. S. Department of State, Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, 1885 (Washington, D. C, 1886), p. 2.
22 Brady, “Railways of Argentina,” pp. 104-105. The Transandine line was opened in 1910.
23 Brady, “Railways of Argentina,” p. 106; G., Michael and Mulhall, Edward T. (comp.), Handbook of the River Plate (Buenos Aires, 1885), p. 52.Google Scholar
24 Brady, “Railways of Argentina,” pp. 164 ff.
25 Ibid.
26 Bunge, Ferrocarriles argentinos, pp. 119-121; Mulhall, Handbook of the River Plate, p. 52.
27 Tornquist & Co., The Economic Development of the Argentine Republic in the Last Fifty Years, p. 122.
28 Ibid., p. 26.
28 Martínez, Albert B. and Lewandowski, Maurice, Argentina in the Twentieth Century, trans., Miall, Bernard (Boston, 1911), p. 94.Google Scholar
30 Ibid., p. 111.
31 Scobie, Argentina: A City and a Nation, p. 119.
32 Romero, José Luis, A History of Argentine Political Thought, trans., McGann, Thomas F. (Stanford, 1963), p. 161.Google Scholar
33 Mulhall, Handbook of the River Plate, pp. 52-53.
34 Scobie, Argentina: A City and a Nation, p. 139.
35 Williams, Argentine International Trade Under Inconvertible Paper Money, pp. 88-94.
36 Romero, A History of Argentine Political Thought, pp. 184-187; Zea, Leopoldo, The Latin-American Mind, trans., Abbott, James H. and Dunham, Lowell (Norman, 1963), pp. 214–218.Google Scholar
37 The full text of Law 531 is given in Bunge, Ferrocarriles argentinos, pp. 36-55.
38 The full text of Law 2873 is given in ibid., pp. 56-77.
39 U. S. Senate, 58th Congress, 2nd Session, Senate Documents, doc. no. 206, “Pan-American Railway” (Washington, 1904), p. 30.
40 Named for the author of the law, Emilio Mitre.
41 The full text of the Mitre Law is given in Bunge, Ferrocarriles argentinos, pp. 78-81. Also see Posse, Justiniano A., “Economía y ferrocarriles,” Revista de economía argentina, XLIV (February, 1945), 42–43.Google Scholar
42 Williams, Argentine International Trade Under Inconvertible Paper Money, pp. 88-90.
43 Quoted in Shepherd, “Default and Adjustment,” p. 7.
44 Martínez and Lewandowski, Argentina in the Twentieth Century, p. 94.
45 U. S. Department of State, Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, 1888 (Washington, 1889), I, 16.
46 Shepherd, “Default and Adjustment,” p. 7.
47 Quoted in Pendle, “Railways in Argentina,” pp. 123-124.
48 Quoted in Romero, A History of Argentine Political Thought, p. 193.
49 Llorens, Emilio, “La nacionalización de los ferrocarriles,” Revista de economía argentina, XLV (July, 1946), 224–230.Google Scholar
50 Quoted in Romero, A History of Argentine Political Thought, p. 193.