A federal analysis overlaying America's Class I railroad network onto its long-haul fiber optic backbone found the two maps nearly identical. Salt Lake City, Albany, Birmingham. The same cities show up as hubs on both. Engineering convenience played a role, but the legal story is what kept the pattern locked in place for over a century.
Between 1850 and 1872, Congress granted railroad companies enormous strips of public land, alternate sections in corridors twenty to fifty miles wide, to incentivize construction. The 1875 General Railroad Right-of-Way Act formalized the process, letting companies claim corridors across public lands without case-by-case negotiation. The railroads got built. The legal permissions outlasted everything else.
A century later, Southern Pacific Railroad looked at its own corridor and saw something besides track. In 1970 it formed a subsidiary, Southern Pacific Communications Company, and began selling surplus capacity on a microwave telecom system running along its existing right-of-way. By 1976 the service, branded SPRINT (Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony), was the first AT&T competitor offering coast-to-coast private lines. When GTE acquired Sprint in 1983 for $1.2 billion, the corridors were the prize. GTE already had switching capability. What it gained was hundreds of miles of open easements between major cities.
The pattern kept compounding. Philip Anschutz bought Southern Pacific Transportation Company in 1988 and immediately started a subsidiary to lay fiber optic cable along the railroad's rights-of-way. Free access to those corridors was reportedly a primary motivation for the purchase itself. That subsidiary built out 15,000 miles of fiber, renamed itself Qwest Communications, and went public in 1997. Level 3 Communications followed the same gravitational logic, constructing a 16,000-mile national network largely within railroad corridors. In Buffalo, crews dug trenches along Norfolk Southern lines. The corridors kept pulling new technology into old paths, because the legal groundwork made every alternative more expensive.
Railroad land is privately held, so fewer permits are needed. A single agreement can span state lines without navigating separate jurisdictions. When landowners challenged fiber deployments as exceeding the original railroad purpose, courts held that fiber optic cable is:
"The modern application of its antecedent the telegraph line."
A use contemplated, if not imagined, by the original grants.
Union Pacific today actively markets access to its rights-of-way for telecom deployment. The corridor itself is the product.
A right-of-way doesn't appear on satellite imagery or engineering diagrams. It's a legal artifact, invisible in every physical sense. And yet the technology running through these corridors has changed three times since the 1800s: telegraph wire, then microwave, then fiber optic glass. The legal corridor hasn't changed once. American broadband geography was shaped by land grants designed to move steam locomotives across the frontier. Permissions compounded. The path of least resistance turned out to be the one where resistance had already been cleared, a long time ago, for a completely different purpose.

