"No historian has previously documented the full measure of [railroading’s] inflluence in such comprehensive fashion as Ely does in this book. . . . [An] impressive work."—Technology and Culture
"A major contribution to the legal history of railroads in United States history. Recommended for general audiences as well as specialists in United States legal history, railroading, and transportation history. Ely’s remarkable book changes the arguments about railroads and law and sets new parameters for the public and scholarly debates about railroads and public policy. This book is truly a significant and welcome achievement."—American Nineteenth Century History
"This important account goes far beyond detailed exegesis into a rich history of the ways in which those who make and read the law have defined the competing rights of all Americans, and of the larger legacy of railroad law to the nation as it has evolved. . . . Balanced, insightful, and clearly written."—Journal of Southern History
"A masterful one-voume synthesis of this massive topic. . . . Railroads in American Law is a great achievement. Ely presents a complex, sprawling, and sometimes arcane topic using accessible language that convincingly demonstrates the impact the nation's first large corporations had on the law and society. Scholars and lay readers alike will be referring to Ely’s book for years to come."—Annals of Iowa
"A model work of legal history."—Journal of American History
"This is the best single book on the history of railroad law. The author addresses the two fundamental questions of railroad law: how did railroads shape the law, and how did law shape the railroads? This superb book should be on the shelves of every railroad, economic, and legal historian."—Railroad History
"This is an important synthesis. Ely [provides] a very readable one-volume summary of the complex relationship between the railroads and the law. His study is balanced and well researched, and I enthusiastically recommend it."—Enterprise & Society
"Railroads are the engines of constitutional change in this book—perhaps the best book yet written on the topic. Riding the legal history of the railroads is really a history of the American Constitution. . . . Few books can be described as innovative and fun to read; this is an exception to this rule. Besides constructing a readable framework for understanding constitutional law, it also tells an important story about how the law can be used in service of the private sector and economic development, with positive and negative consequences. . . . An important contribution to constitutional law and knowledge of how the law is employed by, or deployed against private industry."—Law and Politics Book Review
"A huge topic handled with vigor and aplomb. Anyone remotely interested in history, law, and railroads should read this book."—Appellate Practice Journal
"A ground-breaking study."—History: Reviews of New Books
"A monumental achievement—it should be on the shelves of every railroad, economic, and legal historian."—Herbert Hovenkamp, author of Enterprise and American Law, 1836–1937
"Fills a large void in the field of legal history. There is nothing else available that covers this subject, or even comes close."—Lawrence M. Friedman, author of A History of American Law
"A unique and wide-ranging book on a relatively untouched subject that should appeal to anyone interested in the history of the American railroad."—John F. Stover, author of American Railroads
"An incredibly ambitious book from a master at writing about sweeping legal topics in a meaningful and readable way."—Paul Kens, author of Lochner v. New York: Economic Regulation on Trial