Website Uptime Monitor

Monitor website availability and server information for any domain

uprr.org

Uptime & Server Information

Current Status

Status
Active
Server Type
Apache
Page Title
First Transcontinental Railroad - Central Pacific Railroad Photographic History Museum
Meta Description
Central Pacific Railroad construction in the 1860's. Stereoviews, engravings, maps, and documents are treasures of western Americana that illustrate the history of the first transcontinental railroad, built from Sacramento, California over the Sierra Nevada mountains, the to end of track at the Golden Spike Ceremony at Promontory, Utah where the rails were joined on May 10, 1869 with the Union Pacific Railroad from Omaha, Nebraska. CPRR stereograph images by Alfred A. Hart, A. J. Russell, Houseworth, Muybridge, Reilly, Savage, Watkins, and Anthony picture locomotives, snowplows, trains, scenery, bridges, tunnels, and snowsheds.
Meta Keywords
transcontinental railroad, Central Pacific railroad, CPRR stereograph stereographs stereo stereoview stereoviews Southern Union, photographic history museum library 3D 3-D picture pictures U.P.R.R. UPRR Stanford Hopkins Huntington Crocker Montague Theodore Judah Lewis Metzler Clement rail train trains steam engine locomotive locomotives diamond stack A. A. Hart Alfred Carleton Watkins Thomas Lawrence Houseworth Charles Savage Ottinger Pond J. Reilly E. & H.T. Anthony Muybridge Andrew Russell 19th century nineteenth albumen prints Currier Ives Harper Harpers Harper's Weekly Leslie Frank engraving engravings map maps 1860's 1870's Sierra Nevada mountains Donner Lake summit tunnel bridge trestle travel transportation western Americana Sacramento Truckee Cisco Colfax C.P.R.R. C. P. R. R. CPRR.org photographs photography photograph photo foto California Nevada Utah snowshed snowsheds RR, R.R. trans-continental Promontory Point golden spike driving ceremony
Most Recent Data
0 hours, 0 minutes ago

Historical Data

DateStatusServer
6/1/2025, 12:58:33 AMActiveApache

About Website Uptime Monitoring

Use the Who.is uptime information to track the availability and server information of websites. This helps track:

  • Website availability and response status
  • Server software and configuration
  • Meta information including titles and descriptions
  • Historical uptime patterns

This information is valuable for website owners, system administrators, and anyone interested in monitoring website reliability and performance.


Disclaimer: Who.is is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any of the domains displayed on this page. We provide this information as a public service for informational purposes only.

Want to reliably monitor your website's status?

We provide 24/7 monitoring with instant alerts, detailed statistics, and customizable checks. Perfect for keeping your website reliable and your users happy.

Try Free Website Monitoring

Free for up to 2 websites. No credit card required.

Metrics we monitor

  • Uptime Percentage: The percentage of time your website is accessible
  • Response Time: How quickly your server responds to requests
  • Status Codes: HTTP response codes indicating server status