I need no warrant for being, and no word of sanction upon my being. I am
the warrant and the sanction.
— Ayn Rand, Anthem
| Year | Event | |
| -9 | Hank Rearden born | |
| -8 | ||
| -7 | ||
| -6 | ||
| -5 | ||
| -4 | ||
| -3 | James Taggart born | |
| -2 | Philip Rearden born | |
| -1 | ||
| 0 | BIRTHS OF JOHN GALT, FRANCISCO D’ANCONIA, RAGNAR DANNESKJOLD | |
| 1 | ||
| 2 | Dagny Taggart born | |
| 3 | ||
| 4 | Eddie Willers born | |
| 5 | ||
| 6 | ||
| 7 | ||
| 8 | ||
| 9 | ||
| 10 | ||
| 11 | Dagny, age 9, decides she’ll run Taggart Transcontinental one day | |
| 12 | Francisco, 12, takes job at Taggart
Transcontinental; Galt, 12, leaves home. |
|
| 13 | ||
| 14 | Dagny, 12, meets Eddie at railroad tracks; tells him of her future plans | |
| 15 | ||
| 16 | Francisco, Galt, and Ragnar, all 16, enroll in Patrick Henry University | |
| 17 | ||
| 18 | Dagny, 16, takes job on the railroad as a night station operator | |
| 19 | Dagny, 17, has debut party; in summer, begins affair with Francisco, 19 | |
| 20 | Galt, Ragnar, and Francisco, all 20, graduate from college. Francisco buys copper foundry | |
| 21 | Rearden, 30, founds Rearden Ore; Francisco, 21, takes over N. Y. office of d’Anconia Copper | |
| 22 | ||
| 23 | Francisco’s father dies, and at 23 he inherits d’Anconia Copper | |
| 24 | Robert Stadler, 40, endorses the establishment of the State Science Institute; Galt, 24, condemns him and quits his graduate studies in physics | |
| 25 | ||
| 26 | Rearden Steel established. Rearden, 35, begins work on Rearden Metal. | |
| 27 | The 20th Century Motor Co. is taken over by the Starnes heirs. | |
| Spring | GALT, 27, QUITS AND LAUNCHES STRIKE. Francisco joins the strike, then Ragnar, then Hugh Akston. Francisco leaves Dagny. Galt goes to work as common laborer at Taggart Transcontinental. | |
| 28 | Ellis Wyatt launches Wyatt Oil. Richard Halley joins strike. | |
| Dec. 10 | Rearden marries Lillian. | |
| 29 | ||
| 30 | Twentieth Century Motor Company closes its doors. | |
| 31 | Midas Mulligan quits and vanishes. James Taggart takes over Taggart Transcontinental. d’Anconia Copper begins mining in Mexico; San Sebastian Line launched. | |
| 32 | ||
| 33 | ||
| 34 | Dagny threatens to quit the railroad, is promoted to Vice President of Operations | |
| 35 | ||
| 36 | Sept. 2 | THE NOVEL OPENS. Dagny orders Rearden
Metal for Colorado track. Owen Kellogg quits. The first heat of Rearden
Metal is poured. |
| Oct. 25 | “Anti-Dog-Eat-Dog Rule.” San Sebastian mines prove worthless. | |
| Dec. 10 | Reardens’ eighth anniversary party. | |
| 37 | Winter | Equalization of Opportunity Bill passes legislature. |
| Spring | Dwight Sanders quits. Dagny sees
stranger’s shadow outside offices of the John Galt Line. |
|
| July 22 | First run on the John Galt Line. Dagny and Rearden begin their affair. | |
| September | Dagny and Rearden discover remnants of Galt’s motor. | |
| Fall | Dagny’s fruitless quest to find the motor’s inventor. | |
| December | Mouch’s directives. Wyatt sets oil fields ablaze and joins the strike. | |
| 38 | May | Dagny discusses motor with Stadler. Quentin Daniels hired to rebuild it. |
| Sept. 2 | James Taggart’s wedding to Cherryl; Francisco explains the moral meaning of money to Rearden. | |
| Sept. 3 | Lillian discovers that Rearden has been unfaithful. | |
| October | Floyd Ferris confronts Rearden about Dannager’s illegal coal sales; Rearden and Dannager indicted. Dannager visited by “the destroyer” and joins strike. Francisco tries vainly to recruit Rearden at his mills. | |
| Thanksgiving | Rearden resists his family’s moral assaults; next day: wins his trial. | |
| December | Rearden visits Francisco, orders copper
from d’Anconia Copper; shipment is sunk three days later by Ragnar. |
|
| 39 | Feb. 15 | Taggart Board votes to close John Galt line |
| Mar. 31 | Dagny and Rearden go to Colorado to close the John Galt Line | |
| April | Lillian discovers Dagny is Rearden’s lover. | |
| May 1 | Directive 10-289 announced. Dagny quits, goes to cabin in Berkshires. | |
| May 15 | Ferris extorts Rearden’s signature on
Rearden Metal Gift Certificates; Orren Boyle’s mills destroyed by
Ragnar. |
|
| May 26 | Taggart Tunnel disaster. Francisco visits
Dagny to recruit her, but she rushes back to N. Y. to deal with
disaster. Rearden confronts Francisco over Dagny; Dagny gets Quentin
Daniels’ letter of resignation; Eddie discovers Dagny-Rearden affair,
and reveals it to Galt. |
|
| May 31 | Dagny chases “the destroyer” by plane, crashes into Galt’s Gulch. | |
| June | Dagny in the valley; reconciles with Francisco; falls in love with Galt. | |
| June 29 | Dagny leaves Galt’s Gulch, returns to N. Y. | |
| July | First public demonstration of Project X. | |
| Sept. 2 | Francisco destroys d’Anconia Copper and vanishes. | |
| Oct. 15 | Dagny meets Galt in Taggart Transcontinental tunnels, begins affair. | |
| Oct. 31 | Rearden’s personal property attached by the government | |
| Nov. 4 | Rearden meets with government officials; Rearden Steel attacked by violent gang; Rearden saved by Francisco, recruited to join the strike. | |
| Nov. 22 | GALT’S RADIO SPEECH | |
| 40 | Jan. 22 | Rearden Steel closes its doors. |
| February | Galt captured. | |
| Feb.- March | Galt refuses to join government; tortured at State Science Institute; then is rescued by his friends. LIGHTS OF NEW YORK GO OUT. | |
| March | Galt, in the valley, decides it’s time to return to the world. |
The
Atlas Shrugged Timeline
An Explanatory Note
Scholars, students, and fans of Ayn Rand’s masterwork,
Atlas Shrugged, often find it difficult to grasp the complex details of its
plot, and to find temporal reference points for key events and relationships
among its many characters. For their benefit, then, I have prepared this
timeline of the key events that are depicted, or alluded to, in the novel. It’s
meant to serve as a reference for readers who wish to understand or recall the
story line, and it may also help them appreciate the remarkable logical
integration of the novel’s plot structure.
Because Ayn Rand sought to give her
Atlas Shrugged a sense of timelessness, she did not tie its events to
real-world dates. So she set this huge, sprawling tale ambiguously in the “near
future.” The main events take place over a four-year period; however, there are
also many allusions to “back story” events that transpired before the novel
opens, which are often brought to life in flashbacks. However, like all
novelists, Rand obviously had to work out a detailed, internally consistent
timeline for her plot. If it still exists, her timeline has never been
published; but its contours can be gleaned from clues scattered throughout the
novel.
In my attempt to reconstruct a chronology of the events of Atlas Shrugged,
I have adhered to Rand’s intention to keep the story in a kind of temporal
“limbo” world. However, I needed an internal starting point, a date against
which to place all the other events.
The most fitting point around which to fix the timeline is the birth year of
the story’s major heroes. We are told that John Galt, Francisco d’Anconia, and
Ragnar Danneskjold all entered Patrick Henry University at age 16. This means
that they were born the same year. I have selected that as “Year Zero.” But when
does the story open? We learn in Part I, Chapter 5 that Francisco is 36 years
old – and so, the novel begins in “Year 36.”
From this point, the other characters’ relative ages can be determined. In
the same chapter, we are told that Dagny is two years younger than Francisco
(hence Galt), or 34 when the novel opens. We are also told, in the first
chapter, that her brother Jim is 39, or five years older than Dagny – which
corresponds with the fact that Dagny began work at 16, and Jim the same year, at
age 21. Hank Rearden is 45 at the start of the tale – thus eleven years Dagny’s
senior, and nine years older than Galt, Francisco, and Ragnar. In my chronology,
therefore, Rearden was born in year “Minus Nine.” Eddie Willers is introduced at
age 32, or two years younger than Dagny, and born in “Year Four.” Philip Rearden
is 38 – seven years younger than Hank, two years older than Galt or Francisco.
Rand also provides relative dates and time spans sufficient to let us fill in
other points in the chronology. For example, we learn that Rearden was 30 when
he purchased his ore mines (“Year 21”). Francisco took over the New York office
of d’Anconia Copper at age 21 – i. e., that same year. Rearden was 35 when he
launched Rearden Steel, and began work on Rearden Metal about the same time.
December 10 of Year 36 is his eighth wedding anniversary – which means that he
married Lillian in Year 28, when he was about 37 years old.
When did the strike begin? Dagny meets the tramp on the train on May 31 of
Year 39, and he tells her that Galt quit the 20th Century Motor Company in the
spring 12 years before – or in the spring of Year 27, when Galt himself was 27.
Etc.
By such means, I was able to fill in most of the chronology. However, preparing
this timeline was not without difficulties or uncertainties.
For example, it’s impossible to tell with precision what year the State
Science Institute was founded – that is, what year Galt quit his post-graduate
studies with Robert Stadler. From the incomplete information Rand offers, I’ve
guessed that this occurred around Year 24. That means Galt would have been
working for about three years at the 20th Century Motor Company before the
spring of Year 27, when the socialist plan was implemented and he went on
strike.
Occasionally I had to guess approximate dates, based upon such plot clues as
weather and dress, or how much time passed between the unknown date and other
dates already established. I used such hints to guess that Ellis Wyatt may have
set his oil fields ablaze around December of Year 37, though the exact month
might have been November or even October.
The most important uncertainty in the chronology concerns the novel’s final
events. Rearden Steel closes its doors on January 22 of Year 40. Then an
unspecified period of days or weeks passes before Galt is arrested, perhaps in
mid-February. Galt is held for an additional two or three weeks before his
climactic torture scene and rescue.
When is this, exactly? We read that Dagny rushes from the Wayne-Falkland
Hotel into night air “more windless than warm” and holding “the hint of a
distant spring,” and Francisco tells her to pack “some warm clothing.” Hours
later, at the State Science Institute in New Hampshire, there’s no description
of any snow on the ground. All this suggests that these events transpire in late
February, or perhaps early March of Year 40.
The final important ambiguity concerns the exact month, even year, that the
strikers return to re-inhabit the country during the novel’s closing pages.
In Galt’s Gulch, there is “snow still covering the ground” and the “promise
of the coming leaves of spring.” But is this the same year and spring as in the
previous scenes, or has an entire year (or more) passed? The words “still
covering the ground” seem to imply that we’re in the same year and season, and
the activities of the strikers appear to suggest that not much time has passed
since their arrival in the valley. Since Galt’s Gulch is high in the Colorado
Rockies, that could explain residual snow in March.
So my best guess is that at novel’s end, it’s mid-March of Year 40 – and that only a few weeks have passed since the lights of New York were extinguished.