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Sandford Fleming
England and Canada
A Summer Tour Between Old and New Westminster, with Historical Notes
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066125547
Table of Contents
CHAPTER II. HALIFAX TO LIVERPOOL.
CHAPTER IV. ENGLAND —(Continued) .
CHAPTER VII. HALIFAX TO QUEBEC.
CHAPTER VIII. QUEBEC, MONTREAL, OTTAWA.
CHAPTER IX. TORONTO TO LAKE SUPERIOR.
CHAPTER X. LAKE SUPERIOR TO WINNIPEG.
CHAPTER XI. WINNIPEG, HUDSON’S BAY COMPANY, LORD SELKIRK.
CHAPTER XII. WINNIPEG TO CALGARY.
CHAPTER XIII. CALGARY TO THE SUMMIT.
CHAPTER XIV. DOWN KICKING-HORSE VALLEY.
CHAPTER XV. TO THE SUMMIT OF THE SELKIRKS.
CHAPTER XVI. DOWN THE ILLE-CELLE-WAET.
CHAPTER XVII. DOWN THE ILLE-CELLE-WAET. — Continued.
CHAPTER XVIII. THROUGH THE EAGLE PASS.
CHAPTER XIX. KAMLOOPS TO THE COAST.
CHAPTER XX. ON PACIFIC WATERS.
CHAPTER XXI. BRITISH COLUMBIA.
CHAPTER XXII. HOME BY THE NORTHERN PACIFIC.
CHAPTER XXIV. THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY.
ENGLAND AND CANADA.
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTORY.
If we carry ourselves in imagination to that part of North America nearest to Europe, we find that we have reached the most easterly coast of the Island of Newfoundland, an outlying portion of the continent. Standing on Cape Bonavista and looking from this promontory over the waste of waters, we discover that between the Equator and Greenland the Atlantic Ocean is generally of much greater width in every other parallel than opposite our present position: that its breadth rapidly increases as we proceed southward, if but a few degrees of latitude, and that, in the parallels of New York or Philadelphia, the ocean is more than double the width. Towards the continent of Europe the first land the eye rests upon is that of the British Islands. Four centuries back the first recorded discoverer of Newfoundland sailed from those shores, and from the time of the Tudor monarchs this stretch of ocean has been unceasingly traversed by European ships. It has thus been the cradle of ocean navigation. Adventurous men, who planted the early settlement of America, crossed to the new world on this narrow belt. The vessels which carried them were indeed frail craft compared with the creations of modern ship-building. But, step by step, they were enlarged and developed to the magnificent clipper, which again has been supplanted by the still more magnificent ocean steamer.
In old days, even in a sailing vessel of large tonnage, a sea voyage was frequently accompanied with much misery. It was not uncommon for emigrants to be detained at sea as many weeks as now days are needed for the voyage. Ships might be retarded or driven back by adverse gales, or they might remain in mid-ocean, becalmed in water as unruffled as a mirror of glass. Steam has revolutionized these conditions. Instead of ships being turned far from their course by contrary winds, or with flapping canvas waiting for a fair breeze, we behold on the waters of the Atlantic fleets of swift steamers, carrying thousands of passengers to and fro with the regularity of the daily post between two neighbouring cities. However formidable the voyage once was, its greater drawbacks are now removed. A steam ferry has been practically established between the two continents, and transportation is effected with scarcely less regularity than between opposite banks of a navigable river. The path of the ocean steamer has in reality become, as it were, the Queen’s highway; and were anything wanting to facilitate intercourse, we possess it in the telegraph. If this belt of ocean has been the nursery of the ocean steamers, it has also given birth to ocean telegraphy. In no part of the world are so many submarine cables laid along the ocean bed as in this direction. We live in a period when instantaneous communications from continent to continent are as easily effected as from county to county. Year by year the facilities of intercourse, both by steamship and by telegraph, are increasing in a manner to bind closer than ever, by the ties of mutual benefit and common interest, the different members of the British family. On the one hand, the Canadian is enabled to visit the old land, where his traditions have been gathered, and where there is a history in which he can claim an inherited participation. On the other, it provides the youth of the Mother Country with an outlet by which he may gain a home with a kindred people, who revere the same memories, and who will