Oscar D. Skelton

The Railway Builders: A Chronicle of Overland Highways


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       Oscar D. Skelton

      The Railway Builders: A Chronicle of Overland Highways

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066238858

       ILLUSTRATIONS

       CHAPTER I

       CHAPTER II

       CHAPTER III

       CHAPTER IV

       CHAPTER V

       CHAPTER VI

       CHAPTER VII

       CHAPTER VIII

       CHAPTER IX

       CHAPTER X

       CHAPTER XI

       CHAPTER XII

       CHAPTER XIII

       BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

'THE SURVEYOR, OFTEN AN EXPLORER AS WELL, STRIKING OUT INTO THE WILDERNESS IN SEARCH OF MOUNTAIN PASS OR LOWER GRADE' From a colour drawing by C. W. Jefferys. Frontispiece
THE FIRST RAILWAY ENGINE IN CANADA, CHAMPLAIN AND ST LAWRENCE RAILROAD, 1837 From a print in the Château de Ramezay. Facing page 38
RAILROADS AND LOTTERIES An Early Canadian Prospectus. " 48
SIR FRANCIS HINCKS From a portrait in the Dominion Archives. " 66
RAILWAYS OF BRITISH NORTH AMERICA, 1860 (Map) " 92
SIR GEORGE SIMPSON From a print in the John Ross Robertson Collection, Toronto Public Library " 110
SIR SANDFORD FLEMING From a photograph by Topley. " 114
FLEMING ROUTE AND THE TRANS-CONTINENTALS (Map) " 118

RAILWAYS OF CANADA, 1880 (Map) " 130
LORD STRATHCONA From a photograph by Lafayette, London. " 134
LORD MOUNT STEPHEN From a photograph by Wood and Henry, Dufftown. By courtesy of Sir William Van Horne. " 140
SIR WILLIAM CORNELIUS VAN HORNE From a photograph by Notman. " 148
RAILWAYS OF CANADA, 1896 (Map) " 180
CANADIAN NORTHERN RAILWAY, 1914 (Map) " 194
CHARLES MELVILLE HAYS From a photograph by Notman. " 200
GRAND TRUNK SYSTEM, 1914 (Map) " 218
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY, 1914 (Map) " 224
GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY, 1914 (Map) " 230
RAILWAYS OF CANADA, 1914 (Map) " 238

      

       Table of Contents

      THE COMING OF THE RAILWAY

      The Coming of the Railway—The Iron Road—The New Power—Engine and Rail—The Work of the Railway

      On the morning of October 6, 1829, there began at Rainhill, in England, a contest without parallel in either sport or industry. There were four entries:

      Braithwaite and Ericsson's Novelty. Timothy Hackworth's Sans-pareil. Stephenson and Booth's Rocket. Burstall's Perseverance.

      These were neither race-horses nor stagecoaches, but rival types of the newly invented steam locomotive. To win the £500 prize offered, the successful engine, if weighing six tons, must be able to draw a load of twenty tons at ten miles an hour, and to cover at least seventy miles a day. Little wonder that an eminent Liverpool merchant declared that only a parcel of charlatans could have devised such a test, and wagered that if a locomotive ever went ten miles an hour, he would eat a stewed engine-wheel for breakfast!

      The contest had come about as the only solution of a deadlock between the stubborn directors of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, or tramway,