Dear Ed and group:

Ahh .. Charlie Farquaharson -- comic alter ego of Don Harron, a fine actor.

His is probably as good an explanation as any, although there were, in fact, 
three transcontinentals.  The Canadian Pacific survived as a private 
venture, but the other two, overcapitalized in the anticipation of endless 
immigration during the settling of the Canadian west, failed during World 
War One.  They were not quite completed before the beginning of the Great 
War stopped immigration and completely dried up sources of capital.  Both 
were taken over by the Canadian Federal Government as an emergency measure 
in 1917 and combined to form the nucleus of Canadian National Railways.

One of the transcontinentals was actually a combined system.  The eastern 
part, built mostly in the remote north, was built by the Federal Government 
as the National Transcontinental (NTR).  No private enterprise would risk 
building this essentially trafficless through line in unsettled territory. 
So, the government had to do it.  Well, they didn't have to, but the 
Conservatives had built the CPR in the 1880s so the Liberals, now in power, 
had to have a transcontinental railway of their own.

The western part, in the blossoming prairies, was built by the Grand Trunk 
Pacific (GTP), a subsidiary of the Grand Trunk Ry. (GTR).  Most of you will 
recognize the name of its U.S. subsidiary, the Grand Trunk Western, which 
continued as a separate entity after the GTR itself was brought into the CN 
fold officially in 1923.  The GTP also built the British Columbia section, 
through Yellowhead Pass to Prince Rupert.  GTP planned to create a great 
port at Prince Rupert for the Pacific trade and as an outlet for prairie 
grain.  Prince Rupert is still waiting.

The Grand Trunk bankrolled the GTP on the understanding it would then 
"lease" the National Transcontinental (it was almost a gift) from the 
government for its eastern outlet.  Voila, a half-price transcontinental 
railway.

Incidentally, the NTR built the mighty cantilever bridge across the St. 
Lawrence River at Quebec City.  It was, and may still be, the longest-span 
cantilever bridge in the world.  The rest of the NTR right of way was built 
to first-class standards -- far too good considering the traffic potential. 
The Liberal government of the time spared no expense in building the line 
and lining the pockets of its political friends.

The other and probably more romantic of the transcontinentals was 
essentially the brainchild of two men, William Mackenzie and Donald Mann. 
Their system, the Canadian Northern, originated on the prairies when they 
took over a broken-down streak of rust in Manitoba in the mid-1890s.  They 
eventually pushed it both east and west to form an almost true 
transcontinental.  It did, in fact, touch salt water at both ends.  They had 
a continuous main line from Vancouver (with additional branch lines on 
Vancouver Island) as far east as Quebec City.  They had bought a line in 
Nova Scotia, but CNOR failed before they could make the last eastern 
connection.

Hmph.  Didn't mean to wax so poetic on a couple of magnificent failures.

OK, Ed?

regards ... pqr

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Edward Loizeaux" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> Gents...
>
> Could this actually be true?
>
> Farguharson's "History of Canada" says "the reasons there were two
> railroads in Canada was that construction began on each coast and they
> missed each other."
>
> Call me curious.....Ed L.




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