mc:w_mackenzie
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision | |||
mc:w_mackenzie [2025/01/06 22:33] – sallyr | mc:w_mackenzie [2025/01/06 23:05] (current) – sallyr | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
William Mackenzie and Donald Mann were experienced in the rapid building of railways.((John W. Defoe, //Clifford Sifton in Relation to His Times.// Books for Libraries Press, 1931, reprint 1971: 165.)) In January 1898, they signed contracts with Ottawa to build a narrow-gauge railway from the Stikine River, near Telegraph Creek, to the southern end of Teslin Lake.((Gordon Bennett, //Yukon Transportation: | William Mackenzie and Donald Mann were experienced in the rapid building of railways.((John W. Defoe, //Clifford Sifton in Relation to His Times.// Books for Libraries Press, 1931, reprint 1971: 165.)) In January 1898, they signed contracts with Ottawa to build a narrow-gauge railway from the Stikine River, near Telegraph Creek, to the southern end of Teslin Lake.((Gordon Bennett, //Yukon Transportation: | ||
- | Federal Minister of the Interior, Clifford Sifton, was concerned with trying to find a travel route from the coast that avoided American territory as much as possible. He favoured a route explored by engineer Charles Jennings and surveyor St. Cry from Fort Wrangle on the coast to Telegraph Creek where a proposed road or railway would go to Teslin Lake and a water route to Dawson. Sifton liked this route because Canada had rights to navigation at Wrangle under the treaty of 1825 between Great Britan | + | Federal Minister of the Interior, Clifford Sifton, was concerned with trying to find a travel route from the coast that avoided American territory as much as possible. He favoured a route explored by engineer Charles Jennings and surveyor St. Cry from Fort Wrangle on the coast to Telegraph Creek where a proposed road or railway would go to Teslin Lake and a water route to Dawson. Sifton liked this route because Canada had rights to navigation at Wrangle under the treaty of 1825 between Great Britain |
- | The Mackenzie and Mann contract required them to build a winter road and then a light construction railway, using the standard of the Kaslo-Slocan road in British Columbia, 240 kilometres from Telegraph Creek to Teslin | + | The Mackenzie and Mann contract required them to build a winter road and then a light construction railway, using the standard of the Kaslo-Slocan road in British Columbia, 240 kilometres from Telegraph Creek to Teslin |
Cifford Sifton supported the bill to charter a railway on the Stikine River route but it was defeated by the Senate in March 1898.((Rod Macleod, //Sam Steele: A Biography.// | Cifford Sifton supported the bill to charter a railway on the Stikine River route but it was defeated by the Senate in March 1898.((Rod Macleod, //Sam Steele: A Biography.// | ||
mc/w_mackenzie.1736228035.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/01/06 22:33 by sallyr