登陆注册
5214300000027

第27章 THE UNION ERA(5)

Howe was a man lavishly gifted, one of the most effective orators America has produced, fearing no man and no task however great, filled with a vitality, a humor, a broad sympathy for his fellows that gave him the blind obedience of thousands of followers and the glowing friendship of countless firesides.There are still old men in Nova Scotia whose proudest memory is that they once held Howe's horse or ran on an errand for a look from his kingly eye.

Howe took up the fight in earnest in 1835.The western demand for responsible government pointed the way, and Howe became, with Baldwin, its most trenchant advocate.In spite of the determined opposition of the sturdy old soldier Governor, Sir Colin Campbell, and of his successor, Lord Falkland, who aped Sydenham and whom Howe threatened to "hire a black man to horse-whip," the reformers won.In 1848 the first responsible Cabinet in Nova Scotia came to power.

In New Brunswick the transition to responsible government came gradually and without dramatic incidents or brilliant figures on either side.Lemuel Wilmot, and later Charles Fisher, led the reform ranks, gradually securing for the Assembly control of all revenues, abolishing religious inequalities, and effecting some reform in the Executive Council, until at last in 1855 the crowning demand was tardily conceded.

From the Great Lakes to the Atlantic the political fight was won, and men turned with relief to the tasks which strife and faction had hindered.Self-government meant progressive government.With organized Cabinets coordinating and controlling their policy the provinces went ahead much faster than when Governor and Assembly stood at daggers drawn.The forties and especially the fifties were years of rapid and sound development in all the provinces, and especially in Canada West.Settlers poured in, the scattered clearings; widened until one joined the next, and pioneer hardships gave way to substantial, if crude, prosperity.

Education, notably under the vigorous leadership of Egerton Ryerson in Canada West, received more adequate attention.Banks grew and with them all commercial facilities increased.

The distinctive feature of this period of Canadian development, however, was the growth of canals and railroads.The forties were the time of canal building and rebuilding all along the lakes and the St.Lawrence to salt water.Canada spent millions on what were wonderful works for their day, in the hope that the St.

Lawrence would become the channel for the trade of all the growing western States bordering on the Great Lakes.Scarcely were these waterway improvements completed when it was realized they had been made largely in vain.The railway had come and was outrivaling the canal.If Canadian ports and channels were even to hold their own, they must take heed of the enterprise of all the cities along the Atlantic coast of the United States, which were promoting railroads to the interior in a vigorous rivalry for the trade of the Golden West.Here was a challenge which must be taken up.The fifties became the first great railway era of Canada.In 1850 there were only sixty-six miles of railway in all the provinces; ten years later there were over two thousand.

Nearly all the roads were aided by provincial or municipal bonus or guarantee.Chief among the lines was the Grand Trunk, which ran from the Detroit border to Riviere du Loup on the Gulf of St.

Lawrence, and which, though it halted at that eastern terminus in the magnificent project of connecting with the railways of the Maritime Provinces, was nevertheless at that time the longest road in the world operating under single control.

The railways brought with them a new speculative fever, a more complex financial structure, a business politics which shaded into open corruption, and a closer touch with the outside world.

The general substitution of steam for sail on the Atlantic during this period aided further in lessening the isolation of what had been backwoods provinces and in bringing them into closer relation with the rest of the world.

It was in closer relations with the United States that this emergence from isolation chiefly manifested itself.In the generation that followed the War of 1812 intercourse with the United States was discouraged and was remarkably insignificant.

Official policy and the memories of 1783 and 1812 alike built up a wall along the southern border.The spirit of Downing Street was shown in the instructions given to Lord Bathurst, immediately after the close of the war, to leave the territory between Montreal and Lake Champlain in a state of nature, making no further grants of land and letting the few roads which had been begun fall into decay thus a barrier of forest wilderness would ward off republican contagion.This Chinese policy of putting up a wall of separation proved impossible to carry through, but in less extreme ways this attitude of aloofness marked the course of the Government all through the days of oversea authority.

The friction aroused by repeated boundary disputes prevented friendly relations between Canada and the United States.With unconscious irony the framers of the Peace of 1783 had prefaced their long outline of the boundaries of the United States by expressing their intention "that all disputes which might arise in future on the subject of the boundaries of the said United States may be prevented." So vague, however, were the terms of the treaty and so untrustworthy were the maps of the day that ultimately almost every clause in the boundary section gave rise to dispute.

As settlement rolled westward one section of the boundary after another came in question.Beginning in the east, the line between New Brunswick and New England was to be formed by the St.Croix River.There had been a St.Croix in Champlain's time and a St.

同类推荐
  • 佛说大乘十法经

    佛说大乘十法经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金刚顶瑜伽降三世成就极深密门一卷

    金刚顶瑜伽降三世成就极深密门一卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 录外经等目录

    录外经等目录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 父子合集经

    父子合集经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 海桑文集

    海桑文集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 真理的思考:任继愈传

    真理的思考:任继愈传

    任继愈是我国哲学宗教学的一代宗师,他在佛教方面的研究成就被毛泽东誉为“凤毛麟角”。他精于学问,不攀龙附凤,不趋炎附势,始终保持实事求是正直谦虚的节操。他一辈子以国家社会需要为己任,无论在治学、教学,还是执掌国家图书馆的各个领域,均有重要贡献:前期主要有《中国哲学史》、《老子通译》等著述,后期有107卷的《中华大藏经》、8亿字的《中华大典》(尚未完成)、《二十四史》《清史稿》的修订等。
  • 他们这群人

    他们这群人

    青少戎马战敌顽,壮志凌云钢铁汉。日寇蒋军美国佬,甘拜下风把鬼见。建设祖国冲在前,艰苦奋斗排万难。救死扶伤医德好,白衣天使众称赞。一生辛苦何所乐,为民服务喜开颜。银发捻须高歌颂,夕阳普照红满天。
  • 探索极地荒原(小小探索者系列)

    探索极地荒原(小小探索者系列)

    本书向读者介绍了极地的知识。极地是地球上人类尚未涉足、涉足甚少、渴望征服的未知领域或环境极其恶劣甚至无生物的地域。如地球的最高点、世界最高峰珠穆朗玛峰,地球的最深点、世界最深海沟马里亚纳海沟等。《探索极地荒原》揭开了蒙在他们身上的神秘的面纱。
  • 威尼斯商人 吝啬鬼 死魂灵 欧也妮·葛朗台

    威尼斯商人 吝啬鬼 死魂灵 欧也妮·葛朗台

    纵观世界文学领域,汇集品目繁多的吝啬鬼形象,其中莎士比亚的喜剧《威尼斯商人》中的夏洛克,莫里哀的喜剧《吝啬鬼》(又译《悭吝人》)里的阿巴贡,果戈里的小说《死魂灵》里的普柳什金,以及巴尔扎克的小说《欧也妮?葛朗台》中的葛朗台,最具代表性。这四大吝啬鬼形象,产生在三个国家,出自四位名家之手,涉及几个世纪的社会生存,从一个角度概括了欧洲四百年来历史发展的进程。
  • 行政管理制度表格流程规范大全

    行政管理制度表格流程规范大全

    《行政管理制度表格流程规范大全(成功金版)》内容包括办公用品管理,办公设备管理、办公费用管理,印章、证照、文件资料、档案管理,会议、提案、行政事务、法务管理,员工考勤、出入、假务管理,员工出差管理,车辆管理,招待与接待管理,宿舍食堂管理,环境与安全管理等的日常管理工作,涉及多个行业的企业制度范例以及大量“拿来即用”的模板、量表。它将告诉你如何让繁杂的行政工作变得更有条理,让行政管理变得更有效率。
  • 平砂玉尺经

    平砂玉尺经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Rosamund,Queen of the Lombards

    Rosamund,Queen of the Lombards

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 保护我方神明大人

    保护我方神明大人

    人无生来神圣,人无生来全明。遇到了恶魔,“为什么你能成就巫师?”夏尔疑惑,“能借我条手臂看看吗?”遇到了神明,“为什么你能久而不衰?”夏尔举起手术刀,“能借我你的脑袋看会儿吗?”神明不语,看着夏尔背后散发恐怖气息的一群老幼病残。
  • 苍穹古龙之尊

    苍穹古龙之尊

    轮回八世,我将强势归来,脚踏苍龙,头顶苍穹,手握天下,万人唯命叩首!天地我独尊!
  • Colonel Chabert

    Colonel Chabert

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。