The Last Spike at Craigellachie
A quiet spot in the Eagle Pass became a fixed point in national history when the Canadian Pacific main line was joined here in 1885.
Read article →Railway towns of Canada
When a single line of track reached a valley or a stretch of prairie, it often decided where a town would stand, how it would grow, and what work its first residents would do. Corner Stories follows that history through specific places along Canada's early railways.
Why the line mattered
Across the mountains and the prairies, the placement of a station, a divisional point, or a grain elevator was rarely accidental. These decisions concentrated people, trade, and services in particular spots — and left others to fade. The patterns below recur in town after town.
Railways needed places roughly a crew-shift apart to change locomotives, service equipment, and rest crews. These divisional points attracted roundhouses, repair shops, and steady wage work, which in turn drew families, schools, and main-street businesses.
On the prairies, grain elevators rose beside the track at regular intervals so farmers could haul their crop a manageable distance by wagon. Each elevator siding seeded a small townsite with a station, a store, and often a hotel.
Articles
Three closely researched looks at how specific railway decisions shaped specific Canadian communities.
A quiet spot in the Eagle Pass became a fixed point in national history when the Canadian Pacific main line was joined here in 1885.
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Sitting between the Selkirks and the Monashees, Revelstoke grew around the work of keeping trains moving through the mountains.
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Why so many prairie towns sit a similar distance apart, and how the wooden elevator beside the siding organized rural life.
Read article →A short chronology
A few widely documented milestones that frame the articles on this site. Where exact figures are uncertain, we describe events in general terms rather than guess.
CPR incorporated. The Canadian Pacific Railway Company began construction toward the Pacific, working from both eastern and western ends.
Last spike, Craigellachie. The two ends of the main line met in the Eagle Pass of British Columbia in November.
Through traffic begins. Regular transcontinental service started, and stations along the route took on their roles as town centres.
Spiral Tunnels open near Field. Engineering work eased the notorious Big Hill grade in the Kicking Horse Pass.
Contact
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