Introduction
For journalists such as John Sheridan HOGAN, engineers such as Thomas Coltrin KEEFER and Sandford FLEMING, and politicians such as George-Étienne CARTIER and Alexander Tilloch GALT, railways were both an important symbol of progress and a means of knitting together communities scattered across a territory, a province, or a continent. In 1862 politician Thomas D’Arcy McGEE chaired the Intercolonial Railway conference in Quebec City to discuss a railway that would link the Maritime colonies with the Province of Canada [see The Intercolonial Railway]. Like McGee, the premier of New Brunswick, Samuel Leonard TILLEY, believed that an intercolonial railway presaged great things for British North America:
“At a public dinner on 9 Aug. 1864 he described the intercolonial railway as a stepping-stone to British North American commercial and political union. Statesmen, he argued, should try ‘to bind together the Atlantic and Pacific by a continuous chain of settlements and line of communications for that [was] the destiny of this country, and the race which inhabited it.’”