Canada - An in-depth exploration of how a transportation company created a vision for a burgeoning
nation and played a leading role driving immigration to the Canadian West.
Best known for its monumental achievements in transportation technology, Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) was instrumental
in constructing the concept, and the reality, of the country we now call Canada.
In addition to building the railroad that connected the country from coast to coast, CP was also highly effective at
selling the idea of a vast and rich land of opportunity, and triggering a massive wave of immigration to what was
dubbed the "Golden Northwest" (later the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta).
No other independent corporation in the world made such a profound contribution to the creation of a national
enterprise, nor outspent a national government in populating its frontiers with settlers from specifically targeted
areas, often at the expense of indigenous populations and their traditional territories.
Tracing the history of this highly influential corporation from the initial CP contract and land grant, historian
David Laurence Jones explores CP's involvement in carving out routes to the region, building towns, promoting Western
Canada's arable land and economic potential to Europeans and Americans, operating steamships, spearheading some of the
largest irrigation projects in the world, and devising unique settlement schemes such as ready-made farms.
Illustrated with more than four hundred archival photos and colour advertisements, New World Dreams is the most
extensive history of Canadian Pacific ever published.
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provisions in Section 29 of the
Canadian Copyright Modernization Act.