Planet Earth
Season of 1890. Summer resorts reached by the Grank Trunk railway and its connections including Niagara Falls, Parry Sound, Georgian Bay, Muskoka Lakes, Lake Simcoe and Couchiching, MacKinac Island, (14572931027)

Similar

Season of 1890. Summer resorts reached by the Grank Trunk railway and its connections including Niagara Falls, Parry Sound, Georgian Bay, Muskoka Lakes, Lake Simcoe and Couchiching, MacKinac Island, (14572931027)

description

Summary


Identifier: seasonof1890summ00gran (find matches)
Title: Season of 1890. Summer resorts reached by the Grank Trunk railway and its connections including Niagara Falls, Parry Sound, Georgian Bay, Muskoka Lakes, Lake Simcoe and Couchiching, MacKinac Island, Midland District Lakes, the Thousand Islands, rapids of the St. Lawrence River, the White Mountains, Montreal, Quebec, the Saguenay river, Rangeley Lakes, and the sea-shore
Year: 1890 (1890s)
Authors: Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada
Subjects: Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada Railroads Summer resorts
Publisher: Battle Creek, Mich. : Wm C. Gage & Son
Contributing Library: Queen's University Library, W.D. Jordan Special Collections and Music Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Queen's University - University of Toronto Libraries



Text Appearing Before Image:
NIAGARA FALLS. 5i The great maelstrom, called the Whirlpool, some distance belowthe Falls, excites much interest. Its depths are unknown; a 1,000-foot cord was found too short to reach its bottom. There are threedistinct cataracts; the Horseshoe Fall, so called from its crescentshape, is by far the largest, being 2,000 feet wide and 154 feet high;the American Fall is 660 feet wide, and the Central Falls, 243 feet,each having a fall of 163 feet. The two latter are separated fromeach other and the former by Goat Island. The aggregate width
Text Appearing After Image:
FATHER HENNEPINS SKETCH OF THE FALLS. is thus 2,900 feet and the water discharged is computed to be1,000,000 tons per hour. Thanks to the energies of Lord Dufferin,then Governor-General of Canada, and Governor Robinson of NewYork, parks on either side have been opened up free to the public.The Suspension Bridge which is crossed by the Southern (GreatWestern) Division of the Grand Trunk is one of the engineeringtriumphs of the age. It has a span of 1,230 feet from tower totower, and the floor is 256 feet above the water level. This bridgewas opened January 1, 1869; it is a two-storied structure, the up-per story being used for the purposes of the Grand Trunk Railway,and the bottom story for foot and passenger traffic. There is no more graphic description of Niagara .Falls thanthat of Mr. Charles Dickens, who thus in his own characteristicstyle says: We were at the foot of the American Falls; I could 5~ SUMMER RESORTS. see an immense torrent of water tearing headlong down from someimmen

date_range

Date

1890
create

Source

University of Toronto
copyright

Copyright info

public domain

Explore more

1697 engravings
1697 engravings