SIR LEONARD TILLEY: CHAPTER V
THE INTERCOLONIAL RAILWAY
The imperfect means of communication
between the Maritime Provinces and Canada had long
been recognized as a great evil, and very soon after
the introduction of railways into England a line of
railway was projected to run from St. Andrews, in
New Brunswick, to Quebec. The transfer of a considerable
tract of territory, which had been believed to be in
New Brunswick, to the state of Maine, under the terms
of the Ashburton Treaty, gave a check to this enterprise,
and financial difficulties afterwards prevented its
accomplishment. A more promising scheme was that
of a railway from Halifax to Quebec, and this so far
received the approval of the British government that
an officer of engineers, Major Robinson, was, in 1847,
detailed to conduct a survey of the proposed line.
As this gentleman was influenced by purely military
considerations, his line was carried as far from the
United States boundary as possible, and consequently
by a very long and circuitous route. During the
session of 1852, Attorney-General Street introduced
a series of resolutions in the New Brunswick legislature
favouring the building of the Intercolonial Railway
jointly by Canada, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia,
according to terms which had been agreed upon by the
delegates of each. This arrangement was that the
Intercolonial Railway should be built through the
valley of the St. John. These resolutions were
carried by a large majority. During the recess,
Mr. Chandler, as the representative of New Brunswick,
and Mr. Hincks, the representative of Canada, went
to London to endeavour to obtain from the British
government financial aid to build the Intercolonial
Railway. This was refused on the ground that
such a work had to be one of military necessity.
Further efforts were made in 1855, and again in 1858,
to influence the British government in favour of this
railway, but without result; the answer of Downing
Street being that the heavy expenditure involved in
the Crimean War prevented the government from assisting
in the construction of public works, such as the Intercolonial
Railway, however desirable in themselves.
The effort to secure the construction
of the Intercolonial Railway was renewed in 1861.
At a meeting of delegates representing Canada, Nova
Scotia and New Brunswick, which was held at Quebec
on September 30th, it was resolved that the three
governments should renew the offers made to the imperial
government in 1858 with reference to the Intercolonial
Railway, and that the route to be adopted be decided
by the imperial government. The Hon. Mr. Tilley,
who was at this Quebec meeting, was sent to England
as a delegate to confer with the imperial government
with regard to the railway, while Nova Scotia was represented
by the Hon. Joseph Howe, and Canada, by the Hon. P.
M. Vankoughnet. The delegates reached England
in November and placed themselves in communication
with the Duke of Newcastle, who was then colonial
secretary, and they also had interviews with the prime
minister, Lord Palmerston, the chancellor of the exchequer,
the secretary of war, and the president of the board
of trade. While in England, the seizure of the
commissioners of the southern confederacy, Messrs.
Mason and Slidell, by Commodore Wilkes, on board the
British mail steamer Trent, produced a crisis
in the relations between Great Britain and the United
States which seemed likely to lead to a war, and greatly
strengthened the position of the delegates, who were
able to point out the difficulty involved in defending
Canada without a railway to the sea. They presented
their views to the colonial secretary in a very ably
written state paper, which should have convinced those
to whom it was addressed that the railway was an absolute
necessity. The delegates estimated the cost of
the railway at L3,000,000 sterling, and they asked
the imperial government to join in a guarantee of
four per cent. interest on this sum, each of the provinces
to guarantee L20,000 a year for this purpose and the
imperial government, L60,000. This proposal was
rejected by the British government, but it offered
“an imperial guarantee of interest towards enabling
them to raise by public loan, at a moderate rate, the
requisite funds for constructing the railway.”
The British government, therefore, would do nothing
for this great work except to indorse the bonds of
the provinces to a limited extent, for it was stated
in the Duke of Newcastle’s letter to the delegates
that “the nature and extent of the guarantee
must be determined by the particulars of any scheme
which the provincial governments may be disposed to
found on the present proposal and on the kind of security
which they would offer.”
Delegates representing the three provinces
met in Quebec in September, 1862, to consider this
offer, New Brunswick being represented by Messrs.
Tilley, Steeves and Mitchell. The delegates from
the Maritime Provinces declared their willingness
to propose to their respective governments to accept
the proposition of the Duke of Newcastle if Canada
would bear one-half of the expense of the railway
instead of one-third. The Canadian government
offered to assume five-twelfths of the liability for
the construction and working of the Intercolonial,
and to this the delegates for New Brunswick and Nova
Scotia had to agree. This imposed a very serious
burthen on two provinces, which, between them, had
only six hundred thousand inhabitants, and their willingness
to assume it shows the interest they took in this
great work.
In pursuance of an arrangement made
at this Quebec meeting, delegates from the three provinces
went to England to arrange the terms of the guarantee
with the British government; the Hon. Mr. Tilley represented
New Brunswick, and the Hon. Joseph Howe, Nova Scotia.
Mr. Gladstone, who was then chancellor of the exchequer,
insisted on a sinking fund being provided, which was
to be a first charge on the revenues of the several
provinces. This sinking fund was objected to by
the colonial delegates, but the only modification
in its terms which they were able to obtain was that
the sinking fund was not to take precedence of any
existing liability. Before leaving England, Messrs.
Tilley and Howe prepared and submitted a memorandum
to the Duke of Newcastle in which they expressed a
hope that Mr. Gladstone might be induced to reconsider
the matter of the sinking fund, and that it would
not be insisted on. The Canadian delegates left
England without an acceptance of the terms proposed
by Mr. Gladstone, and without a formal rejection of
them. Previous to the meeting of the Canadian
parliament, Tilley proceeded to Quebec to urge upon
the Canadian government the preparation of the necessary
bills to carry out the agreement entered into for
the construction of this great railway. He reported
to the lieutenant-governor on his return that the
government of Canada, for reasons stated, could not
then undertake to pass the legislation required, which
they greatly regretted, but that they had not abandoned
the arrangements for the construction of the railway.
The Canadian government’s declaration in the
course of the session that they had abandoned this
important enterprise was, accordingly, a source of
great surprise and regret. The governments of
New Brunswick and Nova Scotia passed the necessary
legislation at the next session, but the government
of Canada took no further step in the matter until
the confederation negotiations were commenced in 1864.