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English: Railway map of Ontario and Western Quebec. Published by the Government of Canada in 1915. Published by the Government of Canada in 1915. Shows the territories for assigned to each railway.
The Ontario and Quebec Railway (O&Q) was a railway located in southern and eastern Ontario, Canada. [1] It was initially chartered in March 1881 by managers of the Canadian Pacific Railway to run between Toronto and Perth, where it would connect, via a short branch line, to the CPR-controlled Brockville and Ottawa Railway. Construction began in ...
Canadian Government Railways (reporting marks CGR, IRC) [1] was the legal name used between 1915–1918 for all federal government-owned railways in Canada. The principal component companies were the Intercolonial Railway of Canada (IRC), the National Transcontinental Railway (NTR), the Prince Edward Island Railway (PEIR), and the Hudson Bay ...
All three railways, along with the Canadian Government Railways (formed by the Intercolonial, National Transcontinental, and several smaller lines) were then merged into the Canadian National Railways in 1923. The years after the First World War saw only moderate expansion of the rail network and the age of the great railways were over in Canada.
Ontario L'Orignal Railway: eastern Ontario: 1996–2001: Acquired by OCR. Orford Mountain Railway: Acquired by CPR. Oshawa Railway: Acquired by CNR. Ottawa and New York Railway: Eastern Ontario: 1898–1957: Subsidiary of NYC. Ottawa, Arnprior and Parry Sound Railway: Acquired by CAR. Ottawa Northern and Western Railway: Acquired by CPR.
Ottawa Central Railway: Ontario and Ottawa Railway: CNor: 1910 1914 Canadian Northern Railway: Ontario Pacific Railway: NYC: 1882 1897 Ottawa and New York Railway: Ontario and Quebec Railway: CP: 1871 1998 St. Lawrence and Hudson Railway: Ontario and Rainy River Railway: CNor: 1886 1900 Canadian Northern Railway: Ontario, Simcoe and Huron ...
Advertisement for Great Western Railway travel via the Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge, c. 1876. A map of the Great Western Railway in Ontario, Canada, as it was at its height in 1879. The railway merged with the Grand Trunk Railway in August 1882, and ultimately became a major part of Canadian National Railway's southern Ontario routes. The ...
A map showing the route of the Northern at its maximum extent in the late 1800s. Only the portion from Toronto to Barrie and a small section running west remain in service, while the section north of Orillia has merged with another line. The Northern Railway of Canada was a railway in the province of Ontario, Canada.
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