Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Early on, much of the route of the Trans-Canada Highway was first explored in order to construct the Canadian Pacific Railway in the late 19th century, a route which much of the mainline TCH route later ended up following. The Trans-Canada Highway was not the first road across Canada.

    • 7,476 km (4,645 mi)Main route
  2. 3 days ago · Authorized in 1949 by the Trans-Canada Highway Act, construction began the following year. The first province to complete its section was Saskatchewan , which did so in 1957. The full coast-to-coast highway was officially dedicated on September 3, 1962, at a ceremony on Rogers Pass in Glacier National Park , southeastern British Columbia.

  3. The Trans-Canada Highway is a continuous road that allows vehicle travel across Canada. The highway runs through each of Canada’s 10 provinces, from Victoria, British Columbia, to St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador. At 7,821 km, it is the fourth-longest highway — and second-longest national highway — in the world.

  4. Crossing Canada by Ox cart, Steamship, and Rail. Before the railroad, crossing Canada took three months by oxcart, horse and boat, as Sir Sanford Fleming did in 1872 travelling from Toronto to Victoria to determine the course for the proposed trans-continental railway to link to the new province of British Columbia.

  5. Feb 15, 2016 · Built between 1949 and 1970, the 7,821 kilometres long Trans-Canada Highway was a complex and expensive undertaking, which resulted in numerous major engineering achievements. It boosted the country’s economy by strengthening the road construction industry, improving the transportation of Canadian manufactured goods, increasing inter ...

  6. In 1970, a northern route called Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16) was officially opened across Western Canada. Highway 16 splits from the main Trans-Canada Highway just west of Winnipeg at Portage La Prairie and then passes through Saskatoon, Edmonton, Hinton and Jasper.

  1. People also search for