翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Ferial Ashraff
・ Ferial del Boadilla (Madrid Metro)
・ Ferial Ghazoul
・ Ferial Govashiri
・ Ferial Haffajee
・ Ferial Karim
・ Ferguson Desert
・ Ferguson Electronics
・ Ferguson Enterprises
・ Ferguson Falls
・ Ferguson Farm Complex
・ Ferguson Findley
・ Ferguson Gas Station
・ Ferguson Glacier
・ Ferguson High School
Ferguson Highway
・ Ferguson Hill, Indiana
・ Ferguson House
・ Ferguson House (Augusta, Arkansas)
・ Ferguson House (Logansport, Indiana)
・ Ferguson House (Pine Bluff, Arkansas)
・ Ferguson Jenkins
・ Ferguson John
・ Ferguson Lake
・ Ferguson Lake (Kitikmeot Region)
・ Ferguson Lake (Kivalliq Region)
・ Ferguson Lake (Nova Scotia)
・ Ferguson Lake (Sudbury District)
・ Ferguson landslide
・ Ferguson Left


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Ferguson Highway : ウィキペディア英語版
Ferguson Highway

The Ferguson Highway was a long gravel trunk road in Ontario, Canada. Built between 1925-1927 from the city of North Bay to the town of Cochrane, it was created to connect the growing agricultural and mining communities of Northern Ontario with other areas further south.
Several sections of rebuilt local roads were incorporated into the Ferguson Highway, with the final link being completed through the thick forest of Temagami. The highway was officially opened on July 2, 1927, and was named in honour of Premier George Howard Ferguson. It quickly became an important access route to settlements and tourist areas in Northern Ontario. Throughout the following 30 years, the Ferguson Highway was extensively bypassed by the current routing of Highway 11.
== History ==

Although it was named for the man who campaigned to premiership on the promise of building the road, the Ferguson Highway was an inevitable extension of the Muskoka Colonization Road that came to be known as part of it.
;The Muskoka Road
Construction of the Muskoka Road began at a portage site at the mouth of the Severn River where a harbour known as Washago was established. In 1858, work began on a trail north towards the survey line of the Peterson Road. Thomas J. McMurray established Bracebridge in the spring of 1861 at the northernmost point of the Muskoka Road where it intersected the Peterson Road.〔(Parry Sound: Gateway to Northern Ontario ). p. 47〕
The road was completed as far as Utterson in 1862.
Over the next decade, work progressed on the northward extension of the Muskoka Road through Vernon Lake, Huntsville and the unsurveyed territory north to Emsdale, eventually reaching Burk's Falls in 1878. Between 1881 and 1887, the route was pushed to Sundridge, where an existing road connected to South River, at which point work concentrated on opening up access roads to nearby railway stations and resources. It would take a quarter-century for construction to resume on the road. In 1912, work began south from North Bay towards Powassan. Upon the completion of that section, the remaining between Powassan and South River was built. In 1916, it became possible for the first time to drive from Toronto to North Bay without travelling through Pembroke.
;Onwards to Cochrane
In June 1923, Howard Ferguson campaigned to victory, with one of his pledges being the construction of a trunk road from North Bay to the farmland of New Liskeard and the mineral resources of Kirkland Lake and Cochrane. By then, a gravel road had already been constructed between Latchford and New Liskeard. This road started as a connection between the communities of Latchford and Cobalt, the latter of which was already connected with nearby Haileybury. In 1912, following the passing of the Northern and Northwestern Development Act, which allocated funding towards the development of trunk roads, it was gravelled north of Cobalt and extended to New Liskeard.
After Ferguson's victory, construction began immediately on two sections. The first section was a gravel road built south from Latchford to Temagami; the second was a road, mostly gravelled, built north from New Liskeard to Cochrane via Earlton, Englehart, Dane, Swastika, Matheson, Monteith and Porquis Junction. Both were complete by 1925. The Latchford–Cobalt section was also given a gravel surface that year. In 1926, the final south of Temagami to North Bay way opened to traffic, having taken the longest to construct through the impenetrable Temagami Forest.
The fully gravelled North Bay to Cochrane Trunk Road was ceremoniously opened by William Finlayson, the Department of Lands and Forests, on July 2, 1927,〔Myers gives July 1 as the ceremony date, but both Shragge and the historical plaque commemorating the route indicate July 2.〕
and named in honour of Ferguson. The route was later assumed as an extension of Highway 11 throughout June 1937,
following the amalgamation of the Department of Northern Development into the Department of Highways on April 1.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ferguson Highway」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.