The Atlantic Monthly, volume 17, No. 101, March, 1866

Cover The Atlantic Monthly, volume 17, No. 101, March, 1866
The Atlantic Monthly, volume 17, No. 101, March, 1866
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I know gentlemen who have livedin China, Italy, Canada, and England; but, after a residence of someyears in Vancouver Island, they entertained a preference for the climateof the colony which approached affectionate enthusiasm. "[X] The climate of the whole section through which the line passes ismilder than that of the Grand Trunk line. The lowest degree oftemperature in 1853--54 at Quebec was 29 below zero; Montreal, 34; St. Paul, 36; Bitter Root Valley, forty miles from Big Hole Pass, 20.
In
...1858 a party of Royal Engineers, under Captain Pallissir, surveyedthe country of the Saskatchawan for a line to Puget Sound which shouldlie wholly within the British possessions. They found a level andfertile country, receding to the very base of the mountains, and apracticable pass, of less altitude than those at the head-waters of theMissouri; but in winter the snow is deep and the climate severe. Thatsection of Canada north of Superior is an unbroken, uninhabitablewilderness. The character of the region is thus set forth by Agassiz.

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