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Donald Smith drives the last
spike at Craigellachie
1885
Pierre Berton has made the "last spike" into
a watershed in Canadian history, but in fact it was
a rather anticlimactic gesture. The last spike was made
of iron, not the customary gold. Moreover, the price
of building the transcontinental railroad had been high:
it cost the Canadian government 10.4 million hectares
of the best Prairie land; an estimated $63.5 million
in public funds and government loans of $35 million;
not to mention the displacement of Canada's First Nations
and the lost lives of many immigrant labourers.
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