Table of Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Moving Natures in Canadian History: An Introduction Jay Young, Ben Bradley, and Colin M. Coates
PART I: Production, Pathways, and Supply
1. Maitland’s Moment: Turning Nova Scotia’s Forests into Ships for the Global Commodity Trade in the Mid-Nineteenth Century Thomas Peace, Jim Clifford, and Judy Burns
2. Forest, Stream and Snowstorms? Seasonality, Nature, and Mobility on the Intercolonial Railway, 1876–1914 Ken Cruikshank
3. Supply Networks in the Age of Steamboat Navigation: Lakeside Mobility in Muskoka, Ontario, 1880–1930 Andrew Watson
4. Seasonality and Mobility in Northern Saskatchewan, 1890–1950 Merle Massie
5. Creating the St. Lawrence Seaway: Mobility and a Modern Megaproject Daniel Macfarlane
6. Soils and Subways: Excavating Environments during the Building of Rapid Transit in Toronto, 1944–1968 Jay Young
7. The Windsor-Detroit Borderland: The Making of a Key North American Environment of Mobility Tor H. Oiamo, Don Lafreniere, and Joy Parr
PART II: Consumption, Landscape, and Leisure
8. Views from the Deck: Union Steamship Cruises on Canada’s Pacific Coast, 1889–1958 J.I. Little
9. Producing and Consuming Spaces of Sport and Leisure: The Encampments and Regattas of the American Canoe Association, 1880–1903 Jessica Dunkin
10. What Was Driving Golf? Mobility, Nature, and the Making of Canadian Leisure Landscapes, 1870–1930 Elizabeth L. Jewett
11. Rails, Trails, Roads, and Lodgings: Networks of Mobility and the Touristic Development of “The Canadian Pacific Rockies,” 1885–1930 Elsa Lam
12. Automobile Tourism in Quebec and Ontario: Development, Promotion, and Representations, 1920–1945 Maude-Emmanuelle Lambert
Contributors
Index