Research Catalog

The road to confederation; the emergence of Canada, 1863-1867

Title
The road to confederation; the emergence of Canada, 1863-1867 [by] Donald Creighton.
Author
Creighton, Donald Grant.
Publication
Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1965 [©1964]

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library F1032 .C9 1965Off-site

Details

Description
489 pages illustrations, maps, portraits; 23 cm
Summary
Donald Creighton was for many years one of Canada's foremost historians, a firm believer that history was closer to art than it was to science. Marked by beautiful, carefully crafted prose, The Road to Confederation reflects a style that perhaps no contemporary historian would dare: romantic, suspenseful, fearlessly narrative, and full of unapologetic opinions. If not politically correct and sanitized, it is a fascinating exploration of the personalities, the political logjams, even the debt problems that marked the period leading to Confederation. The book was also, as Donald Wright's excellent introduction argues, haunted by doubt. Not only had Canada failed to live up to Creighton's vision, Creighton himself was writing from the perspective of a rapidly changing country. Quebec was moving towards a liberal, secular, and nationalist identity; English Canada was embracing bilingualism and diversity; debates about nuclear weapons were raging; and living next to the United States was becoming increasingly uneasy. The road was becoming ever less straightforward. In many respects, The Road to Confederation reveals as much about the 1960s as it does the 1860s.
Subject
  • 1841-1867
  • Politics and government
  • Canada > Politics and government > 1841-1867
  • Canada
Bibliography (note)
  • "A note on sources": p. 441-444. "References": p. 445-476.
LCCN
65015162
OCLC
  • ocm00479901
  • 479901
  • SCSB-192370
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library